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Posts published in “Day: September 29, 2006”

OR Senate 7: The partisan box

Eugene City ClubOn his campaign website, Jim Torrey, the Republican nominee for the Senate in district 7, has posted four video/television spots. The one that gets the most attention is the last, "Outside the box," an animated spot. It shows (a younger and slimmer) Torrey being chased by a woman (his Democratic opponent, incumbent Vicki Walker) who is "trying to put him in a partisan box. But Jim has always thought outside the box. Jim leaves party politics at the door."

Weren't left at the door today, though, when Torrey met Walker for their big debate, at the City Club of Eugene. Not that that was Torrey's doing, or that he wanted it.

The debate made three things clear. One is why Torrey, twice elected mayor of Eugene, is such a well-regarded political figure in town, and beyond. A second is that Walker is no pushover. The third, which we're starting to think may be decisive in this close and pivotal race, is that partisan considerations may prove decisive in the outcome - to Torrey's detriment. (more…)

Knowing it by its fruit

We can readily track political ideas entering the environment when they arrive from politicians, from the media, from interest groups, but some of the sources, while intuitively evident enough, are harder to track.

Goldy at Horse's Ass located one in a post today, in noting material which has been removed from a church's web side. This is the Cedar Park Church (Assembly of God) at Bothell - a megachurch, with around 2,000 members - led by Pastor Joe Fuiten. We should all be watching him and it, closely (we're adding it to our regular check-list). The Seattle Weekly reported in November 2004 that, operation through the Washington Evangelicals for Responsible Government, "the pastor sent 2,700 such voter registration boxes to churches across the state, netting what he estimates to be 45,000 to 90,000 new voters. Those are huge numbers that are impossible to verify; he says they come from a sample survey of churches that received the boxes." We have no reason to doubt the numbers.

The church has redone its web site, and some of the old material isn't visible. That drew Goldy's attention, and a reply from the church that the old material will be reposted soon. Meantime, courtesy of Google's caches - where would we be without them? - some material from an October 20, 2001 sermon.

It is absolutely necessary that we compare one religion with another. The old idea was that it didn’t really matter what a person believed. What we discovered on September 11th was that religion does matter. A person’s beliefs are not just private because we all have to share this planet. As long as we all share the Christian concept of doing good to your neighbor, then what particular brand of that belief a person holds is not so important. But when people hold religious views that allow them to kill their neighbor, when war against unbelievers is a core tenet of their faith, then we have a bit of a different situation.

We now know that the old secular idea that religion is not relevant to the public square wasn’t true. We now have to evaluate religion by its fruit. What kind of results does that religion produce? If one of the fruits of Islam is the rubble of the World Trade Center then we need to get some answers about this religion.