Part
1: Making Parents and Children Adversaries
Well,
notorious Sodomite*, eugenicst, white supremacist, false
prophet, and child abuse proponent James Dobson has finally died.
Whether
he knows it or not, there are tens of thousands of us, of multiple generations,
who were gravely damaged by his toxic false teachings. We are glad to see him
go, and, if we don’t wish actual Eternal Conscious Torment on him, a purgatory
where he feels every bit of pain he inflicted on all of us sounds about right.
I strongly doubt the universe contains enough millstones
for him.
There
are so many possible things to write about, and I may get to some of them in
the future.
Should
I write about the fact that his entire “ministry” was a religious whitewash of
the Eugenics movement? That his mentor (atheist Eugenicist Paul Popenoe), from
whom he borrowed his ideas whole cloth, was a major influence on Hitler and the
Nazis?
Or
maybe I should write about his role in convincing white Protestants that you
had to vote for right wing Republicans or you weren’t a “real” Christian? The
line from Dobson to Trump is perfectly straight.
I
might write about how he built his “ministry” on fanning the flames of fear of
white Evangelicals about the civil rights movement (racial equality), the
feminist movement (gender equality), and Vietnam war protests (objections to
imperialism and a morally indefensible war that we inevitably and predictably
lost in the end.)
I
could write about the way he convinced parents like mine that God commanded
them to commit ritual child abuse in order to break the wills of little
children.
I
could write about him beating his small dog with a belt - that was in one of
his books. And also the defense of domestic violence in another book.
Perhaps
I could write about how I had to consciously unlearn literally everything he
taught about marriage and sex in order to have an actually good marriage?
I
already wrote about his pure
evil and malignant racism in advocating for the US to send all the
immigrants and refugees back, build a wall to keep them out, and change our
laws so we never have to accept an immigrant or refugee again.
As
I said, so many topics. He was an evil, anti-christian man, whose damage to
children, families, Christianity, and our nation is almost too enormous to even
begin to fathom. His every inclination was toward grinding the faces of the
vulnerable - children, minorities, women, LGBTQ people, immigrants, refugees,
the poor - while claiming doing such evil was the very will of God.
I
may write about some of these later. But for now, I want to start with this
one:
James
Dobson is responsible for making parents and children into adversaries.
*Sodomite: See Ezekiel 16:49-50
***
It
is always difficult writing about my parents. Families are complicated, humans
are complicated, and little divides neatly into black and white. It is mostly
shades of grey, or at least black and white so mixed up that it looks
grey.
In
my particular case, things are complicated by the fact that I have been
estranged from my parents for the last five years. On the one hand, seeing my
childhood from outside of the relationship has helped me clarify some things,
understand some things, and reconsider events in the light of later
developments.
On
the other, I know I am going to have a tendency to read too much into the past
given the present. It is one thing to know from my memories that my parents
loved me when I was a child, but another to square that with their willingness
to throw me away now.
My
family history is also very complicated, with many different threads
interwoven, so teasing out causation is a mess.
Thus,
I want to start with a look at some of these issues before I can even get into
the main point of this post. I hope a few readers can stick with it long enough
to get there.
***
If
you had asked me ten years ago if I was abused as a child, I would have said
no.
I
would have been wrong about that, but I was not yet at the point of admitting
to myself that some of what my parents did was in fact abusive.
Part
of the problem was that I was still trying to have a relationship with my
parents, particularly my dad, and to admit to myself they were at times abusive
would have been to have to admit to them (when asked) that they were, which
probably would have led to the end of the relationship at that time. In fact,
it was when I started pushing back that my parents cut me out of their
lives.
Another
part of the problem was that it is easy to think of abuse as a binary. A family
is either loving or it is abusive, good or bad, happy or miserable.
And
that is wrong.
Most
abusive relationships aren’t abusive all the time. Or even most of the time. I
should have known this, working in domestic violence for the last quarter
century. But applying it to one’s own childhood isn’t easy.
My
childhood was mostly happy. My parents were probably better than most when I
was a child. They made a conscious effort to do better than their own parents
did, and sometimes they succeeded.
