The elevation of Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) to House speaker was a shocker. Not since John McCain picked Sarah Palin to be his running mate has a heretofore little-known politician been lifted so quickly to a position of prominence and importance. Though Johnson now is second in the line of presidential succession, we’re still finding out basic and important facts about him and how he sees the world. This includes his alarming record as a hardcore conservative cultural warrior, motivated by a Christian fundamentalist belief, who has fiercely opposed gay rights (comparing homosexuality to pedophilia), called for a total nationwide ban on abortion, proposed the end of no-fault divorce, and urged a return to “18th century values.” One more significant thing I’ve discovered is that Johnson appears to believe in a religious litmus test for politicians.
 
Our Land

A NEWSLETTER FROM DAVID CORN

Our Land

A NEWSLETTER FROM DAVID CORN

 

SCOOP: Mike Johnson Urged a Religious Test for Politicians

By David Corn  October 31, 2023

House Speaker Mike Johnson addressing a meeting of the Republican Jewish Coalition on October 28, 2023, in Las Vegas. David Becker/AP

House Speaker Mike Johnson addressing a meeting of the Republican Jewish Coalition on October 28, 2023, in Las Vegas. David Becker/AP

The elevation of Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) to House speaker was a shocker. Not since John McCain picked Sarah Palin to be his running mate has a heretofore little-known politician been lifted so quickly to a position of prominence and importance. Though Johnson now is second in the line of presidential succession, we’re still finding out basic and important facts about him and how he sees the world. This includes his alarming record as a hardcore conservative cultural warrior, motivated by a Christian fundamentalist belief, who has fiercely opposed gay rights (comparing homosexuality to pedophilia), called for a total nationwide ban on abortion, proposed the end of no-fault divorce, and urged a return to “18th century values.” One more significant thing I’ve discovered is that Johnson appears to believe in a religious litmus test for politicians.

This weekend I broke the news that Johnson and his wife, Kelly Johnson, a self-described Christian counselor, a few years ago created a seminar that promoted the premise that the United States has been a “Christian nation.” I found a video of one of these sessions they held in 2019 at the Baptist church they belong to in Bossier City, Louisiana. At that event, from the pulpit, Kelly declared that “biblical Christianity”—that is, a literal reading of the Bible as fundamentalists interpret it—is the only “valid worldview,” and nothing else makes sense. (This worldview includes creationism—believing that the Earth was created by God in six days 6,000 years ago—and the denial of evolution.) Mike Johnson called for “biblically sanctioned government.” In this venue and many others, including a podcast they have hosted together, the pair have contended that there is only one truth: “Jesus’ truth.”

The Johnsons are diehard fundamentalists who believe every religion other than their brand of Christianity is false and that whatever is written in the Bible should dictate all conduct, rules, policies, and laws. As I reported earlier, Mike Johnson in 2016 exclaimed, “We’re living in a completely amoral society.” The only way out, according to him and Kelly, is to abide by the Bible.

This is a lot to absorb. We’re often uncomfortable discussing a politician’s faith. But in this case, Johnson acknowledges that his fundamentalism determines his politics and policy positions. As he said during a Fox interview, “I am a Bible-believing Christian. Someone asked me today in the media, they said, 'It's curious, people are curious: What does Mike Johnson think about any issue under the sun?' I said, 'Well, go pick up a Bible off your shelf and read it. That's my worldview.'"

After reporting the story on the seminars he and his wife conducted, I went back and watched the video again and found another important nugget that I’m sharing here for the first time. Toward the end of that three-hour-long presentation, Johnson instructed the assembled on how they ought to apply their religious beliefs to politics:

You better sit down any candidate who says they’re going to run for legislature and say, “I want to know what your worldview is. I want to know what, to know what you think about the Christian heritage of this country. I want to know what you think about God’s design for society. Have you even thought about that?” If they hadn’t thought about it, you need to move on and find somebody who has...We have too many people in government who don’t know any of this stuff. They haven’t even thought about it.

This remark came after Kelly and Mike had repeatedly asserted that the Christian fundamentalist worldview—based entirely on what appears in the Old and New Testaments—is the only legitimate worldview.

Johnson was telling the folks in the pews that the only political candidates deserving support are those who share this worldview and who embrace the notion that the United States has been a Christian nation. This smacks of Christian nationalism and appears to be a religious test for politics.

