It's company policy at The New York Times that opinion columnists may not officially endorse presidential candidates. Still, there was no doubt during the past year which man most of the page's writers were backing.
A trio of hysterical pieces published Nov. 4 confirmed that, each
claiming that a nationwide outbreak of religious zealotry had led
to Sen. John Kerry's defeat.
"The president got re-elected by dividing the country
along fault lines of fear, intolerance, ignorance and religious
rule," wailed Maureen Dowd.
Not to be outdone, Tom Friedman chipped in, "We don't just disagree on what
America should be doing; we disagree on what America is. Is it a
country that does not intrude into people's sexual preferences and
the marriage unions they want to make?"
Well, a better question would be: Is America a country where the
people want to be governed by unelected judges? Where a 4-3
decision of the Massachusetts Supreme Court is considered binding
on the rest of us? By passing defense of marriage amendments in all
11 states where they were on the ballot, voters indicated they want
to govern themselves, not be ruled by a judicial elite.
But the most over-the-top Times piece came from an
outsider, historian Garry Wills. He claimed that Bush's re-election
spelled the end of the Enlightenment. "The secular states of modern
Europe do not understand the fundamentalism of the American
electorate," Wills opined. "Where else do we find fundamentalist
zeal, a rage at secularity, religious intolerance, fear of and
hatred for modernity? Not in France or Britain or Germany or Italy
or Spain."
By all means then, let's compare ourselves with Europe. Consider
Rocco Buttiglione. He was recently nominated for a job in the
European Union as commissioner for Justice, Freedom and Security.
But there was a problem: Buttiglione is a devout Catholic, thus he
believes in the importance of traditional marriage and thinks
homosexuality is a sin.
Such views are unacceptable in Wills' supposedly "enlightened"
Europe, as Buttiglione found out during a three-hour inquisition
before members of the European Parliament. Even when he gave
reasonable answers, the Italian found himself under
fire.
For example, asked about his views on homosexuality, the nominee
answered, "Many things may
be considered immoral which should not be prohibited. I may think
that homosexuality is a sin, and this has no effect on politics,
unless I say that homosexuality is a crime."
But Buttiglione's "live and let live" policy isn't good enough in
modern Europe. "A man who openly discriminates against homosexuals
and who is openly for reducing the role of women cannot deal with
these affairs in the commission," claimed Johannes Swoboda, an
Austrian member of the European Parliament.
Of course, that's not what the nominee had said -- he'd explicitly
pointed out that his personal beliefs wouldn't affect his politics.
And that just highlights the problem in Europe today: The "elite"
seem to think they can censor not just the politics of citizens,
but their very thoughts and beliefs as well.
Meanwhile, freedom of religion is thriving in the U.S. This year's
presidential election featured a well-known Protestant against a
self-proclaimed Catholic. Four years ago, Joe Lieberman became the
first Jewish man to run for national office. And we've already
heard talk that Barak Obama, just elected to the Senate, may seek
higher office in 2008. Obama's grandfather was Muslim.
In order to calm the "enlightened" Europeans, Buttiglione
eventually withdrew from consideration for the justice
commissioner's job. "I am the victim
of a new form of creeping totalitarianism, which forbids the asking
of certain questions. Anyone who doesn't accept that is
excommunicated," Buttiglione told The Times of
London.
That's the sort of "enlightenment" some would prefer to impose on
American voters. The
results on Election Day simply prove that we'd prefer to retain our
traditional tolerance -- even if doing so angers some at The New
York Times.
Ed Feulner is the president of The Heritage Foundation
(heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research
institute.