On
the positive side, they did work to be loving and involved parents. It is the
memories of my childhood that kept me hanging on to hope of a good adult
relationship with them for more than 20 years after I moved out.
Things
began to change for the worse in my teens, when my parents got involved with
Bill Gothard’s cult, and started dialing up the attempts to control. And this
didn’t stop after I grew up and moved out, but was just extended to my wife and
children.
But
that said, there have always been good times, good memories, good things that
my parents did that I have tried to emulate for my own kids.
And
yet, there was always a level of abuse present too, primarily driven by the
teachings of one James Dobson.
Another
complication here is my parents’ background. They were both missionary kids in
an era when missionaries were expected to neglect their children, send them off
to boarding school as soon as possible, and let them fend for themselves.
In
my mom’s case, she also had the difficulty of a mentally ill mother, and a
distant father who didn’t like her and didn’t want her around. (Seriously. My
dad had to buy my mom’s parents bus tickets, or they would have declined to
attend their wedding.)
So,
lots of trauma, probably PTSD, and god only knows what else.
Bottom
line, however: my mom is mentally ill.
She
has never been a fully functional adult. She has never been emotionally
healthy. She has never, in my memory, had a truly equal, mutual adult
friendship. They all have been based on her finding an emotionally unhealthy
“friend,” so then she can be the confidant and feel needed. In this sense, one
of the manifestations of her illness is her “hypervigilant”
narcissism. The constant need to be needed, and her vindictiveness when
denied that craving.
I
probably need to write at some point about two results of this. One was the
projection of her childhood trauma onto me (as a first-born male like her
father) and projection of herself onto my sister (as a third-born female like
herself), coloring every family conflict with her own pain.
The
other was that, probably as early as age 12 or 13, I realized I was a more
functional person, more of an adult, than she was. She was incompetent at many
basic tasks, played constant favorites with my sister, and seemed totally
oblivious to the reality of our family dynamics. This made it extremely
difficult for me to stomach having to obey her without talking back. This led
to most of my parent-child conflicts as a teen.
One
question, then, is how much of this conflict was the result of mental illness,
and how much the result of Dobson’s terrible childrearing advice? Were my
parents attracted to Dobson’s teachings because of their mental health issues?
Did Dobson’s toxic teachings exacerbate their other issues?
In
addition to the entirely predictable conflicts as the result of bad parenting
advice and untreated mental illness, there was also my dad’s response. He had
to be the only adult in our family, and he ordered his life around attempting
to prevent my mom from having negative feelings - he had to clean up the
emotional vomit afterward.
So,
as a fellow male (and the second-most functional person in the family), I was
expected to also devote my life to coddling my mom’s feelings (and my sister’s
feelings), at the expense of my own emotions and needs.
As
I said, it's complicated.
My
dad has issues too, also from unresolved childhood trauma. During my teens, he
told us about his suicidal ideations (which of course freaked me out, being the
one who would have to be the only functional adult, and I wasn’t even an adult
yet.) And, rather than get professional help, my parents self-medicated by
embracing even more authoritarian parenting, particularly directed at me.
And
here is another complicating factor: my parents didn’t do everything Dobson
advised. For one thing, they were never freaked out about my turning gay
because I didn’t perform masculinity a certain way. (An obsession of Dobson’s.)
I had no idea until recently that he said
this, for example.
My
parents encouraged me in my love of violin, flowers, cats, poetry, and other
“feminine” signifiers. True, I am cishet and always have been (of course), but
Dobson and other patriarchists were pretty freaked out about boys being too
“feminine.” So I am very grateful to my parents for that. As children,
we were raised in a fairly gender-neutral manner. It wasn’t until later that my
parents went down the full gender essentialism path.
There
were other ways they didn’t fully follow Dobson. Neither was fully committed to
the constant corporal punishment necessary to truly break me. (If that were
possible - I suspect not.)
In
fact, if left to herself, I think my mom might never have used corporal
punishment. And if my dad were not looking for a way to feel in control of his
own life, he might not have gone that direction either.
