Skip to content Skip to footer

Hot Air and the Stench of Brimstone

These resources are comprised of the collective outrage of our over 28,000 clients within the armed forces, paired with the brain trust that comprises our organizational staff and the gracious donations given by our valued support base. Given our forthright nature and our unparalleled effectiveness, it makes perfect sense that we have become the target of concerted attempts to vilify, slander, and distort our cause. As the celebrated Irish icon of wit Oscar Wilde presciently inferred, our rapaciously fundamentalist Christian opponents absolutely couldnu2019t stand the fact that we have managed to make convincing, logical arguments upholding the civil rights of servicemembers. Hence, these cowards have despicably deployed the all to predictable, pedestrian tactics of defamatory mudslinging and outright falsification. Recently, Iu2019ve been grossly mischaracterized as some u201cgrey eminenceu201d sitting behind the scenes at the Department of Defense (DoD), some sinister overlord with an axe to grind against religion in general and Christianity in particular. As my blatantly cynical detractors would have it, whenever I nonchalantly set foot on the grounds of the Pentagon, top brass swarm about to deferentially u201ckiss the ringu201d as if I were Capo di tutti capi at DoD. This mirage couldnu2019t be farther from the truth; our fight entails a bloody, daily tooth-and-nail struggle with those same top DoD officials that we supposedly hold in spellbound thrall. For example, the disgusting arch-fraud pretender to the title of u201cAmericau2019s Historian,u201d David Barton, recently made the ridiculous, off-base remark, u201cIu2019ve decided that Mikey Weinstein is now the new Secretary of the Air Force.u201d I thoroughly dissected this exaggerated claim in one of my last Op-Eds. Scurrilous lies coming from a career peddler of false, revisionist nationalist mythologyu2026 really, is anyone surprised? Unbeknownst to us, Bartonu2019s lunacy was the mere opening shot in a much broader campaign to vilify our organization. In recent months, MRFF has slammed multiple line drives in our round-the-clock campaign to uphold what little remains of the wall separating church and state in the United States military. Indeed, ever more frequently now, weu2019re knocking u201chome runsu201d out of the ballpark. For example, MRFF pressure decisively put an end to the unconstitutional branding of Holman Bible Publishersu2019 u201cMilitary Biblesu201d with the insignia of the four branches of the U.S. Armed Forces u2014 a veritable u201cGrand Slamu201d that was covered impeccably by journalist Kelley Vlahos. This monumental constitutional victory whipped our religious extremist opponents into an absolute frenzy, replete with disingenuous weeping and a great gnashing of teeth. No sooner had we made the announcement that u201cLady Liberty is smiling,u201d than the various extreme Christian fundamentalists pounced for an attack. First, Fox Newsu2019 fundamentalist barking dog, Todd Starnes, intentionally mischaracterized MRFF as an u201catheistu201d organization and purposely confused our acronym with that of the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF). Our balking at such a false descriptor doesnu2019t mean that we at MRFF have any problems with atheists in the least, but the claim is substantively inaccurate. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation is a constitutionalist organization grounded in an alliance of both interfaith and non-faith communities. The vast majority of our staff, clients, supporters, and donors happen to be of the Christian faith. The u201catheistu201d-baiting smear was a transparent, cold, calculated move by Fox News that was simply meant to incite. The u201cFaux Newsu201d salvo was followed shortly after by a drive-by hit piece on MRFF from Glenn Becku2019s hideous Utah-based web tabloid, The Blaze. The Blaze article was truly vile, framing the removal of insignia from Holman Military Bibles as an action that u201cwill surely raise eyebrows among those who have traditionally appreciated the militaryu2019s often Christian undertones.u201d Often Christian? As my foundation has thoroughly documented, the U.S. Military is a veritable Petri dish for what can only be described as a metastasizing u201cChristian Talibanu201d of sorts, albeit a nuclear armed, apocalyptic-Dominionist variant capable of deploying the most modern arsenal devised in the history of humankind. Officers Christian Fellowship (OCF), Cadence International, The Navigators, Cru (nu00e9e Campus Crusade for Christ) Military Ministries, and many other groups or u201cparachurchu201d organizations have brazenly spoken of