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JOE SCARBOROUGH, HOST: Come one, come all. The
circus has rumbled into town, so let the sideshow begin.
In this corner, see the woman with the world‘s biggest
broken heart, still in mourning over John Kerry‘s loss.
Sad Senator Babs Boxer spent today protesting the
president‘s win in Ohio, despite the fact that Bushman
George carried the Buckeye State by 118,000 votes.
And in the other corner, the Michigan congressman who has
trouble counting 50 turkeys. He is demanding greater
accountability from election officials. In the words of
WKRP‘s Les Nessman, “the humanity of it all".
Welcome to SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY, where no passport is
required and no sideshows are allowed.
Stop the presses. The president‘s nominee for attorney
general testifies that he opposes torture. But should he?
Democrats grill Alberto Gonzales and his stance on torture
as an interrogation tool. But would you want the law to
beat a terrorist if it was the only way to find a nuclear
bomb that was about to be detonated in your hometown?
And then, Michael Moore is back. Despite the whipping
Democrats took from Bush, Moore still claims Americans
side with Democrats on the issues, and he pitches Tom
Hanks and Oprah for president.
And a Saudi professor blames sex-crazed tourists for
bringing God‘s wrath down on South Asia. Meanwhile,
oil-rich Arab countries turn their backs on suffering
Muslim brothers and sisters. As Peggy Lee once asked in
the song, who is stingy now?
ANNOUNCER: From the press room, to the courtroom, to the
halls of Congress, Joe Scarborough has seen it all.
Welcome back to SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY.
SCARBOROUGH: Hey, welcome to the show.
Now, you can tell Congress is back in session because the
laughs never stop coming. It‘s time for tonight‘s “Real
Deal.”
It was about 10 years ago this week that I was sworn in as
a member of Congress, and it was a great source of pride,
more often than not. But from time to time, my former
colleagues often embarrassed themselves and the
institution I once served.
Today, United States Senator Barbara Boxer played the role
of Vladimir Putin in the Ukraine by refusing to
acknowledge the popular will of the people and accepting
voting results that even the most hardened Democratic
political pro accepted. What does Ms. Boxer and her fellow
tinfoil-hat-wearing conspiracy theorists suggest we do
every time a candidate is beaten by over 100,000 votes?
Challenge the process, stop the business of the Senate and
the House, whatever that is, and grandstand for the most
extreme 1 percent of all American Internet users?
Listen, no respectable politician or journalist has
suggested that John Kerry had a chance in hell of winning
a challenge in Ohio. The fact that a United States senator
and a handful of congressmen would hold up congressional
business for the benefit of Internet conspiracy nutbars
says more about Boxer and friends than the freaks they are
trying to appease.
And what can you say of John Conyers, a former fellow
Judiciary member with whom I served and personally like?
Now, here is a man who was given 50 turkeys over the
holidays, so his office could distribute them to the poor
and needy. Instead, Conyers and staff reportedly gave a
handful of the basted birds to political cronies as
flavorful favors. And they lost count of what happened to
the rest of those turkeys.
Is this really the man to be criticizing the way Ohio
election officials count five million votes? Of course
not. But, then again, some congressmen and senators never
let the facts get in the way of a good press conference.
Pass the gravy, because this one is too rich even for my
taste. And that‘s tonight‘s “Real Deal.”
Now, here to talk about all the political maneuvering on
Capitol Hill today is Howard Fineman of “Newsweek.”
Howard, thanks for being with us to talk about this
momentous occasion.
I understand you were there. And I just got to ask you
this, Howard. You can usually find a hotheaded congressman
like myself to strap political dynamite on his chest and
do something foolish like this, but you usually can‘t find
senators to do this. Why would Barbara Boxer step forward
and challenge the vote in Ohio?
HOWARD FINEMAN, NBC CHIEF POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT: Well,
Joe, I wanted to be there to be able to tell my
grandchildren that I had seen it.
(LAUGHTER)
FINEMAN: You know, I have to say, even though there are
questions about the way voting is conducted and it‘s
always worth looking to make sure that it‘s done right,
you know, this was a, I think, fundamentally in the end
perhaps a little silly exercise by the Democrats, because
they said all along, and even the most partisan of
Democrats said, even John Kerry himself said repeatedly
that George Bush won Ohio by 115,000, 120,000 votes.