Finally,
there is no way of talking about my birth family without acknowledging the
sibling favoritism that poisoned everything, and is at this point in our lives
thoroughly pathological.
My
sister was and is the golden child, the one who could do no wrong, the one who
is now as an adult, allowed to abuse the rest of the family with impunity. As I
have come to realize after learning mainstream ideas about psychology, she is a
full-blown malignant narcissist with significant sociopathic traits. Even
without Dobson, I likely would have ended up as the black sheep of the family,
the scapegoat for all our problems. Dobson made things worse, though.
I
hope this gives a more nuanced view of my childhood, with all the threads for
good or bad that made it far from the worst childhood, yet with enough
problematic seeds sown that would eventually lead to adult estrangement.
***
Now,
back to the main idea. As I wrote about more generally regarding Religious
Authoritarian Parenting, the root problem is the goal. Breaking
a child’s will is just evil. It is morally wrong.
It
also isn’t in the Bible - it is an idea made up by Dobson and other
Authoritarians who came after him.
It
also has no good effect on children or on the society they will inhabit. For
the child, it leaves them emotionally damaged, traumatized, and mentally
unhealthy. This
is well documented. For society, creating a class of humans conditioned to
unquestioning obedience to the “right” authorities is the road to fascism
and brutality, not empathy and a good society.
I
have written about these issues, and likely will write more.
What
I want to focus on here is the way that Dobson viewed the parent-child
relationship as antagonistic and adversarial.
It
is parent versus child, only one can win, and it must be the parent. The
child needs to learn that he will always lose, and should thus give up without
a fight. Breaking the will.
This
is such a horrible way to look at what should be a loving relationship. Who
would want to live like this?
Having
had kids myself (three of which are adults now), I really don’t understand
viewing family this way at all.
Dobson
taught that children were naturally tyrants, evil creatures determined to defy
their parents, practically parasites who needed to be hit early and often in
order to learn their place.
Ugh.
It just makes me sick even writing that.
It
is this view of the parent-child relationship that continues to drive our
family dysfunction.
Nobody
would accuse me of being a permissive parent with out-of-control kids. But what
I have found works best is to see them as fully human, in need of love and
support, and capable of being the most important part of the resolution to
problems. They don’t need increasing attempts at control, but help in figuring
stuff out. And less of that help as they mature and are able to do more for
themselves.
Going
back to some things I mentioned above, I need to mention that, although a lot
of the talk about Dobson centers on corporal punishment. And there is good
reason for that. But I also think it tends to distract away from the deeper
problems inherent in Authoritarian Parenting. You could take out the spanking
and it would still be damaging.
However,
while I am not going to go into detail in this post, what my parents did to me
went well beyond spanking. In fact, the spanking itself stopped probably around
age 10, when I started refusing to cry. (It was very important in Dobson’s
teaching to bring the child to tears - the sign of true emotion which could
lead to surrender of the will.) I just dissociated and simmered with
rage.
I
am deeply sorry that I didn’t come to this realization before using corporal
punishment on my own kids. I am ashamed of that, and if my kids read this, I am
sorry and wish I had done better.
In
retrospect, spanking did nothing positive for me, but just made me determined
to get out of the family as soon as I could, so I could make my own
decisions.
That
said, honestly, I don’t think the spanking was the biggest issue. I don’t
remember much about it when I was really young. I’m sure I did some bad things
that deserved some consequence. And for the few cases of spanking that I do
remember where I went over the line into something actually problematic, I
don’t remember feeling the rage. I understand and understood consequences, and
don’t feel traumatized about consequences per se.
The
rage came because for the overwhelming majority of the times I remember being
spanked, it wasn’t for doing something morally bad, but for talking back to my
mom. In other words, I was frustrated at her (for the reasons I have noted
above) and didn’t think she was being fair to me. So I hit back verbally.
After
the spanking stopped - probably in part because I wouldn’t cry - things shifted
into violence and threats of violence instead. I’m not going to go into detail
here, but these were things that would have gotten my parents arrested if they
had done them to a spouse rather than a child.
