
Now, McCain has renounced Hagee so this may be a moot point, but I want to correct a false narrative that was starting to get around. Conservatives who were forced to defend McCain for his former endorsement simply decided to underplay the amount of influence Hagee has and try to make him seem like he is a fringe figure. This of course is simply not true as Hagee had enough notoriety for not one, but two journalists to do investigative work about him and his church.
Bill Moyers did a piece about Hagee and Christians United for Israel which aired on October 5, 2007. Mr. Moyers pointed out the fact that Hagee’s church had a congregation of 18,000 members as well as the 99 million homes which he reaches with his weekly radio broadcast. He also points out that McCain, Lieberman, and Warner were all lobbied by CUFI. Lieberman described Hagee as:
“an ‘Ish Elokim,’ a man of God and those words really do fit him; and, I’d add something else, like Moses he’s become the leader of a mighty multitude, even greater than the multitude that Moses led from Egypt to the promised land.”
The other journalist who profiled Hagee is Matt Taibbi, who is a contributing editor at Rolling Stone. He went undercover into Hagee’s church and writes about it extensively in his book The Great Derangement. He describes a scene where Hagee explains his view of environmentalists:
“They want to use the environment to force America to reduce its population. And how do they want to do that? Through abortion.”
It’s no longer a campaign issue, but people shouldn’t ignore the fact that a lunatic like Hagee has enough influence that McCain felt it was worth pursuing his endorsement just because he has denounced him. It means McCain certainly disagrees with Hagee(which was obvious anyway) but, Hagee is still something which needs to be addressed by the larger civil society. He’s excercising his freedom of speech which is good, but extremists like Hagee need to be fought by disseminating the truth.
May 27, 2008 at 1:33 pm
Hey, at least we arent forced to defens sitting in Wrights church for 20 years.
May 28, 2008 at 12:07 am
Wright’s remarks don’t approach advocating the holocaust(given that if God sent Hitler, Hitler is simply doing the will of God and thus is good.) I’m not saying Wright is right, but Hagee is just on another level.