Religious Right folks can be sneaky, that’s for sure.
They know the best way to surreptitiously influence elections: hold an event at Reliant Stadium in Houston, Texas; say it’s about prayer not politics; collect thousands of email addresses through the event’s registration process; and two weeks later, send out a mass email urging attendees to show up at the polls and recruit others to go along.
I was fortunate enough to be one of those who received this enticing email after registering and attending “The Response,” the fundamentalist prayer-and-fasting service put on Aug. 6 by the American Family Association (AFA) and allies at the behest of Texas Gov. Rick Perry.
In the message, which showed up in my junk email filter yesterday, AFA founder Don Wildmon told registrants about Champion the Vote (CTV), a “friend” of AFA whose goal is to register five million “conservative Christians” who will vote according to “the Biblical worldview” in 2012.
The email reminds us that “
nly half of the Christians in the United States are registered to vote. Imagine the impact we could make on the future of America if these Christians made their voices heard in the voting booth!” (Remember, when Wildmon uses the word “Christian,” he doesn’t mean the vast majority of members of that faith; he’s talking about fundamentalists who share his theocratic ambitions.)
Well, so much for The Response not being about politics, as the AFA and Perry so adamantly claimed. They said this was only about prayer.
HA! Funny how it doesn’t take long before the truth really comes out.
http://www.secularnewsdaily.com/2011/08/20/%E2%80%98the-response%E2%80%99-and-the-truth-houston-prayer-rally-kicked-off-%E2%80%98biblical%E2%80%99-political-campaign/