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Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth

ReligionIf you've been waiting until the Christian fascist movement started filling stadiums with young people and hyping them up to do battle in "God's army" to get alarmed, wait no longer. Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth

Battle Cry for Theocracy!

By Sunsara Taylor

If you've been waiting until the Christian fascist movement started filling stadiums with young people and hyping them up to do battle in "God's army" to get alarmed, wait no longer.

In recent weeks, Battle Cry, a Christian fundamentalist youth movement, has attracted more than 25,000 to mega-rally rock concerts in San Francisco and Detroit and this weekend they plan to fill Wachovia Stadium in Philadelphia.

They claim their religion and values are under attack but, amidst spectacular lightshows, hummers, Navy Seals, and military imagery on stage, it is Battle Cry that has declared war on everyone else! Their leader, Ron Luce, insists: "This is war. And Jesus invites us to get into the action, telling us that the violent--the 'forceful' ones--will lay hold of the kingdom."

A glimpse at Battle Cry's Honor Academy, which trains 500 youth each year and preaches that homosexuality and masturbation are sins, reveals a lot about what kind of society they are fighting for. Interns are forbidden to listen to secular music, watch R-rated movies or date. Men can't use the internet unsupervised and the length of women's skirts is regulated. The logic behind this, that men must be protected from the sin of sexual temptation, is what drives Islamic fundamentalists to shroud women in burkhas!

Behind their multi-million dollar operation that sends more than 5,000 missionaries to more than thirty-four countries each year, are some of the most powerful and extreme religious lunatics in the country. Their partners include Pat Robertson (who got a call from Karl Rove to discuss Alito before the nomination was made public), Ted Haggard (who brags that his concerns will be responded to by the White House within 24 hours), Jerry Falwell (who blamed September 11th on homosexuals, feminists, pagans, and abortionists), and others. Their events have been addressed by Barbara Bush (via video) as well as former President Gerry Ford. This weekend's event will include Franklyn Graham who has ministered to George Bush and publicly proclaimed that Islam is an "evil religion."

What most of these figures have in common is their insistence that the Bible be read literally and obeyed as the inerrant word of God. And, as Ron Luce leads youth to pray, "I will keep my eyes on the battle, submitting to Your code even when I don't understand.outside my comfort zone in the battle zone," it would be foolish to expect that there is any part of the Bible's literal horrors this movement would be unwilling to enforce. That includes stoning disobedient children and non-virgin brides (Deuteronomy 21:18-21 and 22:13-21), executing gays (Leviticus 20:13), and keeping slaves (Peter 2:18).

Already they staged a protest on the steps of San Francisco's City Hall precisely because they were "the very city hall steps where several months ago 'gay marriages' were celebrated." Their answer to the scourge of rape and violence against women is to end divorce, spread ignorance, insist on virginity--the very things that will more entrap women in these nightmares. And this Friday, they are planning rallies at fifty City Halls nation-wide.

Of course, like the President who gave Ron Luce an appointment to the White House Advisory Commission on Drug-Free Communities, Battle Cry tells its share of bald-faced lies. For one, they claim that "a society fortified by biblical principals and a strong moral code...is the heritage our forefathers fought and died to secure for us." But the word "God" never appears in the Constitution. After three-and-a-half months of debate about what should go into the document that would govern the land, the framers drafted a constitution that is secular.

Battle Cry also claims America has been "set aside for God's purposes--a country established for good and fruitfully blessed so that we might take God's message to the ends of the earth." It is revealing that for all their talk about the value of life and the evils of violent imagery, Battle Cry never speaks against the real violence and loss of life being inflicted by U.S. troops in Iraq.

Still, there is one thing that Battle Cry gets right: this country is in the midst of a deep moral crisis. We are indeed living through times when business-as-usual is unconscionable.

As the Bush regime wages unjust wars and conducts torture in our names, as they leave New Orleans to rot, and drag us closer each day to a theocracy where abortion and birth control are banned, science is pulled under, and gays are persecuted, it is no wonder that young people are searching for meaning and morality.