Nobody disputed that, especially after the recount was had
in the state. So, they weren‘t really saying that the
electors did not deserve to be recognized by the Congress,
which is actually what was going on today, a sort of
formal exercise. And, you know, they lost the vote 74-1.
Many of the senators were not around. They were on various
trips abroad or it would have probably been 99-1. But they
did it anyway.
And I think it‘s unusual. You are right. You make a good
point about the Senate, which used to be a place where
senators considered themselves on many occasions to be
above partisanship, to be representing the country as a
whole and not just their states, as the founders intended,
but where today, if you look at the roll call sheets in
the Senate, where they tally votes, Joe, they are
color-coded now, red for Republicans, blue for Democrats.
And they started doing that in the last session. That to
me is all too symbolic of the way the Senate now operates.
SCARBOROUGH: One final question for you, Howard. Let‘s
talk about the other show that was going on, on Capitol
Hill, a much more important story. And that is what is
happening with Gonzales, a lot of Democrats attacking him,
saying that, as the president‘s counsel, that he basically
turned a blind eye to torture towards terrorists.
Do you think, in the end, there is any chance at all that
Alberto Gonzales will not get confirmed by the United
States Senate, or is this too a sideshow?
FINEMAN: Yes, well, there‘s very little chance that he
won‘t be confirmed. I just was talking to a key staffer
right in the wheelhouse of the Democratic Party up there
just a few minutes ago who said to me, of course he is
going to be confirmed. We think we have made progress by
getting him on record for having supposedly changed the
administration‘s torture policy.
That could be debated forever. But this all had a sort of
shadowboxing quality to it. Ironically, I don‘t think the
Democrats wanted to find out anything that would actually
compromise Gonzales‘ chances, because they don‘t want to
have to vote against the first Hispanic nominated for such
an important position, either that, or they think they can
roll this guy once he is in the Justice Department.
So the whole thing had a sort of phony quality about it,
of pounding the table, having already decided that they
are going to vote for this guy, or not vote at all and let
the Republicans put him in place. Very strange day.
SCARBOROUGH: Very strange day, indeed, Howard Fineman.
But, again, you were there to record it, not only for
“Newsweek” readers, but also for your grandchildren. I
know you felt history rushing through your veins. Thanks
for being with us tonight.
FINEMAN: I was humbled. I was humbled.
SCARBOROUGH: And we are humbled to have you here. Thanks
for being with us.
(LAUGHTER)
SCARBOROUGH: OK.
Now let‘s go to Alan Dershowitz. He‘s Harvard professor
and the author of “Rights from Wrongs: The Origins of
Human Rights in the Experience of Injustice.”
And thank you for being with us, Professor.
ALAN DERSHOWITZ, AUTHOR, “RIGHTS FROM WRONGS”: Thank you.
SCARBOROUGH: You know, one of the things that I found so
interesting today was that, by the end of the hearings, I
really had no more idea on what the state of the law is
regarding terrorism and torture than I did at the
beginning of the day.
DERSHOWITZ: You are absolutely right.
SCARBOROUGH: It is so muddled.
DERSHOWITZ: You are absolutely right. And it is
deliberately muddled.
SCARBOROUGH: So what did we learn as Americans? Go ahead.
DERSHOWITZ: Well, nothing. We deliberately—what we
deliberately do is muddle the situation.
Everybody is against torture, but then everybody has their
own definition of torture. Torture is what they do to our
people. What we do to their people, that is something
short of torture. And nobody is prepared to sit down and
say, precisely what are we prepared to do? If there were
ticking-bomb terrorist who was about to set off a nuclear
weapon, would we be prepared to put a sterilized needle
underneath his fingernails for 30 minutes, cause him
excruciating pain, so that he would reveal the
information?
Would we be prepared to put him on a board and have his
head dip in the water until he felt he was drowning, so
that he would reveal the information? We are not prepared
to debate what precisely we are permitted to do, who is
prepared to authorize it. We just want to be satisfied,
say, oh, torture, that‘s terrible. We are against torture.
We are all against torture, even though we all know we
would use it if it ever came down to crunch and it
required torture to save hundreds of thousands of innocent
lives.
SCARBOROUGH: Well, Professor, I know you are not here to
talk politics. Obviously, though, this is my feeling.
When Democrats get out and criticize someone who supports,
let‘s say, water-boarding—and, of course, water-boarding
is what the CIA agents did to Khalid Shaikh Mohammed,
where they made him think that he was going to drown.
