“The death of one man is a tragedy,” said Joe Stalin, “the death of millions is a statistic.”
Well, he was a guy who should know. And the twentieth century had more than a handful of men who committed their share of “statistics.”
Not surprisingly, there’s an organization that got into bed with a lot of the last century’s despots, all to gain influence and broker some juicy deals.
It’s called “the family,” and it was started, I’m sorry to say, by a Norwegian immigrant in Seattle in 1935. The group has one public activity: the National Prayer Breakfast. The rest of the time they’re underground, or forming a spiritual cell around the next congressman or senator.
And they do keep busy. I know all this because I forced myself, this last weekend, to forego the jacuzzi and read Jeff Sharlet’s book, appropriately called The Family. And here’s Wikipedia on the subject.
The author Jeff Sharlet has criticized the fellowship's influence on US foreign policy. He argues that Doug Coe and the "networking" (or formation of prayer cells) between foreign dictators and US politicians, defense contractors, and industry leaders has facilitated military aid for repressive foreign regimes. Sharlet did intensive research at the Billy Graham Center, before the Fellowship Foundation archives were closed to those other than divinity scholars. Sharlet published a book about the history of the groups and their influence on US domestic and foreign policy from the 1920s to the present.[28] Sharlet in particular details the relationship with General Suharto of Indonesia in the 1970s, and with Siad Barre of Somalia in the 1980s. Also, in the archives, there are at least two nearly full boxes of documents describing the relationship with Brazil's long dictatorship of the Generals.[61]
Regarding his relationships with foreign dictators, Coe said in 2007, “I never invite them. They come to me. And I do what Jesus did: I don’t turn my back to any one. You know, the Bible is full of mass murderers.”[62]
Don’t believe me, or Sharlet? How about this guy?
“The Fellowship’s reach into governments around the world is almost impossible to overstate or even grasp,” says David Kuo, a former special assistant in George W. Bush’s Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.
Well, great to know! Although it does appear that Coe isn’t quite as embracing to absolutely everyone. I copy and paste again from Wikipedia.
The Fellowship, through Representative Joe Pitts (R.-Pa.), redirected millions in US aid to Uganda from sex education programs to abstinence programs, thereby causing an evangelical revival, which included condom burnings.
In a November 2009 NPR interview, Sharlet alleged that Ugandan Fellowship associates David Bahati and Nsaba Buturo were behind the recent proposed bill in Uganda that called for the death penalty for gays.[75] Bahati cited a conversation with Fellowship members in 2008 as having inspired the legislation.[76]
Wonderful! And it appears that it’s not just in Somalia, Indonesia or Uganda that Coe exercises his power. Sharlet indicates that there’s virtually no office in Washington where Coe can’t drift in, pound on a few backs, gather the boys together in prayer, change public policy and broker another deal.
“In Washington, you must have a religion to get anything done,” writes Sharlet, or words to that affect. Even Hillary Clinton gets into the picture. Here she is on Coe.
Doug Coe, the longtime National Prayer Breakfast organizer, is a unique presence in Washington: a genuinely loving spiritual mentor and guide to anyone, regardless of party or faith, who wants to deepen his or her relationship to God.
Ummm, yes and no. The Family is devoted to those who have power. It’s a ministry that makes no bones about it—no money, no influence? Screw you!
The story of the family makes a good read—a shadowy man, a secret organization, evil and misdeeds, a perverted religion. I thought of it all this morning, on the trot. The death of millions is a statistic.
Is that the trouble with the gun control issue? 30,000 is just a number. But behind that number are 30,000 names, faces, lives. If we published the names, would it make it more real?
‘Let’s try,’ I decided. And went to a site that randomly generates names. So here are forty-five names—as much as will fill one page of a document with the font size set at 12.
OK—so how many pages would I need to list all 30,000 victims of gun violence annually?
Hold onto your seat.
666.
A revelation, hunh?
1. Dona Schrom
2. Darryl Ferriera
3. Loraine Pietz
4. Earnestine Kardos
5. Mallory Mani
6. Rae Nassar
7. Fernando Lamborn
8. Alana Ghoston
9. Allan Kittinger
10. Mathew Hoppes
11. Jamie Vitiello
12. Kelly Basler
13. Jock
14. Avis Heuser
15. Malinda Brindle
16. Javier Mckinsey
17. Jessie Gowers
18. Max Miraglia
19. Saundra Vanderhoof
20. Jamie Junker
21. Cody Cassara
22. Edwina Kilman
23. Cody Calabria
24. Marcie Ritts
25. Tyrone Guard
26. Kurt Spradling
27. Lakisha Fasciano
28. Kelly Mossey
29. Avis Deasy
30. Carlene Verge
31. Allyson Yanes
32. Guy Loew
33. Ted Mariner
34. Lonnie Bart
35. Clinton Matthias
36. Tanisha Bou
37. Lorrie Kowalewski
38. Elinor Doten
39. Melisa Roose
40. Jamie Jarrard
41. Ted Mahnke
42. Melisa Cerutti
43. Roxie Marcial
44. Zelma Rozar
45. Sofia Detty