Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Kevin Kruse — How Big Business Invented the Theology of 'Christian Libertarianism' and the Gospel of Free Markets


Lesson in American history.
In a 1939 address to the US Chamber of Commerce, H.W. Prentis of the Armstrong Cork Company proposed the way forward. “Economic facts are important, but they will never check the virus of collectivism,” he warned; “the only antidote is a revival of American patriotism and religious faith.” Prentis’ speech thrilled the Chamber and boardrooms across America. Soon propelled to NAM’s presidency, he continued to tell corporate leaders to get religion. His 1940 presidential address, promoted heavily in the Wall Street Journal and broadcast live on both ABC and CBS radio, promised that business’s salvation lay in “a strengthening of the spiritual concept that underlies our American way of life.”
Accordingly, corporate America began marketing a new fusion of faith, freedom and free enterprise. These values had been conflated before, of course, but in the early 1940s they manifested in a decidedly new form. Previously, when Americans thought about the relationship between religion, politics and business, they gave little thought to the role of the national state, largely because it was so small it gave little thought to any of them. But now that the federal government had grown so significantly, corporate leaders sought to convince Americans that the New Deal threatened not only the economic freedoms of business leaders, but the religious and political freedoms of ordinary citizens as well. They worked tirelessly throughout the 1940s and 1950s to advance a new ideology that one observer aptly anointed “Christian libertarianism.”
Initially, businessmen outsourced this campaign to an unlikely set of champions: ministers. Though this decision seemed unorthodox, the logic was laid out clearly in private. “Recent polls indicate that America’s clergymen are a powerful influence in determining the thinking and acting of the people in the economic realm,” noted one organizer, and so business leaders should “enlist large numbers of clergymen” to “act as minutemen, carrying the message upon all proper occasions throughout their several communities.”....
With this generous funding, ministers in these organizations spread the arguments of Christian libertarianism. “I hold,” Reverend Fifield asserted, “that the blessings of capitalism come from God. A system that provides so much for the common good and happiness must flourish under the favor of the Almighty.” But concern for the “common good” was uncommon in their arguments, which tended instead to emphasize the values of individualism. In their telling, Christianity and capitalism were indistinguishable on this issue: both systems rested on the fundamental belief that an individual would rise or fall on his or her own merit alone. Just as the saintly ascended to Heaven and sinners fell to Hell, the worthy rose to riches while the wretched were resigned to the poorhouse.
Any political system that meddled with this divinely prescribed order of things was nothing less than a “pagan” abomination. Indeed, they argued, the welfare state stood in direct opposition to the Ten Commandments. “We emphasize the interdependence of freedom and Christianity,” the Christian Freedom Foundation announced in its founding statement. “When the First Commandment ‘Thou shalt have no other Gods before me’ is violated and the state is exalted to take the place of God as the highest authority over the actions of man, freedom is suppressed. Conversely, Christianity can thrive only where human beings live under a system of free institutions and government by the people.” The welfare state, a CFF member argued elsewhere, violated the eighth and tenth commandments by encouraging the poor to covet what the wealthy had and “forcibly taking the wealth of the more enterprising citizens for distribution to others.” And because it spread scurrilous rumors about the rich and made extravagant promises to the poor that it could never deliver, the New Deal violated the ninth commandment’s injunction against bearing false witness, too....
AlterNet
How Big Business Invented the Theology of 'Christian Libertarianism' and the Gospel of Free Markets
Kevin Kruse, Alternet

8 comments:

Dan Lynch said...

OT, but the budget deficit has fallen to its lowest level since the last time the economy crashed.

Matt Franko said...

Good find Dan...

Ok here we go then it's put up or shut up time for the "deficit is too small" doomsday crowd.... Let's put a clock on it please... Or else go join the schiff people...

Leading govt spending is up over $1T (33%) annual since then while bank credit is only up marginally if at all...

Rsp

Matt Franko said...

Tom, provocative article where do I start....