DERSHOWITZ: Right.
SCARBOROUGH: I can tell you, that may offend a lot of
people on the Upper West Side. It certainly would offend
sensibilities of a lot of thinking Americans, but it seems
to me most Americans would support that type of action if,
like you said, they thought that there was a nuclear
device in Lower Manhattan and this guy had the
information.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Now, how do we bring these two sides
together? How do we reconcile what Americans are willing
to do to keep their country safe and what, let‘s say,
judges are willing to allow under the Constitution that
our founding fathers gave us?
DERSHOWITZ: Well, I think judges would be allowed, would
allow extreme measures in extreme cases.
The problem is, because we have the hypocritical approach,
in which we say, we are against it all, we are against it
all, and then, with a wink and a nod, we send a message,
do what you have to do in extreme cases, Abu Ghraib
results, where we have no standards, no measures, no
accountability.
What I am in favor of is some kind of accountability,
whereby only the president of the United States or the
chief justice or the secretary of defense, a very
high-ranking official, would be able to say, look, this is
a crisis. This is something that will happen maybe once a
century. We have to suspend the Marquis of Queensbury
rules and we have to do what we need to do to get the
information.
But we‘ll never allow it to become routine. We are not
prepared to do that. We prefer the way of the hypocrite,
which says we will never allow it, but quietly we say,
look, we all want it to happen if it‘s required to save
lives. We need accountability. We need rules. We need
regulation.
That‘s why I agree with what the designated attorney
general said when he said that the Conventions are clearly
anachronistic, the Geneva Convention, after 9/11.
SCARBOROUGH: Right.
DERSHOWITZ: We must relook at them. Now, whether we should
look at them the way he wants to look at them or the way
human rights groups want to look at them, but I think
every thinking person would say that those conventions
today benefit the terrorists, at the expense of innocent
civilians.
SCARBOROUGH: You know, Professor, obviously—and you
understand this better than most because you have been
studying this extensively since September 11, 2001, but
listen to what you are saying. You are saying, we need a
set of concrete rules.
DERSHOWITZ: Right.
SCARBOROUGH: We need guidelines that our leaders can
follow, that our judges can follow that can hold people
accountable.
DERSHOWITZ: Right.
SCARBOROUGH: I agree with you.
At the same time, you are saying that we as an American
people, who respect individual rights and like to think of
ourselves as that city shining brightly on the hill for
all the world to see, don‘t want to put those rules down
in writing.
DERSHOWITZ: That‘s right.
SCARBOROUGH: So, are we not doomed to this ambiguous
approach to the enforcement of torture and terror for,
God, the next 20, 30, 40 years?
DERSHOWITZ: Well, if we do that, we will have more Abu
Ghraibs.
And the reason we won‘t have more is not that what was
going on is unacceptable. It‘s the fact that photographs
were taken, and they were forced—we were forced to see the
degradation that was going on. And, by the way, the
degradation that went on at Abu Ghraib happens in American
prisons and British prisons and prisons all over the
world. It‘s fairly routine, but what‘s not routine is
seeing them in front of our eyes in photographs.
SCARBOROUGH: And what they did with Khalid Shaikh
Mohammed, obviously, al Qaeda‘s No. 2 guy, I would suggest
much tougher, putting a man under water, making him think
he is going to drown, more than, let‘s say, stripping
people down and stacking them up in a pyramid.
(CROSSTALK)
DERSHOWITZ: No question about that.
And, by the way, the description of what we were doing to
Shaikh Khalid Mohammed was in all the papers, in “The Wall
Street Journal,” “The New York Times,” “Atlantic Monthly,”
well before the photographs, but nobody cared because we
didn‘t have a visual picture of it.
(CROSSTALK)
DERSHOWITZ: And not only that, but he was the No. 2 man.
So what I think we need to do is go back to the drawing
board, redesign the rules and create limited exceptions in
extraordinary cases under which only the president—it‘s
really like shooting down the jet that‘s about to crash
into the Empire State Building.
SCARBOROUGH: Right.
DERSHOWITZ: You don‘t want some lieutenant colonel to make
that decision. You want to make the president of the
United States accountable in case he is wrong. The same
thing is true for torture.
SCARBOROUGH: Professor, we‘ve got to leave it there. Thank
you so much for being with us.
DERSHOWITZ: My pleasure. Thank you.
SCARBOROUGH: Looking forward to having you back again to
talk about this in the coming weeks.
We‘ll be right back in SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: Up next, will Michael Moore ever get it? He
is back with a fresh propaganda film, and we are going to
break it down for you.
So, don‘t go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: From the sound insight of Howard Fineman and
Alan Dershowitz, we move to a SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY
showdown. When should torture be acceptable?
With me now to talk about it is Republican strategist Jack
Burkman and Democratic strategist Dave Pollak.
Dave, I know you heard Professor Dershowitz, a
progressive. He says, hey, in the post-9/11 world, torture
is just a reality we are going to have to get used to. You
agree with that, don‘t you?
DAVID POLLAK, PRESIDENT, DEMOCRATIC LEADERSHIP FOR THE
21ST CENTURY:
I didn‘t hear him say that. I think I heard him say in the
post-9/11 world, in certain very, very unusual cases, the
president himself may need to authorize a very difficult
decision to perhaps torture a subject where lives are at
stake.
(CROSSTALK)
POLLAK: But that‘s not what is happening today. That‘s not
what happened in Iraq. That‘s not what happened in Abu
Ghraib.
SCARBOROUGH: Do you support—let‘s say, for instance, there
is a nuclear device? And he was talking about the ticking
bomb situation. There‘s a nuclear device in southern
Manhattan. We have got somebody there that has information
on it. Should the United States government be able to
torture that detainee to find out where the nuclear device
is?
POLLAK: Joe, before I answer that, let me preface my
answer by saying, the question you are asking me is not
what happened in Iraq, and it‘s not what we faced with the
Gonzales writings and opinions on.
But the case you laid out, perhaps. But that‘s not the
reality of modern torture today.
JACK BURKMAN, REPUBLICAN STRATEGIST: But, you know, Joe,
it‘s interesting. We‘ve seen that question. I think you
and I have asked that question to a lot of Democrats.
Perhaps is just not an answer.
The president of the United States can‘t answer that
question perhaps. When two generals come in and say
there‘s a dirty bomb in New York City, a million people
can die, perhaps is not an answer that saves a million
lives.
(CROSSTALK)
POLLAK: But wait a second. Now you are playing word games,
because perhaps is not the answer to that question.
BURKMAN: Is the answer yes or no?
POLLAK: The answer to that question is up to the
president.
BURKMAN: Well, what is your answer? Joe asked you.
POLLAK: Well, if I got to be president and I could torture
somebody to keep them from blowing up a million Americans,
I suppose I would do it.
(CROSSTALK)
BURKMAN: Well, Joe, the issue, look, with the Geneva
Conventions, we all they were never intended to prohibit
torture under any circumstance.
The framers of the Geneva Convention could not contemplate
a circumstance where there would be something like a dirty
bomb or a smallpox epidemic or some type of terrible thing
that could kill millions of people. But I would take it
even further. Why does it have to be something so extreme,
as Senator Specter laid out today? What if 10,000 or 5,000
lives? Do you mean to tell me the president of the United
States should refrain from—not killing someone or even
maiming someone.
SCARBOROUGH: Well, you know, Jack Burkman, during today‘s
hearings, Gonzales didn‘t back down at all when he was
asked whether the Geneva Conventions applied to al Qaeda.
And this is what he said.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
ALBERTO GONZALES, ATTORNEY GENERAL NOMINEE: The decision
not to apply Geneva in our conflict with al Qaeda was
absolutely the right decision for a variety of reasons.
First of all, it really would be a dishonor to the Geneva
Convention. It would honor and reward bad conduct. It
would actually make it more difficult, in my judgment, for
our troops to win in our conflict against al Qaeda. It
would limit our ability to solicit information from
detainees.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SCARBOROUGH: David Pollak, the professor agrees also with
Mr. Gonzales regarding that, that the Geneva Conventions
do not apply to al Qaeda. What‘s your position?
POLLAK: I don‘t think the professor said that he agreed,
nor do I believe Jack would agree that the Geneva
Convention does not apply to detainees in Iraq.
BURKMAN: You are wrong. I do. Don‘t put words in my mouth.
I do agree. The Geneva Convention were drafted for
pre—they were drafted for the 1940s. They‘re very vague
documents.
(CROSSTALK)
POLLAK: Jack, do you support the torture that happened in
Abu Ghraib in Iraq?