The truth is, however, youth will not find the morality they need in a stadium listening to Ron Luce preach about religious war and intolerance. And they won't find it while buying Battle Cry's keepsake dog-tags.

These young people need to be challenged to look around them and think for themselves.

I am confident that if they do, many of them may find that the truly moral way to live is to throw their tremendous energies and dreams of a better world into stopping this madness and driving out the Bush regime.

This generation--and their counterparts all around the world--will have to live with the consequences of this culture war, one way or another.


http://www.counterpunch.com/taylor05112006.html

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The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Admin on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 01:11 PM UTC
Do Infoshop supporters want to organize against this new fascist youth movement? We can provide resources for organizing.

I suggest organizing actions and spectacles which ridicule this movement. Holy rollers usually have no sense of humor about themselves and the young people who go to these events are often being forced to attend by parents or they want to hook up with other hormone-enhanced teens.

They are hypocrites. Let's have some fun with them.

C.
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 02:34 PM UTC
I agree; If you can't wow 'em with wisdom, baffle 'em with bullshit.
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 03:34 PM UTC
I have been doing some work on a website that is intended to promote Fideism amongst young Christians as well as providing a critique of both sides of the culture war.

winepress nate
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 05:28 PM UTC
care to share that website? i mean, it doesn't sound real interesting nesecarily.....
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 04:12 AM UTC
oh, Im still working on it, I will post the adress once it is up and running. That could be a while, work takes most of my energy.

winepress nate
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 06:03 PM UTC
Chuck is absolutely right.

Make fun of them, but carefully.

Looking through the group's propaganda, I am not convinved that they are
all that dangerous. It just seems a particularly well-designed - graphically,
culturally, stylistically - version of previous youth outreach ministries.

They are like the International Noise Conspiracy of the Christian youth culture
movement.

Snappy looking faux revolution.

But always a good place to recruit for anarchy!
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 05:54 AM UTC
To those thinking that these people can be recruited, well, a short look at the wikipedia article on them makes me doubt. One of their doctrines is: "We will respect the authorities placed in our lives, even though some may not live as honorably as they should."

Bleh. Sounds like opposing them is the way to go - good luck with that. Am glad that Australia's Christian-fascist movement is small at the moment...

As to eliminating Christianity generally - as nice as that sounds, forcing anarchism into a secular-only thing is a Bad Idea (IMO). Christianity has made plenty of contributions to anarchism, so it shouldn't really be opposed as an anarchist thing. If you feel the need - do it from an atheist rather than anarchist point of view...
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Renegade on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 05:48 PM UTC
hell yea! i want to march into their rally wearing a t-shirt that reads "unwed and pregnant" which I am. i am 18...
let's oppose them!

