Ken Young:
Jason Harmon:
With the 92 election looming, here is a brochure detailing exactly why
atheists or anyone who genuinely values separation of church and state,
should NOT vote for George Bush:
-begin quoted material-
''Can George Bush, with impunity, state that Atheists
should not be considered either citizens or patriots?''
The History of the Issue
Madalyn O'Hair
When George Bush was campaigning for the presidency, as incumbent vice
president, one of his stops was in Chicago, Illinois, on August 27, 1987.
At O'Hare Airport he held a formal outdoor news conference. There Robert
I. Sherman, a reporter for the American Atheist news journal, fully
accredited by the state of Illinois and by invitation a participating
member of the press corps covering the national candidates had the
following exchange with then Vice President Bush.
Sherman: What will you do to win the votes
of the Americans who are Atheists?
Bush: I guess I'm pretty weak in the Atheist community.
Faith in god is important to me.
Sherman: Surely you recognize the equal citizenship and
patriotism of Americans who are Atheists?
Bush: No, I don't know that Atheists should be considered as citizens, nor
should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God.
Sherman (somewhat taken aback): Do you support as a sound constitutional
principle the separation of state and church?
Bush: Yes, I support the separation of church
and state. I'm just not very high on Atheists.
On October 29, 1988, Mr. Sherman had a confrontation with Ed Murnane,
cochairman of the Bush-Quayle '88 Illinois campaign. This concerned a
law-suit Mr. Sherman had filed to stop the Community Consolidated School
District 21 (Chicago, Illinois, suburb) from forcing his first-grade
Atheist son to pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States "one
nation under God" (Bush's phrase). The following conversation took
place.
Sherman: American Atheists filed the Pledge of Allegiance lawsuit
yesterday. Does the Bush campaign have an official response to this filing?
Murnane: It's bullshit.
Sherman: What is bullshit?
Murnane: Everything that American Atheists does, Rob, is bullshit.
Sherman: Thank you for telling me what the official position of
the Bush campaign is on this issue.
Murnane: You're welcome
This suit, now in federal district court for over three years, is not
considered to be bullshit by the federal judge before whom it is pending.
During the time it has been in the federal court, Robert Sherman's son, now age
nine, has been physically and psychologically brutalized in his school for
refusing to pledge to a "nation under God."
After Bush's election but before his taking office, American Atheists wrote
to Bush asking that he consider being sworn into office on the Constitution
instead of the Bible and also asking him to retract his August 1987 statement.
Bush had his White House buddy, C. Boyden Gray, counsel to the president, reply
on White House stationery on February 21, 1989, stating that substantively Bush
stood by his original statement.
American Atheists had not asked Bush to either "unnecessarily"
or even "necessarily" encourage or support them. All they wanted
was an apology for the insult. Many Atheists wrote to Bush over the issue
and Nelson Lund, the associate counsel to the president, found it
necessary to reply on April 7, 1989, directly to the American Atheist
General Headquarters, Inc.
This letter from the White House said that Mr. Gray was adhering to his
statements in the February 21, 1989, letter. On May 4, 1989, Jon Murray,
the president of American Atheists, again wrote to President Bush
demanding a clarification of and an apology for his statement that
Atheists "should not be considered as citizens, nor should they
be considered patriots." Bush ignored the letter, as did Gray and
Lund. Mr. Murray also asked for an appointment so that a group of
representatives of American Atheists could meet with Bush.
Mr. Joseph W. Hagin 11 responded on May 25, 1989, again on White House
stationery. He stated that the president "appreciated your taking
the time to write and your willingness to share your thoughts" but
that "due to heavy commitments on his official calendar" the
president could not meet with representatives of American Atheists.
On January 9, 1990, George Bush, in signing a proclamation for the Martin
Luther King holiday, had the gall to remark that "bigots" must
be brought to justice. Again, American Atheists threw his words back in
his face, asking what his designation of Atheists as being unworthy of
citizenship was. On February 5, 1990, Mr. Nelson Lund replied again on
White House stationery--stating
Indeed it has and that position is that George Bush is a bigot.