their worshiped goal of transforming the U.S. Military into u201cgovernment-paid missionaries,u201d as shown by the shocking video immediately below: This seditious, fundamentalist Christian treachery is what weu2019re up against. However, The Blaze maliciously mischaracterizes MRFFu2019s civil rights fight as u201canti-theist advocacy.u201d No, our sole purpose is to safeguard Constitutionally guaranteed religious liberty in the truest sense of the phrase, as envisioned by those who drafted the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Of course, pernicious lies and defamatory rubbish are all that we can expect from the u201canti-truth advocatesu201d employed at the propaganda mills of these fascistic, fundamentalist Christian extremist predators. A so-called u201cChaplain Alliance for Religious Liberty (CARL)u201d had its own novel take on the Military Bible issue, using it as a Trojan horse to disguise their relentless campaign against the basic human rights of the LGBT community. A recent article from this u201callianceu201d of disgusting bigots was entitled u201cBibles? Nah u2026 u2018Gay prideu2019? Yep!u201d According to CARL, Congress has u201cforced a radical homosexual agenda on the militaryu201d through the repeal of Donu2019t Ask, Donu2019t Tell (DADT). Offering another indicator of how far our supposedly u201cChristianu201d military has drifted from its roots, CARL spokesman Col. Ron Crews (USA-Ret.), stated that u201cIt just seems that every time Mikey Weinstein sends an e-mail over to the Pentagon that they just cater to his every whimu2026This one individual has that much influence in the Pentagon. They just cave in.u201d Crews also stated u201cMRFF must cease and desist their reckless assault on religious liberty. The Chaplain Alliance for Religious Liberty calls on Congress to investigate this frivolous threat and apparent discrimination against religious views by the DoD.u201d Mere days later, 66 Republican members of Congress sent a letter to Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta with the spurious allegation that U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz was guilty of u201cimposing a stringent policy with regards to religion,u201d and that the USAF in general is guilty of creating u201ca culture that is hostile toward religion.u201d This was a reaction to the watershed memo Schwartz released last September underscoring the long-existing yet oft-ignored expectation that u201cchaplains, not commandersu2026 notify Airmen of Chaplain Corps programs.u201d According to these woefully misinformed and Constitutionally derelict lawmakers, Schwartzu2019s simple recapitulation of long-standing rules governing the division of labor in the armed forces vis-u00e0-vis religious programs constituted a full-frontal attack on all religious practices throughout the Air Force. Euphemistically, lawmakers accused the USAF of bowing to the pressure of u201csecular groupsu201d like MRFF. Not so. The Schwartz memo was a wet-noodle, meek attempt at damage control issued amidst an especially frenetic period when the Air Force was, yet again, fully embroiled in severe controversy due to a string of breathtakingly embarrassing incidents. MRFF was even forced to erect a public billboard of the Schwartz memo in Colorado Springs in direct reaction to U.S. Air Force Academy Superintendent Lt. General Michael Gouldu2019s abject refusal to disseminate it to cadets on campus. Admittedly, yes, many of these incidents were indeed exposed by MRFF to an absolutely thunderstruck global audience. The so-called u201cu2018Jesus Loves Nukesu2019 Speech,u201d a mandatory u201cChristian Just Waru201d ethics training for nuclear missile launch officers, was even featured on the front page of the major Japanese daily Asahi Shimbun. Thus, two days prior to the anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, our friends and strategic allies in Japan were informed of how the USAF views their national trauma; as an u201cethicalu201d example of the waging of u201cHoly War.u201d These shameful embarrassments and self-inflicted wounds are among some of the most powerful means by which the religious predators at DoD undermine our national security, desecrate our beloved Constitution and disrupt our alliances. Above: Panel from August 4, 2011 cover story in the Japanese edition of Asahi Shimbun showing a portion of the u201cJesus Loves Nukesu201d PowerPoint Presentation Following the letter to Secretary Panetta, CARL once again attacked me, this time by means of the organizationu2019s founder, Brig. Gen. Douglas Lee (USA-Ret.). Lee once again raised the claim that u201cI think [Mikey Weinstein] has way more influence in the Air Force than is necessaryu2026 Certainly