---
~~~I know things~~~
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 05:49 PM UTC
Although harassing this group of lunatics would be fun, I think a better strategy would be to try more broadly to destroy Christianity.

Let's face it: anyone who believes the insane bullshit spewed in every Christian church is suffering from a very real mental (or social) disorder; now the assholes running these brainwash camps are actually trying to take control of the country (and actually have to a large extent).

This is not acceptable.

I think the best thing to do is start teaching kids the truth about Christianity. For instance, giving 50 kids a card that says "There is no such thing as hell and you don't have to be afraid of it" could do a lot of good in the long run.

It doesn't sound like much, but the bottom line that the main motivation, the main reason for "believing", or joining the Christian cult, is fear. Yes, there is the social aspect of going to church, but when the money-plates come around, you can see in everyone's eyes that fear is what brought them.

If you've never actually experienced a Christian church, I suggest you check it out. As a person whose parents tried to make him a Christian, I can tell you, it is a very, very strange and obviously wrong situation.

People like Voltaire and many, many others broke the power of the Church hundreds of years ago: Now its time to finish the job before they take over again.
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 06:21 PM UTC
where would infoshop be organizing? im bringing a few friends from NYC down to help fight the good fight against these fanatics
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 07:14 PM UTC
To me the best thing to do would be to tell these people about the more existential aspect of Christianity exemplifed in the radical xians like Leo Tolstoy, Jacques Ellul, and Paul Virilio. Or existential conceptions of christianity exemplified in people like Nietzsche(Der Anti-Christ). Utimately people need to know how discourse and context tend to work in regards to Christianity.

Oh and btw, Voltaire was nothing special, all he did was usher in a human religion to replace of godly one.

Wolverine
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 08:18 PM UTC
Wow. Appropriation galore. "A stealthy enemy has infiltrated our country and is preying upon the hearts and minds of 33 million American teens. Corporations, media conglomerates, and purveyors of popular culture have spent billions to seduce and enslave our youth. So far, the enemy is winning. But there is plenty we can do. We need to take action. We need to answer the Battle Cry." (Battle Cry or Infoshop?)
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 10:39 PM UTC
I think what this movement is doing is playing off the general discontent that something in society is very fucked up. To this point they are absolutely correct. Where they go wing-nut is their analysis of why it is fucked up and how to fix it.

I think these kids attending this shit are the restless and discontent that should be lining up with us. I think the best thing we can do is a slick propaganda campaign to recruit out of their ranks before kids get totally brainwashed. Ridicule and humor would work well too. Just think, a kid goes in to one of their things and gets a flyer with rhetoric about the world being fucked that is similar (or even the same) as the Battle Cry rhetoric, only the flyer refers them to infoshop or somewhere else instead. Or a interested kid walking up sees a bunch of people making the wing-nuts look like the idiots they are.
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 07:44 AM UTC
You;re right, their rhetoric is anti-corporate too...BUT, I think the difference between them and infoshop (or anarchism in general) is that while @ encourages rejection of all authority, including that imposed by a capitalist hegemony, as an empowering act, these folks manipulate the disempowerment and alienation felt in a capitalist system in order to bring more under the fold of an authority figure (BC as the representative of God). Ultimately, the fact that one form of oppression is being substituted for another will ultimately spell its own failure....
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 10:54 PM UTC
They're so disingenuous. We hate a lot of the same things they do, for some of the same reasons. I think that's what's meant by "framing the debate."
Yes, we must keep close tabs on these people. But what to do about them? Some years ago, Toronto ARA (or nearby) joined up with a crowd of like-minded people to create chaos at a gathering of some forced-childbirth group. The online account of the whole operation was pretty spectacular. They had infiltrators inside, and a whole crowd outside, outflanking the cops and banging on the windows.
I think this is the story, and something tells me that this sort of thing has happened more than once: www.web.net/~ara/OTP/OTP14/rage.htm
As of Friday, there's a new article on Salon dealing with Michelle Goldberg's book about Christian Nationalism. As if we didn't have enough things to worry about, this may really take precedence for those of us in the U.S. If we lose our home turf, just imagine the consequences.
So let's talk it out. What is the level of danger, and what are we doing about it?
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 11:13 PM UTC
Toronto ARA can probably find support amongst the growing underground techno movement in Toronto.

Each event gets bigger and bigger and better.

Former brick factories? Done
Random abandoned warehouses? Done
Abandoned trash compacting facilities? Done
Under multilane highway bridges? Done
Public parks? seems like every other week...
Government Crown land? Every year ...

It's beautiful ... it makes me love the people here.

Lots of youngins showing up now too ... I like the idea of a simple handout. I'm envisioning a small card that has a picture of the Easter Bunny crossed out, then a pic of Santa crossed out, and then a pic of Satan and God crossed out.

Maybe the logic is too simple - but it'd be cool if done well.
