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WSWS : Obituary
Jerry Falwell, founder of the right-wing Moral Majority, dead
at 73
By David Walsh
17 May 2007
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Jerry Falwell, one of the leaders of the Christian Right in
the US, died Tuesday in his office in Lynchburg, Virginia at the
age of 73. Although his brand of fundamentalist hucksterism has
been around for a long time in America, Falwell belonged to a
generation of preachers who enjoyed unprecedented success as religious
entrepreneurs, television personalities and even political leaders.
While the evangelists death has been dealt with in a
somewhat muted fashion in the mass media, a sign of the decline
in Falwells own personal standing, such treatment as he
has received has been generally respectful. Television news programs
inevitably tell their viewers that Falwell was an influential
figure, who left his mark on America, although
he was an individual who aroused controversy.
Typically, Katie Couric of CBS News told her audience
that the death of Falwell closed one of the most controversial
chapters of American political and religious history.... Revere
him or revile him, Jerry Falwells name is one for the history
books. This explains nothing. Why should this character,
mediocre in every department except his ability to appeal to the
worst in his fellow citizens, have become a name in any history
book?
In an especially stupid segment on CNNs morning program
Wednesday, correspondent Brianna Keilar offered her description
of the scene in Lynchburg: People here are teary-eyed, they
are grieving for the loss of Reverend Falwell. But one member
of the church also told me, you know, hes in a better place.
And even in death his message will live on. They say he lived
what he preached. And so forth.
In fact, as a religious conman and bigot, Falwell contributed
what he could to the debasement of American political, social
and cultural life.
Born in Lynchburg in 1933, the son of a flamboyant businessman
(and sometime bootlegger) and a devoutly Christian mother, Falwell
discovered his calling while a college student. He dropped out
of Lynchburg College and transferred to Baptist Bible College
in Springfield, Missouri. What was the atmosphere at this worthy
institution during the height of the anticommunist Cold War in
the early 1950s? One can only imagine.
Back in Lynchburg in 1956, Falwell organized his own church
and soon afterward began radio and television broadcasts of the
Old-Time Gospel Hour. He was a proponent of segregation
at the time, telling a local paper in 1964 that the new Civil
Rights Act had been misnamed: It should be considered civil
wrongs rather than civil rights. His television program
hosted prominent racists such as Govs. Lester Maddox of Georgia
and George Wallace of Alabama.
Some years earlier Falwell had declared that the famed 1954
Supreme Court decision striking down school segregation would
never have been made if Chief Justice Earl Warren and the
other members of the court had known Gods word and
had desired to do the Lords will.
Falwell might have remained one of dozens and dozens of preachers
with local followings had it not been for significant changes
in American social relations.
Following the overwhelming defeat of Republican Barry Goldwater
in the 1964 election to Democrat Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon
sought to redirect the Republican Party toward the construction
of a new mass base for right-wing economic and social policies.
This became known as the Southern Strategy, as the
Republicans sought to whip up a racist backlash against the civil
rights movement, particularly in the Southern states. After a
century of one-party rule by the Democrats, the South was transformed
into a stronghold of the Republican Party in the 1970s and 1980s.
As the Republican Party recast itself as a right-wing, quasi-theocratic
party, and the ability of fundamentalism to play a leading role
ceased to be primarily a regional phenomenon, Falwell rode the
wave to national prominence. Along with a number of others, he
launched the Moral Majority in 1979on a program of imposing
fundamentalist Christian dogma as state policy, ferocious anticommunism
and anti-welfare-state economicswhich was credited with
assisting Ronald Reagan in winning the presidency in 1980.
If historian Douglas Brinkley is correct that Falwell set
the tone and tenor for the 1980s, it is a sad commentary
on the decade. In any event, he certainly both embodied and agitated
for the lurch to the right that has occurred in official American
political life.
Falwell inveighed against gay rights, feminism and, in general,
any signs of social liberalism. The Lynchburg preacher denounced
Martin Luther King and others for their left-wing associations
and declared that Labor unions should study and read the
Bible instead of asking for more money. When people get right
with God, they are better workers. In 1979 he told his followers
that he yearned for the day when America wont have
any public schools. The churches will take them over again and
Christians will be running them. He opposed sanctions against
the apartheid regime in South Africa in the 1980s, warning of
a Soviet-backed revolution.
