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Christian Nation

par Frederic C. Rich

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15628174,953 (3.52)13
"They said what they would do, and we did not listen. Then they did what they said they would do." So ends the first chapter of this brilliantly readable counterfactual novel, reminding us that America's Christian fundamentalists have been consistently clear about their vision for a "Christian Nation" and dead serious about acquiring the political power to achieve it. When President McCain dies and Sarah Palin becomes president, the reader, along with the nation, stumbles down a terrifyingly credible path toward theocracy, realizing too late that the Christian right meant precisely what it said. In the spirit of Philip Roth's The Plot Against America, one of America's foremost lawyers lays out in chilling detail what such a future might look like: constitutional protections dismantled; all aspects of life dominated by an authoritarian law called "The Blessing", enforced by a totally integrated digital world known as the "Purity Web". Readers will find themselves haunted by the questions the narrator struggles to answer in this fictional memoir: "What happened, why did it happen, how could it have happened?"-- Publisher's description.… (plus d'informations)
  1. 10
    Écarlate par Hillary Jordan (4leschats)
    4leschats: Similar theme of a post-evangelical government takeover and its ramifications on civil liberties
  2. 10
    1984 par George Orwell (AvengingExile)
    AvengingExile: The quintessential dystopian novel.
  3. 00
    It Can't Happen Here par Sinclair Lewis (sturlington)
    sturlington: Very similar, which I think is intentional.
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Affichage de 1-5 de 27 (suivant | tout afficher)
I have long been a fan of alternate history. I have never, however, read a book (written in 2013) where speculation so unrelentingly and terrifyingly unfolds itself in reality mere years from its publication. "They said what they would do, and we did not listen. Then they did what they said they would do." In fact, they are inexorably doing it as I write. The author thoroughly destroys the rabbit's-foot that it can't happen here. ( )
  Lemeritus | Dec 2, 2023 |
This is the most frightening book I have ever read. ( )
1 voter EZLivin | Jul 4, 2023 |
I gave this book a while to sit in my head, hoping that my estimation would rise. It's been a month and it didn't. It got lower. I barely finished it because it's poorly written and plotted. There are long diatribes and a lot of author intrusion. None of the main characters are sympathetic in the least. I could only picture them sitting around drinking pabst beer in hipster glasses. This book just didn't do it for me. Unlike Sinclair Lewis' brilliant book 'It Can't Happen Here', this book is just one long, screechy whine. ( )
  rabbit-stew | Mar 29, 2019 |
I was intensely curious about Christian Nation from the moment it was first brought to my attention. I do like a enjoy a good alternate "what if?" history novel, but I was far more interested in this as a book of ideas. As a reader who is apparently destined to be persecuted on multiple fronts in Rich's theocratic state, I was interested to see how he would develop his ideas and justify his conclusions.

Oh my gosh. I mean no offense to my friends south of the border, but this is a quintessentially American novel - full of arrogance, self-importance, and return to thoughts of manifest destiny. The political and religious leaders of Rich's novel not only believe that the establishment of America as a pure Christian Nation is required for the second-coming, but that they were granted the land by God for that sole purpose. There is some lip service provided to the idea of supporting a Jewish state in Israel but, for the most part, the new rulers of America don't give a damn about anybody outside their borders. The Bible may not have been written by them but, by God, it sure as sin was written for them.

Along the same lines, the new rulers are not content to merely accept the will of God and rule their country according to the literal dictates of the Bible. The 10 commandments are a great inspiration, but in America you go big or you go home, and it takes 50 new commandments , in the form of The Blessing, to get things done. I really don't know whether Rich was being satirical in so wholeheartedly embracing the worst stereotypes outsiders have of America, but he plays just about every card in the deck. The Blessing has to be the ickiest part of the novel, several pages of racist, sexist, homophobic that just makes you queasy to think of anybody buying into.

It's not just American stereotypes at work here, however, but misogynistic religious ones as well. In the new Christian Nation, it's homosexual men who are the enemy, and sodomy that is the world's greatest sin. Islamic terrorists loading rocket launchers around airports are bad, but Rich's theocratic leaders would run right past them to stop two young men from loading something far smaller, and far less lethal, into one another. His is a world where single men over a certain age are legally assumed to be homosexual, and where gay sex is grounds for execution. Lesbians, however, merely have to be watched (I guess some things never change), and women merely have to be pleasant and obey their husbands - who can, of course, demand any sort of kinkiness they desire. I do have to give Rich credit for making a lovely, charismatic gay man one of his protagonists, though, even if he never gets kissed, much less sodomized, anywhere on the page.

Whew. Could it really happen the way Rich suggests? Could a theocracy take root in America, rise to absolute power, and then gleefully abuse that power until everything that made the country America is gone? I sure as hell hope not but, then again, he makes it clear the world felt the same way about Nazi Germany once upon a time. As a cautionary tale and a philosophical exploration of what happens when the lines between church and state are erased, this is a fascinating read. It's very dry, and full of long passages that I'm sure even lawyers and university professors will be tempted to skim, but it is interesting to see how easily we can be convinced to give our freedoms away. ( )
1 voter bibrarybookslut | Jul 5, 2017 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Like a few other folks I found this book pretty hard to get into, although the premise and topic are engaging. I would be curious to revisit it a few years later to see how the book ages though!
  23points | May 3, 2016 |
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Religion begins by offering magical aid to harassed and bewildered men; it culminates by giving to a people that unity of morals and belief which seems so favorable to statesmanship and art; it ends by fighting suicidally in the lost cause of the past. For as knowledge grows or alters continually, it clashes with mythology and theology, which change with geological leisureliness.
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This novel is a work of speculative fiction. The speculation is about one possible course of American history had the McCain/Palin campaign won the 2008 election. -Author's Note
Adam told me to start by writing about what I feel now. -Chapter One, What They Said They Would Do, 2029
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"They said what they would do, and we did not listen. Then they did what they said they would do." So ends the first chapter of this brilliantly readable counterfactual novel, reminding us that America's Christian fundamentalists have been consistently clear about their vision for a "Christian Nation" and dead serious about acquiring the political power to achieve it. When President McCain dies and Sarah Palin becomes president, the reader, along with the nation, stumbles down a terrifyingly credible path toward theocracy, realizing too late that the Christian right meant precisely what it said. In the spirit of Philip Roth's The Plot Against America, one of America's foremost lawyers lays out in chilling detail what such a future might look like: constitutional protections dismantled; all aspects of life dominated by an authoritarian law called "The Blessing", enforced by a totally integrated digital world known as the "Purity Web". Readers will find themselves haunted by the questions the narrator struggles to answer in this fictional memoir: "What happened, why did it happen, how could it have happened?"-- Publisher's description.

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