Johnson, of course, is free to follow his values, back politicians who are fundamentalist Christians, and press others to do the same, believing that only people who follow his take on Christianity are worthy of holding elected office. But doing so demonstrates a narrow and rigid view of life and suggests that he yearns for a theocracy—a government run only by Christian fundamentalists who base all their decisions on what they consider to be the “absolute truth” of the Bible.

A good example of how Johnson’s faith affects his approach to public policy occurred earlier in this seminar, when he discussed climate change. He asserted that the demand for action to address the climate crisis “defies the created order of how this is all supposed to work.” He explained that the Bible presents an order to life: There’s God, beneath God is “man,” and below that all the animals. Humans are to follow God’s command to “take dominion of the Earth. You subdue it...We’re supposed to eat those animals.”

Johnson noted that environmentalists ignore God’s word, and he compared them to the devil:

When you take God out of the equation, and you remove absolute truths...you got to make all this stuff up. So what they’ve done is, as the devil always does, they take the truth and they turn it upside down. So the radical environmentalists—they actually believe that the environment is God.

Johnson adheres to a harsh perspective. The only truth is what he preaches. The only true religion is what he practices. The only guide to the problems of modern society is the Bible. Environmentalists are akin to Satan.

Johnson does come across as a mild-mannered fellow. Indeed, during this seminar, he told his co-religionists that they need to promote their truth in a Christ-like fashion, with loving and kindness, and that they must avoid bitterness or anger. Do not be quarrelsome, he advised. Don’t try to silence or censor others. Let the critics and foes have their say, for, ultimately, nothing can defeat the one and only truth that Johnson and his comrades in Christ hold.

Johnson’s amenable persona is a cover for his extremism. He sees himself as part of a small band of righteous Christian soldiers combatting an “amoral” society. (His wife’s business was called Onward Christian Counseling Services. After he became speaker, she took down its website.) For Johnson, this is truly a war for the soul of the nation. With a Bible in his hand, he and a small slice of Americans are up against dark and Satanic forces. Still, Johnson is a happy warrior—albeit an intolerant one who believes that only he and his fellow faith-keepers possess the truth and deserve access to power. He cannot accept the religious and cultural diversity of this nation and the world. He is much better suited to be a preacher than a leader just two heartbeats away from the presidency.

Got anything to say about this item—or anything else? Email me at ourland@motherjones.com.

An Our Land Zoom Get-Together

As I noted last week, we’re going to have another Zoom gathering of Our Land readers on November 9, 8 p.m. ET. That will be two days after critical elections in Virginia and Ohio. These gatherings are limited to premium subscribers. On the morning of the event, they will get an email with a onetime Zoom link. But you can sign up here now for the full newsletter and be eligible to attend. There is far too much to talk about, to vent about, and to cry about. I wouldn’t be surprised if this becomes something of a support group. See you soon.

ratio 

The Watch, Read, and Listen List

Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie. In the 1980s, it was easy to be resentful of Michael J. Fox. He quickly rose from sitcom star to Hollywood superstar. He had natural sass. He had great hair. And he married Tracy Pollan, an attractive, accomplished, and smart actor. As they say, he had it all. Until...one morning in 1991 when he woke up in a Florida hotel after a bender and noticed his left pinky was twitching. He wasn’t shaky because of his previous night’s escapades—which involved his pal Woody Harrelson—he was experiencing the first symptoms of Parkinson’s disease. He kept it a secret for seven years, while he continued to work.

 

Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie, directed by acclaimed documentarian Davis Guggenheim (best known for An Inconvenient Truth about Al Gore and climate change), chronicles Fox’s struggle with this horrible ailment. The film, which is streaming on Apple TV+, jumps back and forth between Fox’s biography and the present day. Archival video of Fox on television and film sets during his heyday is intercut with interview footage of Fox as he is now, discussing his past exploits and current challenges. Guggenheim imbues the documentary with a Back to the Future feel. What’s particularly poignant are the clips that show Fox acting in the sitcom Spin City before he went public with his diagnosis. He had craftily devised a variety of ways to hide his symptoms. For instance, he’d be twirling a pen in his left hand to keep his tremors from being noticed.

