Street Prophets

Nobody Expects The Spanish Inquisition!

Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 12:35:50 PM PDT

Dear David Brooks:

I wish you'd reconsider your terminology. In your latest column, you say that the "Democratic Party has turned liberalism from a philosophy into a secular religion," and that liberals have instituted a "inquisition" against Joe Lieberman.

I find this line of reasoning offensive. First of all, the good members of the Church of Liberalism are too busy contradicting Genesis and using victim representatives to sanctify sex and death. That's quite a workload, and it doesn't even include our ongoing efforts to tear school children away from their prayers at the flagpole for forced same-sex marriages! Sometimes, I think if it weren't for brie and cheese, we just wouldn't be able to finish everything we start in a day.

As for inquisitions, well. As a progressive Christian, I have been accused many times of participating in the same institution that created the Inquisition. Never mind that that the last Inquisition was established over 500 years ago. I'm a Christian, which apparently means that I am liable for every wrong ever done in the name of Christ in the past 2,000 years. This makes cocktail parties very difficult. I'm sure you understand.

But here's my point: I need the Inquisition for intimidation purposes. Without it, the Church of Liberalism is likely to explode in chaos and anarchy: spontaneous peace songs, wife-swapping, contested primaries, and other episodes of civil disorder. Why, the only thing that holds back the rabid lambs is the threat of a good inquisition!

I'm sure you know where I'm going with this. Boy, I'd really like to get Connecticut to legalize wacky tobaccy, deny the divinity of Christ, and put all citizens to work in the bit-mines of the Overlord Kos. Oh, and legalize man-on-dog sex too, just to get back at Rick Santorum. But I don't think we're going to get there if you give the rabble the idea that they can start an inquisition against Joe Lieberman. They'll toss him out too soon, and settle for halfway measures like demanding accountability from the Bush administration on Iraq and setting pharmaceutical policy for the benefit of the consumer, rather than well-connected drug companies. We can't have that. It hardly helps me work up a good froth around the mouth.

I'm going to need a good cudgel to keep these people in line. Please, Mr. Brooks, I'm begging you. I have the entire blogosphere arrayed against me. Let me keep the only weapon tool I have.

I know that it's terribly difficult for a highly-paid New York Times columnist such as yourself to keep all of this stuff straight, so I've included some photo illustrations:

This is an inquisition:

Whoops! This is an inquisition:

This is voters exercising their democratic rights:

The confusion is understandable.

Well, anyway, I hope this has been helpful.

Smoochies, Pastor Dan

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  • You think you've been insulted? :) (0 / 0)

    How do you think we Jewish supporters of Lamont feel? We get accused of being inquisitors because we value democracy more than... hell, I can't figure out what support for Lieberman is supposed to indicate to Brooks, except maybe aversion to progress.

    The people who claim anti-Semitism is part of the Lamont campaign, or who use or evoke anti-Semitic imagery to slander people who are sick of Lieberman's anti-democratic, anti-Democratic, and pro-war stances are doing us all a great disservice.

    Thwarting the forces of conservatism since 1978.

    by wiscmass on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 01:01:02 PM PDT

    • wiscmass, isn't always (0 / 0)

      the Jews who bear the brunt of the suffering?  My heart goes out to you.  If he loses you will be blamed for turning on a fellow Jew, and if he wins, you will be blamed for sticking with him, just because he is Jewish, when he does not deserve to serve as a Democratic senator. ;o)

      I am jesting, but, as you well know, there is truth in what I say.

  • inquisition (0 / 0)

    isn't that technically what the "congregation for the doctrine of the faith" (not sure I'm getting the name right) is in the Catholic Church? only now to the extent that they are "meanies" they are more into stamping out the "red menace" of liberation theology and that sort of thing. So to the extent that political liberals have a legitimate interest in enforcing "doctrines" of liberal political thought, like the idea it's bad to be a corporate sell-out, I don't think it's totally unreasonable to associate that with the idea of "inquisition."

    But this supposes that it's possible to separate "inquisition" as doctrinal enforcement from "burn the heretic." Which it probably isn't really; whether we liberal opponents of Lieberman's re-election are protecting reasonable interests or if we are meanies partly depends on one's point of view. But, honestly political speech is pretty mean sometimes and does have a "burn the heretic" tone. It's not like all the blogs have a high commitment to "speaking truth in love." Personally I think it might help sometimes.

  • Hilarious, PD. (0 / 0)

    Did you send this to Brooks.  I hope so.  I am continually amazed that a man with such a mushy-thinking brain gets a forum in and is paid big bucks by the "newspaper of record" for writing down what comes out of his mushy-thinking brain and putting it out there for us all to see.
  • it's just democracy (0 / 0)

    When the people who represent you in Congress aren't doing what you want, you either run against them yourself or find somebody who will. That's not an inquisition, it's democracy.
  • Nerdy nit-picking. (0 / 0)

    That picture of the witch doesn't look like the result of an inquisition.  It looks like the result of a witch trial.  Ever since those French Enlightenment critics of the church made the mistake of conflating the two, there's been an assumption that the inquisition was primarily in the business of hunting witches.  It was primarily in the business of hunting heretics (which I also don't particularly cherish).  

