First up from the God Machine this week is a look at the uproar among conservatives over comments President Obama made in Northern Ireland about religious schools.
To hear the right tell it, the U.S. president issued a scathing attack on sectarian institutions. Drudge told his readers Obama made an “alarming call” for an “end to Catholic education.” The conservative Washington Times ran an 800-word article on the “backlash” to Obama’s comments. Sean Hannity and Ann Coulter cited the remarks as proof of the president “attacking America while he’s abroad.” David Limbaugh said it was “unbelievable” to see the president “attacking Catholic schools,” adding, “How much evidence do people need to understand the breadth and depth of Obama’s radicalism?”
“Unbelievable” is certainly the right word under the circumstances.
What, exactly, did the president say that got the right so worked up? Obama was speaking to young people at a town hall meeting in Belfast on Monday, and stressed the importance of “breaking down the divisions that we create for ourselves.”
“Because issues like segregated schools and housing, lack of jobs and opportunity — symbols of history that are a source of pride for some and pain for others — these are not tangential to peace; they’re essential to it. If towns remain divided — if Catholics have their schools and buildings, and Protestants have theirs — if we can’t see ourselves in one another, if fear or resentment are allowed to harden, that encourages division. It discourages cooperation.
“Ultimately, peace is just not about politics. It’s about attitudes; about a sense of empathy; about breaking down the divisions that we create for ourselves in our own minds and our own hearts that don’t exist in any objective reality, but that we carry with us generation after generation.”
Generations of religious strife in Northern Ireland is certainly a difficult issue, but to characterize Obama’s emphasis on breaking down barriers of division as “attacking Catholic schools” and “attacking America” is absurd, and for Fox News and pretty much every conservative site on the Internet to try to turn this into an important religio-political scandal is quite silly.
The context, as Andrew Lawrence explained, is everything. Michael McGough added, “Northern Ireland is not the United States. Even in my childhood, when Catholic kids were encouraged to attend Catholic schools and there was an arguably Protestant ethos in many public schools, Catholics and Protestants weren’t as isolated from (or as distrustful of) one another in this country as they continue to be in Northern Ireland…. Society in Northern Ireland is much more stratified, and the role of religiously defined schools more problematic. You can be perfectly comfortable with the role of Catholic schools in the American context and worry about their contribution to estrangement between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland.”
Also from the God Machine this week:









