David Barton is a Liar and a Rat Fink, and NPR Thinks So Too

Haiku

Makes the ganglia twitch.
I don't know if anyone here has been following the news on this but it does my heart good to see these creeps called out for their lies. There is video at the link.. http://crooksandliars.com/leah-nelson/david-barton-liar-and-rat-fink-and-npr#comment-2127451

Fake historian David Barton got a bit of what’s been coming to him on Wednesday, when NPR’s “All Things Considered” turned its polite, soft-spoken, but firmly fact-based attention to the evangelical demagogue beloved of Glenn Beck and former child star Kirk Cameron.

In a segment titled “The Most Influential Evangelical You’ve Never Heard Of,” Barbara Bradley Hagerty, NPR’s religion correspondent, introduced the “Prairie Home Companion” and “Car Talk” crowd to Barton, a self-promoting windbag who specializes in claiming that things he disagrees with are unbiblical. His special obsession is the Founding Fathers, who, he says, were devout Christians who never envisioned anything like a separation of church and state.

Hagerty blogged the segment on NPR’s website. (C&L has bolded the especially good parts for your reading ease):

“You look at Article 3, Section 1, the treason clause,” [Barton] told James Robison on Trinity Broadcast Network. “Direct quote out of the Bible. You look at Article 2, the quote on the president has to be a native born? That is Deuteronomy 17:15, verbatim. I mean, it drives the secularists nuts because the Bible's all over it! Now we as Christians don't tend to recognize that. We think it's a secular document; we've bought into their lies. It's not.”

We looked up every citation Barton said was from the Bible, but not one of them checked out. Moreover, the Constitution as written in 1787 has no mention of God or religion except to prohibit a religious test for office. The First Amendment does address religion.

She continued,

[H]istorians say Barton is flat-out wrong in his facts and conclusion.
And,

David Barton is not a historian. He has a bachelor's degree in Christian education from Oral Roberts University and runs a company called WallBuilders in Aledo, Texas. But his vision of a religion-infused America is wildly popular with churches, schools and the GOP, and that makes him a power. He was named one of Time magazine's most influential evangelicals. He was a long-time vice chairman for the Texas Republican Party. He says that he consults for the federal government and state school boards, that he testifies in court as an expert witness, that he gives a breathtaking 400 speeches a year.

As I said, self-promoting windbag.

Fortunately, there are intelligent evangelicals out there who are embarrassed and frustrated by Barton’s prominence. In the wake of the release of his book The Jefferson Lies, a bestseller that that recasts the deist, slave-owning Founding Father as an ultra-Christian champion of civil rights, professors at Christian colleges have amplified their efforts to diminish Barton’s influence.

One of these is Warren Thockmorton, who told “All Things Considered,”

“Mr. Barton is presenting a Jefferson that modern-day evangelicals could love and identify with. … The problem with that is, it's not a whole Jefferson; it's not getting him right.”

Throckmorton co-authored Getting Jefferson Right, a book detailing what he says are Barton's distortions. As to Jefferson's faith, Throckmorton says there is no dispute among historians: Jefferson questioned the most basic tenets of Christianity.

“He didn't see Jesus as God,” Throckmorton says. He didn't believe that Jesus performed miracles, he dismissed the Trinity. Throckmorton notes that when Jefferson decided to write his own version of the Gospels, now called the Jefferson Bible, “he said he was taking ‘diamonds as if from a dunghill.’ So he picked out the Sermon on the Mount and the golden rule — those were the ‘diamonds.’ But the ‘dunghill’ was the virgin birth, the resurrection of Christ, the Great Commission.”
Hagerty also pointed about “another “lie” about Jefferson that Barton sets out to “debunk.” Barton says Jefferson — who owned nearly 200 slaves — was a civil rights visionary.

Read more at the link above.

If you're interested in this subject and want to learn more the best person writing about these issues is Chris Rodda, a real historian. There are video's ... NPR was pretty good debunking Barton's crap. Chris Rodda is MUCH better.

Especially watch the last 5 segments in the series (of 9). She annihilates him.


Or you can read, for free her book.... Liars For Jesus

http://www.liarsforjesus.com/downloads/LFJ_FINAL.pdf

It's surprising how such nonsense is being peddled in this country. Beck loves this guy. The good news is that this week Barton's publisher dropped his books and removed them from shelves because they lacked substance.
 
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