    Witches generally faced secular courts, not church courts as much.  And according to Gustav Henningsen's account in The Witches' Advocate: Basque Witchcraft and the Spanish Inquisition, the inquisition in that area saved many an accused witch from the stake because their methods of interrogation showed  that the charges weren't accurate.

    </pedantic attention to detail rather than main point>

    AWESOME diary, overall.  You rock, PD!

    The Wine of Youth ferments this night in the veins of God - Alfred de Musset.

    by dirkster42 on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 02:03:08 PM PDT

    • MY BAD!!!!!!!!!! (0 / 0)

      Not picture of witch.  Picture of Anabaptist Martyr from the Martyr's Mirror.

      But I thought Utrecht was Protestant by 1544.  Now I need to confirm that.

      History - so many details!

      The Wine of Youth ferments this night in the veins of God - Alfred de Musset.

      by dirkster42 on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 03:35:28 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      • Brother dirkster... (0 / 0)

        I have an ear-to-ear smile right now!  It's so nice to know there are kindred spirits out there.  

        I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use. - Galileo

        by Mahanoy on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 06:51:48 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        • So happy to oblige, brother mahanoy! (0 / 0)

          And with a little digging, I learned that the Netherlands were not officially Protestant until after the Dutch rebellion in the 1570s!  I should have remembered that from quals reading, but I guess my overall sense of Holland as basically Protestant proved a filter stronger than historical facts (until today).

          The Wine of Youth ferments this night in the veins of God - Alfred de Musset.

          by dirkster42 on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 07:29:59 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

  • And In the Todays News, (0 / 0)

    "I have here in my hand, a clear confession by the Far Left Religious Community of their plans to take over our GOD GIVEN RIGHT to live FREE of EVIL!!! AS GOD COMMANDS US TO!!"

    It was the wife-swapping. It always scares 'em 'cause the wives might find another guy more interesting.
    :P

    Our gift is Free Will. Infinite in Potential, limited only in Experience.

    by R Elland on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 03:52:35 PM PDT

  • Of course, the good news is (0 / 0)

    That we have arisen to the point that our political actions are worthy of comment and criticism.

    Imagine the squawking if we upset the well ordered apple cart.  

    The rightwing has been doing this sort of stuff for decades to very little notable fanfare.  They pour in out-of-state money and expert consultants to win individual local races, they hand pick candidates, run 527 ads, jam phonebanks, steal lawnsigns, the works.  For them, this is how the game is played.  For us, a bit of blogging and out-of-state fundraising is mounting an "inquisition".

    Whatever....

    • Think they're getting pissy now? (0 / 0)

      Wait until Aug 8.
      If Lieberman goes down, that's REALLY gonna set off the MSM about the horrors of Netroots.
      "The American public getting together on the Internet to come up with their own solutions??! How.... unAmerican!!"

      Our gift is Free Will. Infinite in Potential, limited only in Experience.

      by R Elland on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 04:26:23 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  • Brooks the Hack (0 / 0)

    David Brooks can't really be blamed for his propensity to be a neoconservative hack. I'ts just that he cannot control himself when Leo Strauss starts channeling himself through the babbler!
  • That is some high-quality snark, my friend! (0 / 0)

    I'm just basking in the glow of one hell of a funny "LTE."  

    Ahhh...  

    Now, are you going to send it?  

    I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use. - Galileo

    by Mahanoy on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 06:47:26 PM PDT

  • NOBODY expects the Spanish Inquisition! (0 / 0)

    Ximinez [with a cruel leer]: Now -- you will stay in the Comfy Chair until lunch time, with only a cup of coffee at eleven. [aside, to Biggles] Is that really all it is?
    Biggles: Yes, lord.
    Ximinez: I see. I suppose we make it worse by shouting a lot, do we? Confess, woman. Confess! Confess! Confess! Confess!

    "There ain't no sanity clause." Chico Marx http://wfmu.org/playlists/RX

    by Asbury Park on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 07:37:03 PM PDT

  • ROFL! Liberal? Damn right! (0 / 0)

    Classic:
    That's quite a workload, and it doesn't even include our ongoing efforts to tear school children away from their prayers at the flagpole for forced same-sex marriages! Sometimes, I think if it weren't for brie and cheese, we just wouldn't be able to finish everything we start in a day.
    PD, be very glad I wasn't drinking when I read that. You would've owed me a new monitor. ;-) I also thought this was headed toward Mel Brooks territory.

    Doug.
    (...scurrying off to watch History of the World)

    Meddle not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup.

    by risasperson on Mon Jul 10, 2006 at 08:09:07 PM PDT

  • auto da fe? What's an auto da fe? (0 / 0)

    It's what you oughtn't to do.. but you do anyway!

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