And,
once again, the universal trigger was that I pushed back at my mom. She
frustrated me, I talked back, I experienced violence.
That
brings me to another issue. The violence and anger in our family was
near-universally directed at me.
The
family lore holds that my brother got spanked a lot as a toddler, but by the
time my memories start, he mostly was able to avoid trouble.
And,
as I mentioned, my sister was the golden child. The violence and anger was never
directed at her. Even if she was clearly in the wrong. There was infinite
understanding for her feelings, and only anger at mine.
For
all of those complicated, interconnected reasons, I became the target of the
anger and violence in the family. I became the scapegoat. The one whose will
most needed breaking. The one to be treated as an adversary, not a
friend.
To
be sure, this was not constant. Or even most of the time. Anger wasn’t the
default mood of our family.
But
it seemed to increase as we got into Gothard, who gave my parents new weapons
of psychological manipulation to keep me in line. As I grew up, I got better in
some ways at just keeping my head down. At least until I could move out, which
was a huge relief. But I also asserted my independence more, particularly after
I turned 18 and felt my mom’s right to direct my life should have completely
ended then. (And also that my dad should have switched from control to trying
to support me in my own decisions. I am still furious that I was denied a
chance to attend normal college, for example.)
After
I moved out, the violence ended, because I would absolutely have hit back at
that point. But the psychological manipulation and abuse didn’t end. It just
took on new forms. It would take an entire post to get into the details of how
my mom and sister’s enmeshment have kept the cycle of scapegoating going, but I
do not think it is a coincidence that my parents cut me off after I told them I
would no longer be around my sister.
I
had naively hoped that when I grew up, I would be able to live my own life,
make my own decisions in line with my own conscience and reason. And that my
parents would allow me to do so. After all, they did things differently than
their parents.
But
that was indeed naive. Dobson had already reframed the parent-child
relationship - at least mine - in terms of war. Since my will had not been
successfully broken as a child, the war continued. The last shot fired was my
mom using my 48th birthday to threaten me with hell because I wasn’t “walking
in truth.”
Which
of course means following false prophets like James Dobson.
Looking
back, this is why I feel that the issue of spanking is mostly a side
issue.
Obviously,
I think the whole “dispassionate ritual hitting” thing to be deeply
problematic. But my real trauma comes from the deeper underlying issue.
It
was the why. To break my will. Because I was the adversary.
That
is why the later psychological abuse has actually haunted me so much more. The
threatening to turn me over to the Devil because I expressed my frustration at
my sister’s ill-trained and bad-mannered dog. Telling me that failing to obey
immediately without talking back was turning my soul over to Satan. Telling me
Gothard’s lie that God didn’t speak directly to children, but instead spoke
through their parents, thus making parents the very voice of Almighty God. And
yes, threatening me with hell because I don’t share all of my parents’
beliefs.
It
was the fact that, rather than being on my side, my parents all too often saw
me as an adversary, an antagonist. My emotions were the enemy. My needs were
selfishness. My own conscience and strong sense of justice and morality were
suspect, and needed to be overcome.
Let
me share one incident, which occurred after I turned 18, if my memory is
correct. As a violinist, I have issues with my jaw. It is an occupational
hazard of holding an instrument with one’s chin and neck, turned to one
side.
We
were at the dinner table and my mom, who seemed to find everything about me
annoying back then, yelled at me to stop clicking my jaw when I chewed. As if I
could do that - fix my jaw by sheer willpower.
I
was frustrated and had enough, so I left the table and went to my room. I
didn’t even say anything. Just left.
My
dad was out of the room for the incident, but when my mom told him, his
response was to come to my room, get in my face, and threaten to evict me from
the home. Yep, that was the response.
I
still remember, as in so many similar incidents, the waves of nausea that
washed over me. The anger, the threats, the fact that I couldn’t even just walk
away from abusive behavior without triggering a fight.
In
this case, I eventually was able to explain, and he backed down. The reason
this incident sticks in my head, though, is that it is the ONLY time in my
teens (and since, honestly) when I remember my dad taking my side against
either my mother or sister. It has been more than 30 years since, and he has
taken their side every single time.
In
fact, what has instead happened is that I have gotten blamed for every family
conflict.
My
sister tells vicious lies about my wife and slings false accusations? Well, the
real problem is that Tim talks back says mean things. And on and
on.
This
is where our estrangement makes it difficult to be objective. In the end, it
turned out that my parents didn’t love me as much as they needed to control me.
Their loyalty wasn’t to me, it was to their political ideology, taught to them
by Dobson and Gothard and others. Because I do not obey their demands, I remain
the adversary to be threatened into submission, not a beloved child. It was
more important that I know my place as the family scapegoat (and expect my wife
to take that role too) than to have a relationship with me.
So,
it is hard for me to look back and remember the feeling of belonging and being
loved that I know I felt most of the time, without wondering if any of that was
real? Since my wife, my kids, and eventually I myself was so easily thrown
away, was all that love just pretend? Was it a performance?
What
was the real truth of my childhood? I don’t know anymore.
***
I
want to end with a few final things.
First,
I have been asked why I write negative things about my family and parents. My
parents think I am just being mean and insulting. They also think that I am
just “virtue signaling” to get attention from my “likeminded friends.”
Some
of this is projection: Dobson and Gothard sure taught a lot about how to
“virtue signal” to fellow right-wing white Fundamentalists through things like
moral panics about modern culture (and of course gay people) and clothing,
music, and movie choices. Kind of like the “Baptists don’t dance or raise their
hands” sort of thing. It’s all about virtue signaling, not actual virtue.
And
my parents haven’t had anyone in their lives who isn’t a fellow right-wing
Evangelical (other than me and my family) since they retired. It’s all
“likeminded” friends who share their theology and political views.
But
there is another factor, and that gets to the heart of why I write.
During
my childhood, my parents greatly enjoyed the attention they got from having
“good” children, with the constant praise of how good of parents they must have
been. I’m sure all that affirmation was a hell of a drug.
Along
with that came questions about “how did you do it?”
The
problem is, they always gave the wrong answers.
There
were indeed things they did well that in fact did likely contribute to
us being “good” children. (I believe my brother and I were and are genuinely
good people; my sister, not so much - she is a full-blown malignant narcissist
with significant sociopathic traits - but she faked it well until you actually
got to know her.)
My
parents did teach us good moral values. (Then complained when I retained those
values and called them out for abandoning them.)
My
parents did infuse our childhood with a lot of love, particularly before I hit
puberty. Even after that, my dad still did a lot of good things, which is why I
tried so hard for so long to maintain a relationship with him.
My
parents spent a lot of time with us, something I have tried to do with my own
kids. I think that may have been the biggest thing: my parents invested in us
in time and effort, and those efforts paid off. I am grateful for all of
that.
But
it wasn’t those things that they claimed were the reason we were good
kids.
I
will also add, having been a parent now, that kids deserve more credit for
being good than parents do, honestly. Good kids are good in spite of us, not
because of us. And that’s what I say when asked about my own kids. They are
good because they are good, and I really have no idea how to parent,
other than to love and spend time with your kids.
But
my parents didn’t list the actual good things they did, or acknowledge our own
role in our character.
Instead,
they listed things like spanking, homeschooling, and eventually, following
Dobson and Gothard’s authoritarian parenting prescriptions.
So
why do I write? Because my parents gave credit to the bad and neutral** things
they did, and I am deeply offended that I am being used as an advertisement for
those bad things.
Spanking
did not make me a good child. It just frustrated me and made me angry and told
me that my parents didn’t want to listen to me or meet my emotional
needs.
I
was good in spite of the spanking.
Homeschooling
did not make me a good child. I was a good child before I was homeschooled, and
would have been a good one no matter what education I received. Just like my
friends, many of whom went to public schools.
If
anything, my sister probably would have turned out better had she been forced
to deal with the real world earlier in her life. (She actually still avoids the
real world - no job, isolated lifestyle, alienates any who befriend her…)
And
I am very furious that any credit whatsoever should go to James Dobson or Bill
Gothard for anything about how I turned out. Their influence on our family was
toxic and evil and led eventually to the destruction of our family.
And
I want the world to fucking KNOW THAT.
It
is high time that the world understood how evil James Dobson was. And how much
he damaged millions of children of multiple generations.
I
do not anyone to think that Religious Authoritarian Parenting is morally okay.
I do not want anyone to think that it creates “good kids.” I do not want people
to be deluded into thinking that it is anything other than abusive and evil and
harmful.
Sure,
my parents are angry because I exploded their delusion of being good parents. I
haven’t “turned out,” and instead have called them out. I’d say I’m sorry, but
I really am not. I kept quiet for decades about all of this, hoping to have a
relationship with them. It really wasn’t until about 11 years ago - three years
after my mom went way over the line in trying to control my wife that I even
started writing about politics and religion. Had that breach never occurred, I
probably would never have written about family.
But
that’s what happens. Loyalty is a two-way street. You cannot expect my loyalty
if you refuse to be loyal to me and my family.
And
that is why I write about this. James Dobson and the other false prophets I
call out should not be allowed to enjoy a positive reputation. And certainly
not given credit for my choice to be a hardworking, moral, decent human
being.
**Neutral
things: I consider
homeschooling to be a neutral thing. It wasn’t a bad choice for me, actually. I
think I enjoyed school and life more without the level of busywork and waiting
for other students to catch up. My parents did a good academic job for me
(although I was the one who had to homeschool my siblings for high school math
and science…) and I can’t say much negative about homeschooling itself as I
experienced it. Really the big issue was that homeschooling was the
gateway, via HSLDA, James Dobson, and eventually Bill Gothard, into the White
Christian Nationalist movement. And also, homeschooling is a very bad choice
for many others. Mileage may vary.
***
And
a final thought:
How
did James Dobson get children so wrong? Why did he see them as evil tyrants,
adversaries, and wills to be broken? Why didn’t he see them as Christ saw them,
as young humans in need of love, and uniquely in tune with the Kingdom of God?
Why
couldn’t he look at them with actual love and appreciation? Kids really are
great, after all! (Especially mine…)
I
have wondered about this. One of my conclusions is that Dobson really disliked
children. There are people like that. More than you would think. Our society is
pretty unfriendly to kids and has been for a long time, and that isn’t a
coincidence. A significant portion of the population has a viscerally negative
reaction to how kids actually are: noisy, immature, impulsive, in need of
occasional rest, occasionally overwhelmed and emotional. (And all of the good
things too, of course - kids are both frustrating and adorable, sometimes at
the same time.)
What
I have found is that kids can tell if you like them or not. And they react
accordingly. I have confirmation of this from a number of friends who are
teachers too. The teachers that struggle to keep classroom order are usually
the ones who probably shouldn’t be teachers at all, because they dislike their
kids. I also knew full well as a teen that my mother did not like me. Instead,
she saw her father in me, and reacted to me accordingly.
Likewise,
there are plenty of people who shouldn’t have kids, because they do not like
kids. And their kids know it.
Dobson
was one of those.
But
I think there is something else too. I think Dobson was incapable of seeing
people as people. People to him were resources to be exploited. (Since his
death, people who worked for him have started coming out of the woodwork to
confirm this…)
Ultimately,
what was needed (in his view) was pawns in the culture wars, reproductive units
in the eugenics wars, lots of soldiers marching lockstep against encroaching
modern ideas like racial diversity, acceptance of sexual diversity, the
equality of women, and social justice at home and abroad.
The
“family” - the white Christian family of course - was just another weapon in
this war.
Dobson
couldn’t look at humans like Christ did, and be filled with compassion. He saw
either enemies or pawns.
Perhaps
African American professor and author Anthea Butler put it best in her
article for MSNBC on Dobson:
“He was
a psychologist who didn’t seem to comprehend what it means to be human.”
I’ll
end with that, because I think that cuts to the heart of how Dobson personally
harmed me and my family. His teachings trained my parents to become unable to
comprehend my humanity, to see me as fully human (and thus equal to them), and
to comprehend what my humanity needed from them as parents.
Usually,
I end these with a wish that a false prophet find better mercy than he extended
to others.
I
wish I could here. But I cannot. Instead, let me quote from Albert Burneko.
James
Dobson was a nasty dude. He liked to beat children and dogs with a belt and to
rain misery and punishment on the vulnerable; we know all of this about him
because he said as much in public, repeatedly, over a long and rancid public
life. He enlisted a whole bunch of Ideology—patriarchy, social conservatism,
utterly fake upside-down Christianity—in service of those basic motivations,
not only to justify his own appetite for and personal acts of sadism and
domination, but to cast punishment and predation as far out into the world as
he could manage. He studied psychology and the Bible so that he could borrow
their authority and instrumentalize them to do widespread cruelty more
effectively. He was oriented to evil, at vast scale, by continual lifelong choice.
It was his calling, and he made it his job.
What a guy
like James Dobson does, and what James Dobson did for his whole adult life, is
offer people—white men primarily, but not exclusively—a rhetorical framework
for doing evil and feeling good about it.
He blew
softly on a stupid and seething population's resentments, its will to power,
its lust to punish those who complicate their desires by having lives of their
own, and watched those appetites stick up like the hairs on your arm, or glow
like charcoal in a fire. It feels good. He tempts you with the promise that
every cruel, fearful, punitive impulse you have aligns with The Way Things Are
Supposed To Be, and that it is even your grim duty is to indulge them. In this
respect, James Dobson was very much like Satan.
In this way
Dobson warred against virtually every concerted movement in his lifetime
working toward making this country kinder, more just, more equitable, or more
merciful. He also fought against efforts to protect the environment and
responsibly steward the world's natural resources, because he was a nasty guy
motivated by the thrill of doing evil with impunity and for no other reason
whatsoever.
The world
is a much worse place as a result of his life's work; it would be a better
place had he never been born. If he did not want people to rejoice at his
death, maybe he should not have spent an entire lifetime working for and
justifying their pain and suffering. He preached that there is a hell, and that
the wicked go there. He lived his life as though he did not believe it, or
anything else.
Like
so many other evil, hateful, cruel men, Dobson preached a belief in a literal
hell, with eternal conscious torment for the wicked.
Like
these evil men, Dobson clearly never believed the shit he was spewing. Because
by the terms of his own theology, Dobson followed not merely the spirit, but
the very letter of how to go to hell. He literally did everything Christ said
led to that. And was proud of it.
In
what I think is arguably his finest book, Small
Gods, Terry Pratchett envisioned an afterlife where everyone got the
afterlife they believed in - the afterlife they would inflict on others.
The
villain in the book is Vorbis, the head of the Quizition, obsessed with
authority and happy to torture and abuse anyone who stands in his way.
He
is the fictional character who comes most to mind when I think of Dobson. As
Brutha, the simpleminded, devout, and kind hero of the book realizes:
[T]he
worst thing about Vorbis isn’t that he’s evil, but that he makes good people do
evil. He turns people into things like himself. You can’t help it. You catch it
off him.
This
is Dobson’s legacy. He made millions of good people like my parents do evil.
Unfortunately, like the evil of Vorbis, the evil of Dobson lingers on, the foul
stench of evil he put in the hearts of his followers.
It takes
a long time for people like Vorbis to die. They leave echoes in history.
So,
in this case, my hope for Dobson is this:
May
he spend eternity not surrounded by the sycophants who worshiped and followed
him during his lifetime. May he never see another smug white Evangelical
again.
Instead,
may he forever be surrounded by those he abused and taught others to
abuse.
May
he be fully dependent on the LGBTQ people he hated and vilified.
May
his existence depend on the charity of the immigrants and refugees he was so
eager to send back to die in their home countries.
May
he truly feel the pain so many of us former children endured at the hands of
his evil teachings.
May
he feel the true pain of poverty and the weight of the boot he wished to grind
the poor with.
May
he fully understand how he devoted his life to evil and making the world a
worse place for nearly everyone else.
And,
may he eventually be judged by the Almighty according to his deeds, which were
evil almost beyond belief.