when he has threatened suit, the Air Force seems to have jumped very quickly. His organization claims to be concerned about religious liberty, but I personally interpret their actions as trying to denigrate religious liberty rather than celebrate it. So, yes u2014 heu2019s very much involved.u201d This rogue organization of retired activist chaplains operates under the deceptive title of an u201cAlliance for Religious Liberty.u201d Clearly they have tried to position themselves as the u201canti-MRFFu201d, an unholy alliance devoted to squelching any form of religious freedom. These theocratic clerics have shown themselves to be wholly opposed to the U.S. Constitution and shockingly, 66 members of Congress have joined the crusade. Their wretched campaign isnu2019t waged for the sake of u201creligious libertyu201d u2014 a term whose meaning they have attempted to twist and turn inside out u2014 but for its complete opposite. Their every move constitutes an attack on the rights of servicewomen, LGBT servicemembers, and the spiritually heterodox who refuse to be coercively absorbed by this zealous, militantly evangelical ultra-fundamentalist tumor existing in the U.S. military. We may not have 4-star generals and admirals kowtowing at our feet, but our nontrivial achievements clearly speak for themselves. The hard-fought gains weu2019ve secured are not only our pride and joy, but also a credit to those constitutional stalwarts and supporters who courageously stand at our side. Our demands for constitutional conformity across the whole of the DoD will only grow louder. MRFF will stand strong as a palisade of accountability and a bulwark of defense for those countless servicemen and women who have come to us as a result of the myriad wounds and grievances they have suffered. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation will only gain strength from the attacks by this base, unprincipled, and pathologically intolerant horde of well-funded religious extremists. Indeed, we will garner more and more victories for our clients and their civil rights, irrespective of whether our fundamentalist Christian enemies slander and assault us in the name of their perverse and twisted conception of u201creligious liberty,u201d or some other fabricated excuse. As Gandhi said in regards to the universal struggle for human rights, u201cFirst they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, and then you win.u201d Or, as a friend of mine once told me, u201cLife sucks when those youu2019ve been persecuting begin to return fire.u201d The Military Religious Freedom Foundation is up against well-funded extremist religious organizations. Your donations allow us to continue our fight in the courts and in the media to fight for separation of church and state in the U.S. military. Please make a fully tax-deductible donation today at helpbuildthewall.org. Michael L. u201cMikeyu201d Weinstein is president of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation and an honor graduate of the Air Force Academy. He previously served as White House Counsel in the Reagan administration and general counsel to H. Ross Perot and Perot Systems Corp. He is the author of the recently released book, u201cNo Snowflake in an Avalanche: The Military Religious Freedom Foundation, Its Battle to Defend the Constitution and One Familyu2019s Courageous War Against Religious Extremism in High Placesu201d (2012, Vireo). 0 digg 79 Share 1 COMMENT AAA LIKED THIS ARTICLE? JOIN OUR EMAIL LIST Stay up to date with the latest AlterNet blog headlines via email See more stories tagged with: AAA 79 Share 0 digg More posts by Mikey Weinstein Follow me on Twitter Friend me on Facebook Website 1 See your ad here! Petitions by Change.org|Get Widget|Start a Petition Advertisement Hot Air and the Stench of Brimstone: Chaplains, Gutter Journalism, and 66 Lawmakers vs. Religious Freedom Mikey Weinstein FRC Action Hints High Court u201cObamacareu201d Decision Sides with Satan Chip Berlet u201cRight to Worku201d Really Means u201cUnion Bustingu201d Chip Berlet Street Harassment: A Means of Control That We Need to Get Under Control RH Reality Check A Pyrrhic Victory? In ACA Ruling, Roberts Court Takes Big Swipe At Social Safety Net RH Reality Check Advertisement What your friends are reading on AlterNet Armchair Warriors: Why Are Conservatives the Biggest Warmongers? Corey Robin, Oxford University Press How I Left My Evangelical Christian Faith Valerie Tarico, AlterNet May Day’s Radical History: What Occupy Is Fighting for This May 1st Jacob Remes, AlterNet GOP Suicide: Why Can’t Republicans Stop Alienating Women, Young People and Hispanics? Robert Reich, RobertReich.org 5 Fascinating New Uses For Psychedelics Sarah Seltzer, AlterNet