 

This subterfuge worked because Fox had long developed a frenetic screen persona. He had always been a bit hyperactive. Now he could use that to cover up his physical descent. As he tells Guggenheim, for his entire life he had trouble being still. Then, with Parkinson’s, he had no choice.

 

Fox, who continued to act (and grab awards) until 2020, set up a foundation for Parkinson’s research, and he has raised more than $1 billion for this work. He comes across as tragic and heroic in the film. He asks for no pity. Deploying dark humor, he keenly observes his history and his present condition. He’s a mensch. The movie is a wonderful blend of Hollywood anecdotes, the troubles Fox encountered during his meteoric ascent (yes, too much drinking), and the tale of how he has gracefully come to terms with a personal nightmare. As they say, you will laugh, you will cry. Guggenheim and Fox have given us a story far greater than any movie in which Fox starred.

ratio 

“Atomic City,” U2. A few weeks ago, U2 dropped a new song, “Atomic City,” that strives for the anthemic feel of many of the group’s hits. But it is not their best work. The tune, though, is an important corporate tie-in for Bono and the guys. U2 recently opened a months-long residency in Las Vegas, at the Sphere, a spiffy arena inside a giant orb a few blocks off the Strip. This is the newest big thing in the American city that best symbolizes glitzy capitalism. In the 1950s, this gambling mecca had the nickname Atomic City because from there one could see the nuclear tests being conducted in the Nevada desert, and the new U2 track is essentially an advertising jingle for the band’s Sin City gig there. To my ears, the tune sounds forced. But rock ‘n’ roll commerce cannot be denied.

ratio 

This U2 release reminded me of another song with the same name that was put out in 1989 by Holly Johnson, who had been the lead vocalist of Frankie Goes to Hollywood, the provocative British band. (Remember “Relax, don't do it / When you wanna come”?) Not a great number, either. But if you’re looking for a video that captures the essence of cheesy 1980s music videos, this would definitely be a nominee.

ratio  

By the way, it’s Halloween. Here’s a track from a Halloween playlist I made a long time ago. It features one of the best Mick Jagger sound-alikes and succeeds with only one line of lyrics.

ratio  

Read Recent Issues of Our Land

October 28, 2023: Leonard Leo and the Deep State on the right; recent news about Mitt Romney and Mike Johnson; Dumbass Comment of the Week (House Republicans); the Mailbag; and more.

 

October 24, 2023: Imagine Trump in charge during the Hamas-Israel war; Steve Bannon and Alex Jones conspiracy-mongering together; a Jim Jordan tale; George Santos speaks; and more.

 

October 21, 2023: Biden and Netanyahu’s delicate dance; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Ari Fleischer); the Mailbag: MoxieCam™; and more.

 

October 18, 2023: No blank check for Bibi; the strange trip of Asteroid City; Devon Gilfillian gives us a closer with “Love You Anyway”; and more.

 

October 14, 2023: Jim Jordan’s threat to democracy; from George Santos scoop to indictment; the day the GOP died; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Nancy Mace); the Mailbag: MoxieCam™; and more.

 

October 11, 2023: The Hamas-Israel war—what can be discussed?; The Bear makes you care; Native Americans at the National Gallery of Art; and more.

 

October 7, 2023: How our George Santos scoop ended up in the criminal case; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Elon Musk); the Mailbag; MoxieCam™; and more.

 

October 4, 2023: How media framing aids Trump’s assault on democracy; why do GOP and Trump donors like Robert F. Kennedy Jr.?; am I a redbaiter?; Crooked chronicles an actual weaponization of the Justice Department; a classic Willie Nelson tune; and more.

 

September 30, 2023: Trump loses a battle in his long war on reality; GOP donors look to Gov. Glenn Youngkin; comedians make a serious gun-safety video; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Marjorie Taylor Greene); the Mailbag; MoxieCam™; and more.

 

September 27, 2023: Donald Trump, stochastic terrorist; Joan Osborne’s regrets; Invasion’s slow pace; and more.

Got suggestions, comments, complaints, tips related to any of the above, or anything else? Email me at ourland@motherjones.com.

Our Land

This message was sent to example@example.com. To change the messages you receive from us, you can edit your email preferences or unsubscribe from all mailings.

www.MotherJones.com
PO Box 8539, Big Sandy, TX 75755