Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW
He also offers his thoughtful perspective of Stephen Harper’s last 10 years in his recent eBook, The Harper Decade.

Hey look: There’s a faith war? Sign me up!

by Paul Wells on Friday, May 14, 2010 12:48pm - 285 Comments

From the print edition, my column about Marci McDonald’s book The Armageddon Factor. I think she overstates the influence of Christian conservatives in Stephen Harper’s Ottawa in a way that saps her book of too much of its credibility. I have said similar things before, when her book was germinating as a long article in The Walrus.

But as McDonald points out on her book’s last page, I admitted last summer, when Tony Clement was making up transparent lies to camouflage the cutting of tourism-promotion grants to gay and lesbian community events, that I often have “second thoughts” about whether she had a point. And indeed, in one of the most-read and most-remarked pieces I’ve written this year, I went on at some length about the influence of social conservatives, including what she calls Christian nationalists, in Harper’s Ottawa. I myself have argued that there’s a real presence with real clout. So what’s got up my nose this week?

Maybe just sour grapes (Can you get sour grapes up your nose? Bet that would hurt). You’ll be a better judge of that than I could be. But I think there’s more to my disagreement with McDonald than that. Two things, I suppose. First, it’s irresponsible to write a book about a phenomenon that systematically overstates the extent of that phenomenon. All the more so if you adopt a constant tone of near-panic. (I note, however, that this is not a new technique for McDonald. Almost my favourite part of her book is the bio on the jacket flap, which notes that “her study of the backstage machinations behind the free trade deal led to her book, Yankee Doodle Dandy: Brian Mulroney and the America Agenda.” Really? Her “study?”)

Which leads us to the second, bigger problem: McDonald nowhere specifies which religious attitudes, or which secular policies derived from religious attitudes, she finds unacceptable. Bill Blaikie ran for the NDP leadership on a platform explicitly derived from the social gospel; is that OK? McDonald quotes Scarborough Liberal MP John McKay saying he finds the Harper gang scary. Wow. Really? Why? What are the specific differences between John McKay’s okay Christian nationalism and Dave Quist’s scary terrifying Christian nationalism? ‘Cause it was kind of hard to tell the difference during the Commons vote on abortion in international development assistance.

The last time I took a hard run at a colleague, it was at Mark Steyn over a column he wrote on the purported rise of extremist parties in Europe. Boiled down, my assorted difficulties with that piece amounted to a concern that Mark was not merely failing to define his terms, he was culpably refusing to. Mark Steyn and Marci McDonald must, I am sure, disagree about almost everything, but when each takes great length to announce that “they” are taking over, I develop considerable curiosity over who “they” are, and what, precisely, my problem with “them” is supposed to be.

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  • Brian Landon

    Marci's book makes some huge generalizations. What of the "conservative" elements(growing quickly) in the Muslim religion in Canada. Islam opposes abortion. Yet Ms.Mcdonald blames only Christianity?? Perhap Ms. McDonald should be fearful of a growing group of Islam that supports many of the views that Ms.Mcdonald states are only Christian beliefs? Then again the left (read: Marci Mcdonald) will not speak of Islam because she does not have a clue about it and is afraid of being sued in the very HRC she loves so much by Muslims. I have not been a practising christian for a very long time but when I see this sort of attack, I'm now thinking of going back to my Church.

    • David

      What does it matter whether our rights are taken away by Christians or Muslims?

      Just because Christians want to force women into the back allies for unsafe abortions, and Christians want to jail lovers who happen to be of the same sex, doesn't make it any better than when a Muslim does it.

      If you think the Muslin conservatism being forced upon us is bad, then fine … but if you then also believe that it is fine for Christian conservatives to force their beliefs upon us, then you are being a hypocrite … or a Christian fundamentalist (which is a subset of hypocrite anyway.)

  • Marcia Stobbart

    This article reads in a common sense manner compared with another on the same topic, where my temperament went out of bounds. PM Harper has made the right choices with respect to the Jewish segment of our society, imho. PM Harper did the right thing by cutting funding for the gay parades – which are obscene and, if San Fransisco wants them – be my guest. There was a gay parade marching in Victoria once and some ladies then requested a permit to march a-la nude. Rejected. The difference? They weren't gay. We are all human beings – and we each have our own beliefs but Canada was founded on decency and dignity. In 2010 – wonder why the criminal element is so strong and the morals are so weak? McDonald doesn't even touch that. As for the Religious Right taking over the government – she should look at how the Moslem world plans to do just that. Babies and more babies as compared to the rest of us. This is one book that won't appear in my book club.

