Race And the Religious Right: More than just waffles
by Adele M. Stan, The Media Consortium
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- At the annual Washington gathering of the
Christian right sponsored by the political arm of the Family Research Council, the
Republican Party's top emissaries have come in past years to bow
before some 2000 right-wing foot-soldiers and the leaders who command
them. Howver, this year's Value Voter Summit, a bit light on GOP
dignitaries, made less news in its speaker line-up than it did for the
sale of a particular brand of breakfast food:
Obama Waffles.
In the far corner of the exhibit hall at the Values Voter Summit two
gonzo entrepreneurs hawked a product they described as "political
satire": a box of waffle mix emblazoned with a cartoon image of a
bug-eyed, toothy, dark-lipped Barack Obama eyeing a plate of waffles.
A pat of butter on the waffles is stamped "2008". On the top flap,
the Obama carton appears in a turban, next to an arrow printed with
the text: "Point box toward Mecca for tastier waffles." The box of
mix is a crude send-up of Aunt Jemima's Pancake Mix, which once
featured stereotyped image of a round-faced, turbaned black woman as
its trademark.
Although FRC Action claimed in a statement to have demanded that the exhibitors dismantle their
display "when the content of the materials was brought to the
attention of FRC Action senior officials" on Saturday, the truth is
that by the time Obama Waffles creators W. Mark Whitlock and Bob
DeMoss began breaking down their display, the conference was winding
down and most exhibitors in the hall had already pulled out of Dodge.
I made my way through a row of unstaffed and abandoned booths on
Saturday afternoon, arriving just as Whitlock was packing up unsold
product. Although, according to the FRC Action statement, Whitlock
and DeMoss had already received the equivalent of cease-and-desist
orders from conference organizers, Whitlock, dressed in a cook's apron
and hat, was happy to take my $10 and fork over a box.
Taking FRC Action at the word of its executive director, David Nammo,
a trusting reader may accept that the organization's leaders were
unaware of what Whitlock and DeMoss were hawking for two and a half
days before the exhibit was shut down. But Whitlock and DeMoss are
hardly strangers to leaders of the religious right, and links to
racists (and, indeed, the use of dog-whistle references for racists)
are hardly new for Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research
Council, a spin-off of James Dobson's Focus on the Family empire.
According to a general letter of reference written by DeMoss on behalf of Whitlock (posted by nisperos, a savvy reader at the Denver Post's Web site), the two men met when both met while working at Focus on the Family, which Whitlock's resume dates at "1991 - 1992", when he served as a producer on Dobson's "Focus on the Family" daily radio
program.
The two worked together again, some years later, at FamilyLife
Publishers, an endeavor of the Campus Crusade for Christ -- one of the
very first religious-right organizations. Whitlock's resume
shows him having worked for FamilyLIfe from 1992 - 2004. During that
time he served one year on the event team putting together the
religious right's Congress on the Urban Family, which perhaps
explains where the author developed an apparent affection for hip-hop
music, as evidenced by the bonus "recipe rap" that appears on the side
of the Obama's Waffles box:
Barry's Bling Bling Waffle RingYo, B-rock here droppin' waffle knowledge
Spellin' it out, 'cause a graduated college
Some say I waffle so fast, Barry's causin' whiplash
Just doin' my part, made wafflin' a fine art
For a waffle wit style, like Chicago's Magnificent Mile
Spray whipped crem around the edge
Shake it first like Sister Sledge
The say wit me, I can be as waffly as I wanna be!
(That goes out to my Ludacris posse)
Whitlock recently wrote a study guide to accompany the movie "Nim's Island," a production of FoxFaith, a division of Rupert Murdoch's 20th Century Fox. (Hat tip: FireDogLake's
Julia.)
DeMoss, Whitlock's partner in the OW venture, also has some friends in
high places, having served as the co-author of four books with Tim
LaHaye, best known at the multi-million-selling author of the Left
Behind series of novels. With LaHaye, DeMoss penned four novels
targeted at young adults that include a cautionary tale
about an evil abortion doctor that centers on a teen gone missing, his
absence noticed only after days after he has vanished because his
household is headed by a single mom who spends long hours at work.
LaHaye, DeMoss' co-author, is one of the top leaders of the religious
right, having co-founded the Council for National Policy, the
super-secret umbrella groups that reportedly vetted
GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin on the eve of the
Republican National Convention. LaHaye's wife, Beverly, is the
founder of the influential Concerned Women for
America, which was an early proponent of "gay recovery" therapy
designed to make heterosexuals out of LGBT people.
It is perhaps not surprising that material as racist as that peddled
by Whitlock and DeMoss at the Values Voter Summit failed to set off
alarm bells among Family Research Council and FRC Action leaders
until reporters began inquiring about the Obama Waffles stand. FRC
President Tony Perkins spoke as recently as 2001 before the Council of Conservative
Citizens, a well-documented white supremacist group, and directed the
1996 Louisiana congressional campaign of former Congressman Woody
Jenkins from the campaign lists of former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard
David Duke. Perkins paid Duke $82,000 for the lists. Jenkins served
as the first executive director of the Council for National Policy,
1982-1985, and again in 1987.
More recently, while reporting for Church & State magazine, I saw Perkins address a crowd of hard-core Christian right believers in 2007 at the Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church of the late Rev. D. James Kennedy. In his speech before those assembled in the church sanctuary at the "Reclaiming America for Christ" conference, Perkins blew the white supremacist dog whistle known as the biblical story of Phineas. (In this instance, Perkins used the Phineas story to make the case against Muslims, urging the assembled Christians to "take action" in the way of Phineas.)
"I am here advocating for Christian citizenship, Perkins
said.Lest any of the assembled miss the point, Perkins offered up the story
of Phineas, grandson of Moses' brother Aaron, from Numbers 25. Phineas
was rewarded by God with an "everlasting priesthood" for killing an
Israelite and his Midian lover because God had forbidden the mixing of
the men of Israel with the women of that tribe.[...]
"We read that Phineas arose and he took action?," Perkins said.
"Not only is prayer required?," Perkins continued. "I warn you that if
you begin to pray for our nation that, at some point in time, you?re
gonna be praying and you're gonna feel a tap on your shoulder and
hear, 'Son, daughter, I've heard your prayer; now I want you to do
something about it.'"Just in case his message should be misconstrued, however, Perkins
offered this caveat: "Now, let me be clear, in case the media's here,"
he said, "I'm not advocating you go home and get a pitchfork out of
your storage shed and run into your neighbor's house." Phineas, the
Bible tells us, used a javelin.
.
So maybe the FRC people, as their statement suggests, did simply get
sloppy and miss the fact that a product to which they say they object
for its "coarseness and bias" sat, essentially, on the shelves of the
conference store, for a couple of days. Maybe the co-author of one of
the religious right's top honchos went unnoticed by FRC folks,
mistaken for just another yahoo hawking an amateur attempt at humor.
Maybe the leaders of the Values Voter Summit have a race problem anyway.
-----------------
Adele M. Stan
Executive Editor, Syndicated Reporting Project
The Media Consortium
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