"One nation UNDER God... With LIBERTY..."

How can one be "UNDER" God and yet still possess "liberty"????

These libertarians are lunatics...

Here it is in a NUT shell:

"Christianity and capitalism were indistinguishable on this issue: both systems rested on the fundamental belief that an individual would rise or fall on his or her own merit alone. Just as the saintly ascended to Heaven and sinners fell to Hell, the worthy rose to riches while the wretched were resigned to the poorhouse."

They probably still believe that people born with disabilities somehow deserve it based on what the parents did .... Like the old pagans...

And Hel is the Norse goddess of the underworld, the daughter of Loki brother of Thor son of Odin.... These morons are reading a Stan Lee comic book not the Greek Scriptures.... More paganism...

...
"

Roger Erickson said...

Dan Lynch,
“Religious & patriotic fervor are important, but they will never outlast the virus of reality,the only antidote is a revival of American freedom, intelligence and adaptive logic.”

We've just come full-circle, and are bouncing off the opposite cultural tolerance limit.

Where should I give that inverted speech? At the same Chamber of Commerce?

Or, what's the inverse of the Chamber of Commerce? The streets of reality?

Is it still possible to crowdfund a Soap Box? :)

Roger Erickson said...

It's amazing how people on all sides get caught up in narrow definitions, while refusing to look at the details of changing definitions .... and hence changing contexts.

To me, it boils down to this.
J&J Sixpack have inadequate income, and hence no liquidity.
Corp & upper class are uselessly hoarding declared national spending (based on the erroneous outlook that non-labor "capital" defines value, rather than seeing our citizenry stock as the definition of aggregate value.)

That outlook can last only as long as frauds have enough dumb serfs to play off against one another.

It's a boring game, pursued only by frauds dumb & obsessed enough to be interested, and allowed by an electorate ignorant enough to not notice ... yet.

Paraphrasing Kruschev .... "We could have been a GREAT species!"

Instead, all we have is the biggest output gap in history.

Output gaps always rise to exceed capabilities? :(
Because disorganization always rises to meet aggregate options? :(

There a better way. When will this electorate notice?

Roger Erickson said...

ps: Time to put the cork back in the bottle, Prentis. The Chamber got drunk & is breaking up the citizenry stock, not just the furniture.

Dan Lynch said...

@Matt, no one can predict when the economy will crash because the trigger is usually collapsing private debt. As we saw during the Clinton years, we can even run a surplus for a little while and the economy will keep chugging along until the private debt bubble finally pops.

What we can say is that the private sector is being squeezed and sooner or later something has to give. I've been calling for a recession this year and see no reason to change my outlook. We've already had one negative quarter, if Q2 comes in negative then we're officially there.

It's just math.

Sorry to hijack the "Gospel of Free Markets" thread. :-)

Matt Franko said...

"“When the First Commandment ‘Thou shalt have no other Gods before me’ is violated and the state is exalted to take the place of God as the highest authority over the actions of man, freedom is suppressed."

Ok here is the Lord to Pilate: "Pilate, then, is saying to Him, "To me you are not speaking! Are you not aware that I have authority to release you and have authority to crucify you?"
11 Jesus answered him, "No authority have you against Me in anything, except it were given to you from above. " John 19

Mankind's authority is delegated by God thru the magistrates in the civil govt institutions...

Paul expands on this here:

"Let every soul be subject to the superior authorities, for there is no authority except under God. Now those which are, have been set under God,
2 so that he who is resisting an authority has withstood God's mandate. Now those who have withstood, will be getting judgment for themselves,
3 for magistrates are not a fear to the good act, but to the evil." Romans 13

Seems like it shouldnt be too hard to understand... unless you're a true moron/libertarian and generally dont understand and often actually resist authority... and then to top it off, when we put actual moron/libertarians IN the majesterial positions of authority like we do today, WE can see what mankind gets ie our current dysfunctional govt institutions...

rsp,