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, May 11 2006 @ 11:16 PM UTC
oh oh ... on the back of the card it can say "You don't believe in these either? Great - you're amongst friends..."
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 08:40 AM UTC
this would quickly be argued down by any christian. santa and the easter bunny aren't part of the religion, more the culture. god and satan are deeply part of the religion.
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 11:51 AM UTC
I'm not sure it's exactly an argument...
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 03:20 PM UTC
I'm not sure if I'm missing a joke or not, but if you are serious about recruiting techno fans into your movement, I think you might want to reconsider. Party culture may be fun for a while (I have way too much personal experience here) but it is a completely unsustainable life style, and always ends up bringing along drug dealers and narcs.

winepress nate
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 08:23 PM UTC
yeah ok whinepress, lets just stick with the phenominal success we've had thusfar with the punk rock crowd.

oops, I hope I haven't revealed too much about my past (and present?!).

cyfer
Meet the Shock Troops of the RCP
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, May 13 2006 @ 05:10 AM UTC
I am pretty much a punk for life, but I would not encourage either alienating or depending on individual subcultures for long term success in a movement. As long as any movement is based around youth culture it will be very limited in terms of its impact on the whole culture.

Are you accusing me of being a narc?
If so just post your full name and address, and any past or present illegal activities and ...
... narc! narc!
who's there?
not the guy who is an open conservative Christian on an Anarchist website.

forever insane,
winopress nate
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 08:55 PM UTC
You're absolutely right and drugs are a big part of the culture. But isn't there a large portion of drug users and dealers in many subcultures? Or at least affiliated to them? The dealers have currently been confronted directly by individuals willing to not allow the presence of the violence associated to drug dealing. They tend to permit the dealing to occur because it's literally unenforcable since the popularity is kind of overwhelming. I have seen on many occasions the community defend itself in one way or another against outright violent acts. It's just that this leaves us highly vulnerable to "infilitration" ... and I keep thinking this is unavoidable.

This is grassroots as it gets and many people seem quite dedicated to keeping the anarchist culture alive. *shrug*
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 09:03 PM UTC
I mean you're absolutely right about the problems associated with drugs and narcs.
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 01:46 PM UTC
this piece was evidently authored by a member of the RCP/"world cant wait" who have a typical authoritarian leftist approach and analysis where "fighting fascism" is a catchy way to recruit people to their own ideological pep rallies and brainwashed mass movement. be wary!
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Admin on Friday, May 12 2006 @ 09:53 PM UTC
I apologize for approving this article without checking to find out the background of the author. I've been very disappointed in Counterpunch lately and their increased promotion of grabage from people associated with the authoritarian left. Infoshop has a policy of not publishing any material from groups such as the ISO, WWP, SWP, CP, RCP or any of their front groups.

World Can't Wait is the latest front group for the RCP.

We will be more careful about what we syndicate here in the future and we ask our contributors to keep our limits in mind.

I'm sincerely sorry for letting this one slip through.

Chuck0
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, May 13 2006 @ 04:40 AM UTC
Thanks for beeing real about leting this slip by, I still think it has caused some good discussion, and can be a demonstration of two groups that are authoritarian using each other to pretend to be more radical than they really are.
winepress nate
Meet the Shock Troops of the Christian Youth
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, May 14 2006 @ 12:27 PM UTC
Yes, I'm still pretty glad this slipped through- I would've never known about these guys if I hadn't read this.

I agree we need to organize against these guys, but again, as it has been said... We must do it CAREFULLY. The concentration of the actions should not really be destroying Christianity, but the establishments, institutions, and deluded ideas that their leaders preach. (Such as this organization in the article) As someone said here already, Christianity has provided to the anarchist movement and continues to do so, we shouldn't alienate those people.

The majority of these youth are simply misled folks who are seeking answers. An outright attack on their religion will not likely win them over, but further shove them away and encourage them to keep following this horrifying idea.

Simply put, think deeply about your tactics and the effects they will have. Pissing off right-wing nuts is fun, sure. And that might work for the leaders...But we should be working to show the membership the ideas of anarchism and win them over.

Afterall, I think more satisfying than pissing off a group like this temporarily would be to steal away half or more of their membership into the anarchist movement, which will piss the leaders off permanently and show them that they will not be allowed to mislead a generation of youth into perpetuating the same violent systems which have dominated the world for centuries.
silly nate
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, May 14 2006 @ 03:59 PM UTC
Sorry for the negative/judgemental rants lately, I have been under alot of pressure and having some emotional problems. I really hope that nothing I have said will hurt the chances of anarchists and Christians working together when we agree on causes and having healthy debates when we disagree.