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Newsweek Should Focus Upon Decline in Objective Journalism
The cover of the April 13 issue of Newsweek uses seven words -- THE DECLINE AND FALL OF CHRISTIAN AMERICA -- laid out in the shape of a cross to create a sense of drama aimed at enticing readers. Unfortunately, the 4,200-word article says more about the decline of objective journalism than it does about the faith of Americans.
While highlighting the month-old findings of the American Religious Identification Survey conducted by the Program on Public Values at Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., Jon Meacham took liberties with the subject matter and injected his opinions on several occasions.
Perhaps the most-egregious example appears in the article's fifth paragraph where Meacham writes:
The decline and fall of the modern religious right's notion of a Christian America creates a calmer political environment and, for many believers, may help open the way for a more theologically serious religious life.
Based on that statement, I'm willing to wager Meacham also believes -- and wrongly, I might add -- that the Fairness Doctrine is a good thing and that the Constitution contains clear language requiring the separation of church and state.
I'm also interested in how Meacham might explain the "calmer political environment" that spawned the Tea Party Movement sweeping the country. Anyone who's attended a tea party will vouch for the fact that attendees are anything but calm when it comes to the damage that's been done to our nation during President Barack Obama's first 100 days.
Perhaps instead of chronicling the decline of Christianity, Meacham and his colleagues at Newsweek should focus upon the world of journalism -- specifically, objective journalism -- where a much more precipitous decline is evident.
FYI: For a more objective report on the survey, read my post about it published March 9.
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at 17:14 on April 6th, 2009
I'm confused about this:
" I'm willing to wager Meacham also believes -- and wrongly, I might add -- that the Fairness Doctrine is a good thing and that the Constitution contains clear language requiring the separation of church and state."
You don't think the constitution stipulates the separation of church and state? Regardless, the separation of church and state protects religious sects. If you allow the government to advocate a religion, you are also tacitly giving it authority to condemn others. We might have prayer in schools without the separation of church and state, sure, but how would the Catholic feel if it were a Jewish prayer, or an Islamic prayer?
We live in a liberal society, where the individual has the liberty of conscience to choose what life, what religion, what values they deem fit for a "good life." People need to realize that liberal ideals, such as the separation of church and state, protect individual liberty--i.e. your freedom to worship as you choose.
The more religious you are, the more you should support the separation doctrine. The separation of church and state protects theology from the state, not the other way around. You may disagree, but you're not disagreeing with me...you're disagreeing with Locke, Rawls, J.S. Mill, and a number of liberal visionaries who paved the way for the religious freedom you enjoy today.
at 04:20 on April 7th, 2009
Newsweek predicts the demise of Christian America based on a ten percent decline in self-identified Christians over the last 20 years. Ironically, it makes no mention of its own mortality despite a 17% circulation decline in just two years.
I think the terminally ill patient just told the doctor he looks a little pale.
at 18:43 on April 14th, 2009
The "tea party movement" referred to is not a movement but a PR campaign organized by billionaires, as described in this article by Nobel-prize winning economist Paul Krugman. Exactly what damage has been done during the first 100 days? The US has shut down secret CIA torture centers, the economy is turning around, and we defeated Somalian pirates. What more do you want?