On February 21, [1990], American Atheists wrote to every member of the
United States Congress asking that body to pass a resolution condemning
discrimination against Atheists by any elected or appointed official of
government. The offered resolution read:
You don't need to guess how many senators and representatives answered that
letter: there were none. At this point, American Atheists sent a list of the
members of Congress to all of its membership and asked each one to write or
telephone their congressmen. Hundreds of angry letters and telephone calls were
received at the American Atheist GHQ during the next several months as it
became obvious that the elected Congress was composed entirely of politicians
too damn yellow to challenge Bush. In just one campaign incident, American
Atheists was able to teach thousands of the nation's top-notch citizens that
their government did not give a damn about them. This exercise added
appreciably to the malcontentedness in the nation and rightly so.
American Atheists then sent every single columnist in the United States a
packet of information-- from Pat Buchanan to Jim Fain. Only one was courageous
enough to write a lengthy article on the matter: Tom Tiede. And the newspapers
in which Tiede was syndicated did print his column taking the president to
task. A little later, the CNN feature program "Larry King Live"
broadcast a quarter-hour interview with Mr. Robert Sherman, as he detailed
the perfidy of President Bush.
When George Bush appeared on the campus of the University of Texas on May 19,
1990, American Atheists placed a full-page advertisement in the Austin
American-Statesman detailing the above and demanding an apology and an
explanation. The founders of American Atheists, a thirty-year-old
organization, are both honorably discharged veterans: Richard E O'Hair, U.S.
Marines (totally and permanently disabled); and Madalyn O'Hair, Women's Army
Corps. Both served in World War II.
On December 23, 1990, in Chicago, Illinois Mr. Robert Sherman met with Ed
Derwinski, the secretary of the Department of Veteran's Affairs, to discuss
exclusion of American Atheists from veteran's groups which have been
chartered by the United States Congress. Mr. Derwinski said he would do
"absolutely nothing" about the discrimination. On January 3,
Mr. Sherman crossed paths with Ed Derwinski again at the Illinois
inaugurations.
He asked Mr. Derwinski, at that time, what American Atheists could do to
have the Bush administration take an interest in the problem of
discrimination against American Atheist veterans. Mr. Derwinski's response
was:
When Mr. Sherman was in Washington, D.C., on another issue on March 20,
1991, he again met with Mr. Derwinski, who, on this occasion, shouted that
the Atheists should "get off his back," that the Bush
administration would do nothing for them, and that they would need to
"sue" to end discrimination against them.
To add pointed insult to injury, the City of Chicago Commission on Human
Rights refused to permit American Atheist Veterans to appear as a group in
the Fourth of July "Welcome Home" parade for the veterans of
Desert Storm in that
city.
In the corridors of American history, Atheists have loomed large: Clarence
Darrow, Margaret Sanger, Mark Twain, Henry Ford, Andrew Carnegie, Albert
Einstein, California's Governor Culbert L. Olson, Thomas Edison, the great
botanist Luther Burbank, and James Smithson, founder of the Smithsonian
Institution. The list is long.
American Atheists ask that you write to George Bush, President of the United
States, at The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C. 20500
and ask him for an apology to this group which comprises 9 percent of the
population.
Copies of this brochure (order #8286) are available at the cost of ten cents
each from:
-end of quoted material-
Return to The Skeptic Tank's main Index page.
However, did Bush ever say that atheists are less of Americans, than
Christians?
From:
NETOPRWA@ncsuvm.cc.ncsu.edu (Wayne Aiken)
Subject: Why Atheists should not vote for George Bush
ISSUE
"As you are aware, the President is a religious man who neither
supports atheism nor believes that atheism should be unnecessarily
encouraged or supported by the government."
"We believe that our position has been adequately explained in
previous correspondence."
No person in public life may be free to impugn the patriotism of any
minority group because of that group's opinion in respect to religion.
President George Bush is herewith censured for his public expression
of August 27, 1987, at which time he stated: "I don't know that
Atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered
patriots. This is one nation under God."
"What you should do for me is what you should do for everybody:
Believe in God. Get off our backs."
American Atheist Veterans
7215 Cameron Road
Austin TX. 78752
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