    • H.(Bart) Vincelette

      Gay Canadians; as elsewhere throughout the western world; pay taxes & for eons, had no rights whatsoever. We subsidized our heterosexual counterparts. And, Gay Pride parades are nothing compared to what any television viewing audience faces every day. Sexual orientation is not a belief, but a state of being.It is innate.In addition to the denial of rights , gay Canadians are still subjected to violence & bloodshed, & destruction of self esteem. Homosexuality is global & occurs throughout nature. It is about who one has the propensity to fall in love with, far more than sex acts. Canada was founded upon secular principles of dignity, respect, civil & human rights, & equality, but not all these lofty ideals came with Confederation.I'm proud of the fact that my home province, Manitoba; was the first to grant women the right to vote. And, Canadian morality is not weak, but stronger than ever. When racism, bigotry, inequality , & injustice were commonplace; morality was weak.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/thenonconformer thenonconformer

    "McDonald’s ultimate failing is her definition of a good Canadian is rigid, exclusionary, smug and intolerant of others who see the world differently". Ironically, that’s exactly a self reflection unsurprisingly as to how she views Christian conservatives. She thinks others are like her firstly.. She needs to judge herself first too.

  • CheMan

    The Christian threat the Ms. McDonald talks about is REAL!!! The evangelicals have took over the Republican Party in America and have made it into the war-mongering, oil stealing, bible forcing, bigoted and intolerant stain of humanity that it is. Religious Christians coming to power in Canada can do the same. Plus that Armageddon thing is plain nuts.

    As for the comments about peaceful Christians versus violent Muslims you've got to be joking me. Fox News has people who attack Islam non-stop (Beck, Malkin, Coulter, etc.) are they running and hiding? Far from it. I work in a govt building in Ottawa that staffs the Natl Status for Women. It gets death threats all the time and watches out for violent fanatical Xtians everyday. Christians are peaceful, yeah right! Talk to a child in Iraq or an abortion provider before talking that crap!!

  • http://richard-eng.blogspot.com/ Richard

    I do not want Christian ideology shaping the social policies that *I have to live by*. I am a very tolerant person, but religious influence has no place in the business of government. Christian ideology is basically very different from other kinds of ideology such as socialism and capitalism — it is based on the delusion that there exists a God who micro-manages our lives and commands us to live according to His edicts. It is based on ancient documents written by delusional prophets. It is pure fantasy. I uphold everybody's right to believe in this nonsense, BUT I don't want it shaping social policies.

  • H.(Bart) Vincelette

    I have read Marci's book & also lived in the US (San Diego) during the early years of the rise of the religious right, when it existed largely under the umbrella of the late Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority. I agree with Marci McDonald's warnings about the overt influence of extremist religion over government & therefore, the lives of us all in a secular democracy. No one says they shouldn't be entitled to their opinion or participate in government. But from the perspective of equality of rights as guaranteed under the Constitution of Canada-1982; aka the Charter of Rights & Freedoms; 'they', (religious conservatives); operate under the mistaken assertion that freedom of religion includes the right to deny, eliminate, or diminish; the rights of others. Additionally; they do not restrict their opposition to gay rights to religious beliefs based on verses from the Bible, but as with their American cohorts; use disproved lies, slander, defamation, & innuendo; to further their agenda. And for reasons that have always escaped me; they get away with it. I would encourage fellow Canadians to read the Armageddon factor & take a look at some of the religious right's websites. the denial of any intentions to establish a theocracy by any other name; is to hide ones head in the sand.

  • H.(Bart) Vincelette

    Well put!

  • guest

    a radio program…was amazed that this anti christian bias is being posted …where if it was done to any other religion….it would be a hate crime….maybe Christians should get the same protection agains this type of hate writitng…and then maybe we are strong enough we can take it…………….or are you feeding into the anti christian maw of the religious zelliots of terrorism

  • David

    Then this "radio program" doesn't understand the definition of "hate speech" … although if they're anything like my local right wing talk radio station, I'm sure they use same level of criticism every day against other non-Christian groups and never give "hate speech" a second though.

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