Falwell later wrote that he was convinced that a majority existed
in America that could turn back the flood tide of moral
permissiveness, family breakdown and general capitulation to evil
and to foreign policies such as Marxism-Leninism.
The actual political alliance was bound up less with such apocalyptic
moralism than with the earthly material interests of the American
upper class. Falwell and dozens of other television preachers
helped mobilize disoriented sections of the middle class and working
class behind a program which resulted in a dramatic transfer of
wealth from working people to the super-rich, as well as enriching
a sizeable layer of the upper middle class, including Falwell
himself.
The premise of the Moral Majority proved to be a fraud, even
in its own terms. Successive Republican administrations talked
the language of the Christian fundamentalists and made significant
attacks on democratic and constitutional rights, but these measures
encountered a deep-rooted popular opposition. The promised theocratic
transformation of American life did not materialize, and Falwell
and many of his fellow televangelists, like Pat Robertson, had
to continually up the dosage of their extreme-right demagogy,
embracing increasingly bizarre theories.
The election of Bill Clinton in 1992, in particular, seemed
to set Falwell off. He threw himself into the campaign to destabilize
and bring down the Clinton administration, producing a fanciful
documentary, concocted of lies and innuendo, known
as The Clinton Chronicles. The video hinted at the most
outrageous crimes, from cocaine-smuggling to murder.
In 1999 Falwell declared that the Antichrist was probably on
earth, and he would be Jewish and male.
Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, Falwell notoriously
declared: I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists,
and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians who are actively
trying to make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU, People
For the American Way, all of them who have tried to secularize
America ... I point the finger in their face and say you
helped this happen. He declared that the terrorist
attacks were Gods judgment on America for throwing
God out of the public square, out of the schools. The abortionists
have got to bear some burden for this because God will not be
mocked.
Such comments were criticized or even ridiculed by the American
media, but these same people had been passing off this ignoramus
as a serious moral leader and statesman for two decades. They
bore considerable responsibility for his having a national audience
to begin with.
By the time of his death, Falwells moment had clearly
passed. Even at the height of his influence, it would be mistaken
to believe, as the media and his own followers claimed, that his
ideas ever had mass support. Falwell became
a national figure in a period of political reaction when organizations
to which broad layers of the population looked for leadership
or assistancethe trade unions, civil rights organizations,
the Democratic Partywere in the process of decomposing or
dramatically shifting to the right. The relative prominence of
the religious right has come in large measure by political default,
as well as enormous subsidies from corporate America and the wealthy.
The vacuum of progressive politics in America has brought all
sorts of people to the fore and, in many cases, made them rich.
To give the man his due, Falwell was obviously a savvy business
operator. He transformed his humble church, started with $1,000
in 1956, into a massive propaganda and money-making operation.
He made use of various technologies as they emerged to promote
his cause. His Liberty University in Lynchburg has nearly 20,000
students, each paying some $16,000 tuition a year.
Religion in America is big business. Total retail sales of
religious productsincluding books, music, gifts and cardsamounted
to some $7 billion a year in 2005, according to BusinessWeek.
Of the $260.18 billion in charitable contributions Americans made
the same year, $93.18 billion went to religious organizations.
As we noted at the outset, religious hucksterism is not something
new in the US. Such people have been around for a long time, since
colonial days. The early twentieth century saw no shortage, in
the Billy Sundays and Aimee Semple McPhersons. Sinclair Lewis
(Elmer Gantry), H.L. Mencken and others did their share
to discredit the charlatans and religious backwardness in general.
Writing in the Baltimore Evening Sun in September 1925
in the aftermath of the death of William Jennings Bryan, notorious
for his campaign against the theory of evolution in the Scopes
Trial, Mencken commented: The way to deal with superstition
is not to be polite to it, but to tackle it with all arms, and
so rout it, cripple it, and make it forever infamous and ridiculous.
Is it, perchance, cherished by persons who should know better?
Then their folly should be brought out into the light of day,
and exhibited there in all its hideousness until they flee from
it, hiding their heads in shame.
For a generation Falwell personified the smarminess, hypocrisy
and thinly veiled thuggery of a retrograde social trend. All in
all, his was a baleful presence in American life.
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