“Arguments are to be avoided; they are always vulgar and often convincing.” – Oscar Wilde, Irish novelist, poet, and gadfly

The Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF), the civil rights organization that I founded and preside over, has lately been accused of holding exaggerated sway within the Pentagon. No doubt, our organization has managed to effect an ever-growing number of major changes with quite humble, yet very dear, resources at our disposal. These resources are comprised of the collective outrage of our over 28,000 clients within the armed forces, paired with the brain trust that comprises our organizational staff and the gracious donations given by our valued support base. Given our forthright nature and our unparalleled effectiveness, it makes perfect sense that we have become the target of concerted attempts to vilify, slander, and distort our cause. As the celebrated Irish icon of wit Oscar Wilde presciently inferred, our rapaciously fundamentalist Christian opponents absolutely couldn’t stand the fact that we have managed to make convincing, logical arguments upholding the civil rights of servicemembers. Hence, these cowards have despicably deployed the all to predictable, pedestrian tactics of defamatory mudslinging and outright falsification.

Recently, I’ve been grossly mischaracterized as some “grey eminence” sitting behind the scenes at the Department of Defense (DoD), some sinister overlord with an axe to grind against religion in general and Christianity in particular. As my blatantly cynical detractors would have it, whenever I nonchalantly set foot on the grounds of the Pentagon, top brass swarm about to deferentially “kiss the ring” as if I were Capo di tutti capi at DoD. This mirage couldn’t be farther from the truth; our fight entails a bloody, daily tooth-and-nail struggle with those same top DoD officials that we supposedly hold in spellbound thrall.

For example, the disgusting arch-fraud pretender to the title of “America’s Historian,” David Barton, recently made the ridiculous, off-base remark, “I’ve decided that Mikey Weinstein is now the new Secretary of the Air Force.” I thoroughly dissected this exaggerated claim in one of my last Op-Eds. Scurrilous lies coming from a career peddler of false, revisionist nationalist mythology… really, is anyone surprised? Unbeknownst to us, Barton’s lunacy was the mere opening shot in a much broader campaign to vilify our organization.

In recent months, MRFF has slammed multiple line drives in our round-the-clock campaign to uphold what little remains of the wall separating church and state in the United States military. Indeed, ever more frequently now, we’re knocking “home runs” out of the ballpark. For example, MRFF pressure decisively put an end to the unconstitutional branding of Holman Bible Publishers’ “Military Bibles” with the insignia of the four branches of the U.S. Armed Forces — a veritable “Grand Slam” that was covered impeccably by journalist Kelley Vlahos. This monumental constitutional victory whipped our religious extremist opponents into an absolute frenzy, replete with disingenuous weeping and a great gnashing of teeth.

No sooner had we made the announcement that “Lady Liberty is smiling,” than the various extreme Christian fundamentalists pounced for an attack. First, Fox News’ fundamentalist barking dog, Todd Starnes, intentionally mischaracterized MRFF as an “atheist” organization and purposely confused our acronym with that of the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF). Our balking at such a false descriptor doesn’t mean that we at MRFF have any problems with atheists in the least, but the claim is substantively inaccurate. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation is a constitutionalist organization grounded in an alliance of both interfaith and non-faith communities. The vast majority of our staff, clients, supporters, and donors happen to be of the Christian faith. The “atheist”-baiting smear was a transparent, cold, calculated move by Fox News that was simply meant to incite.

The “Faux News” salvo was followed shortly after by a drive-by hit piece on MRFF from Glenn Beck’s hideous Utah-based web tabloid, The Blaze. The Blaze article was truly vile, framing the removal of insignia from Holman Military Bibles as an action that “will surely raise eyebrows among those who have traditionally appreciated the military’s often Christian undertones.”

Often Christian? As my foundation has thoroughly documented, the U.S. Military is a veritable Petri dish for what can only be described as a metastasizing “Christian Taliban” of sorts, albeit a nuclear armed, apocalyptic-Dominionist variant capable of deploying the most modern arsenal devised in the history of humankind. Officers Christian Fellowship (OCF), Cadence International, The Navigators, Cru (née Campus Crusade for Christ) Military Ministries, and many other groups or “parachurch” organizations have brazenly spoken of their worshiped goal of transforming the U.S. Military into “government-paid missionaries,” as shown by the shocking video immediately below:

This seditious, fundamentalist Christian treachery is what we’re up against. However, The Blaze maliciously mischaracterizes MRFF’s civil rights fight as “anti-theist advocacy.” No, our sole purpose is to safeguard Constitutionally guaranteed religious liberty in the truest sense of the phrase, as envisioned by those who drafted the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Of course, pernicious lies and defamatory rubbish are all that we can expect from the “anti-truth advocates” employed at the propaganda mills of these fascistic, fundamentalist Christian extremist predators.

A so-called “Chaplain Alliance for Religious Liberty (CARL)” had its own novel take on the Military Bible issue, using it as a Trojan horse to disguise their relentless campaign against the basic human rights of the LGBT community. A recent article from this “alliance” of disgusting bigots was entitled “Bibles? Nah … ‘Gay pride’? Yep!” According to CARL, Congress has “forced a radical homosexual agenda on the military” through the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT). Offering another indicator of how far our supposedly “Christian” military has drifted from its roots, CARL spokesman Col. Ron Crews (USA-Ret.), stated that “It just seems that every time Mikey Weinstein sends an e-mail over to the Pentagon that they just cater to his every whim…This one individual has that much influence in the Pentagon. They just cave in.”

Crews also stated “MRFF must cease and desist their reckless assault on religious liberty. The Chaplain Alliance for Religious Liberty calls on Congress to investigate this frivolous threat and apparent discrimination against religious views by the DoD.”

Mere days later, 66 Republican members of Congress sent a letter to Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta with the spurious allegation that U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz was guilty of “imposing a stringent policy with regards to religion,” and that the USAF in general is guilty of creating “a culture that is hostile toward religion.” This was a reaction to the watershed memo Schwartz released last September underscoring the long-existing yet oft-ignored expectation that “chaplains, not commanders… notify Airmen of Chaplain Corps programs.” According to these woefully misinformed and Constitutionally derelict lawmakers, Schwartz’s simple recapitulation of long-standing rules governing the division of labor in the armed forces vis-à-vis religious programs constituted a full-frontal attack on all religious practices throughout the Air Force. Euphemistically, lawmakers accused the USAF of bowing to the pressure of “secular groups” like MRFF. Not so. The Schwartz memo was a wet-noodle, meek attempt at damage control issued amidst an especially frenetic period when the Air Force was, yet again, fully embroiled in severe controversy due to a string of breathtakingly embarrassing incidents. MRFF was even forced to erect a public billboard of the Schwartz memo in Colorado Springs in direct reaction to U.S. Air Force Academy Superintendent Lt. General Michael Gould’s abject refusal to disseminate it to cadets on campus.

Admittedly, yes, many of these incidents were indeed exposed by MRFF to an absolutely thunderstruck global audience. The so-called “‘Jesus Loves Nukes’ Speech,” a mandatory “Christian Just War” ethics training for nuclear missile launch officers, was even featured on the front page of the major Japanese daily Asahi Shimbun. Thus, two days prior to the anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, our friends and strategic allies in Japan were informed of how the USAF views their national trauma; as an “ethical” example of the waging of “Holy War.” These shameful embarrassments and self-inflicted wounds are among some of the most powerful means by which the religious predators at DoD undermine our national security, desecrate our beloved Constitution and disrupt our alliances.

Following the letter to Secretary Panetta, CARL once again attacked me, this time by means of the organization’s founder, Brig. Gen. Douglas Lee (USA-Ret.). Lee once again raised the claim that “I think [Mikey Weinstein] has way more influence in the Air Force than is necessary… Certainly when he has threatened suit, the Air Force seems to have jumped very quickly. His organization claims to be concerned about religious liberty, but I personally interpret their actions as trying to denigrate religious liberty rather than celebrate it. So, yes — he’s very much involved.”

This rogue organization of retired activist chaplains operates under the deceptive title of an “Alliance for Religious Liberty.” Clearly they have tried to position themselves as the “anti-MRFF”, an unholy alliance devoted to squelching any form of religious freedom. These theocratic clerics have shown themselves to be wholly opposed to the U.S. Constitution and shockingly, 66 members of Congress have joined the crusade. Their wretched campaign isn’t waged for the sake of “religious liberty” — a term whose meaning they have attempted to twist and turn inside out — but for its complete opposite. Their every move constitutes an attack on the rights of servicewomen, LGBT servicemembers, and the spiritually heterodox who refuse to be coercively absorbed by this zealous, militantly evangelical ultra-fundamentalist tumor existing in the U.S. military.

We may not have 4-star generals and admirals kowtowing at our feet, but our nontrivial achievements clearly speak for themselves. The hard-fought gains we’ve secured are not only our pride and joy, but also a credit to those constitutional stalwarts and supporters who courageously stand at our side. Our demands for constitutional conformity across the whole of the DoD will only grow louder. MRFF will stand strong as a palisade of accountability and a bulwark of defense for those countless servicemen and women who have come to us as a result of the myriad wounds and grievances they have suffered. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation will only gain strength from the attacks by this base, unprincipled, and pathologically intolerant horde of well-funded religious extremists. Indeed, we will garner more and more victories for our clients and their civil rights, irrespective of whether our fundamentalist Christian enemies slander and assault us in the name of their perverse and twisted conception of “religious liberty,” or some other fabricated excuse. As Gandhi said in regards to the universal struggle for human rights, “First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, and then you win.” Or, as a friend of mine once told me, “Life sucks when those you’ve been persecuting begin to return fire.”

We’re not going to stand for it. Are you?

You don’t bury your head in the sand. You know as well as we do what we’re facing as a country, as a people, and as a global community. Here at Truthout, we’re gearing up to meet these threats head on, but we need your support to do it: We must raise $16,000 before midnight to ensure we can keep publishing independent journalism that doesn’t shy away from difficult — and often dangerous — topics.

We can do this vital work because unlike most media, our journalism is free from government or corporate influence and censorship. But this is only sustainable if we have your support. If you like what you’re reading or just value what we do, will you take a few seconds to contribute to our work?