BURKMAN: I do not support that.
POLLAK: Thank you.
BURKMAN: But that‘s a mistake and an error. That has
nothing to do with what we are talking about.
(CROSSTALK)
POLLAK: But that was a result of Gonzales‘ writings, were
those mistakes in error.
BURKMAN: It was not. You are attributing cause and effect
where you can‘t attribute cause and effect.
Look, Joe, I think Gonzales did a good job today. I think
the one thing he should have done, he should have stuck by
his guns and said yes. He should have said clearly, yes,
there are circumstances where torture is OK. We have a
three and a half million vote conservative mandate. I
don‘t think we should be coddling Ted Kennedy, Joe Biden,
and Pat Leahy. Those guys should be steamrolled.
SCARBOROUGH: All right, Jack Burkman, we will leave it
there with those happy thoughts, the steamrolling of
United States senators.
Jack Burkman and David Pollak, thank you so much for being
with us, as always.
Now, earlier today, Michael Moore was on “The Today Show,”
and he was pushing his new book and his usual bag of
ideology.
Let‘s take a look.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, “THE TODAY SHOW”)
MICHAEL MOORE, FILMMAKER/AUTHOR: When we start running
people that are beloved by the American public, we are
going to win, because we already win on the issues, as I
said earlier. The American people generally agree more
with the Democratic platform than the Democratic platform.
KATIE COURIC, CO-HOST: What do you base that on, by the
way?
MOORE: Any Gallup poll, CNN poll, “USA Today” poll.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SCARBOROUGH: I‘m here with—yes, he‘s the gift that keeps
on giving.
I am here with Lawrence Kudlow of CNBC‘s “Kudlow & Cramer”
and Michael Rectenwald. He‘s the founder and chair of
Citizens For Legitimate Government.
Gentlemen, welcome.
I have got to go to you, Lawrence, first.
Michael Moore pronounces that the American people agree
with Democrats more than Republicans. And George Bush must
have just won because he had the force of personality of
Oprah. Let‘s talk facts. Do the American people support
Democratic positions or Republican positions?
LAWRENCE KUDLOW, CO-HOST, “KUDLOW & CRAMER”: You know, I
think, listen, if Michael Moore wants to go down that
road, if the whole Democratic Party wants to go down that
road and sink deeper and deeper into the electoral
quagmire, so be it. Who am I to stop them.
But what he said is just utter nonsense. The Democrats are
way out of the mainstream on the war against terrorism and
the use of American force. They are way out of the
mainstream on religious values and moral values, and they
are also way out of the mainstream on tax cuts and class
warfare and class envy.
All the gambits that Mr. Kerry tried to use failed on
these things. You know what‘s interesting to me? Why is it
that a leading Democrat doesn‘t pull a Sister Souljah and
just blast, I mean frontally blast all of the nonsensical
garbage that Michael Moore says? I don‘t know. I am
waiting for that, because that‘s the Democrat that can
lead the party out of the quagmire.
SCARBOROUGH: Well, you know, I was waiting for that the
entire election. I expected John Kerry to do it at some
point. I expected Hillary Clinton to do it at some point.
Instead, all they did was seem to embrace him.
I think Hillary Clinton is the best candidate for that,
because I believe she is going to keep moving to the
center. She is going to move to the center economically.
She is going to move to the center as far as national
security goes. I think there‘s a Democrat that needs to
step forward and do that, because you are right. That‘s a
Democrat that can lead the party.
Let me go to you, Mr. Rectenwald.
MICHAEL RECTENWALD, CITIZENS FOR LEGITIMATE GOVERNMENT:
Hey, Joe.
SCARBOROUGH: Mr. Moore says that the American people
support the Democrats on key issues.
RECTENWALD: I agree.
SCARBOROUGH: And yet, when it comes to tax cuts, when it
comes to the war on terror, when it comes to all these
other issues, time and time again, the polls show that
Americans support Republicans. What‘s this guy talking
about?
RECTENWALD: Actually, Joe, that‘s not true. The polls show
that the public does not support the tax cuts for the 1
percent. The public does not support the president‘s
Social Security gambit. The public does not support the
continuous minimum wage at $5.15, what have you. The
public does not support the economic programs of the
president.
And, furthermore, 56 percent of the public now suggests
that the war was a mistake and that it wasn‘t worth it.
So, I think Michael Moore is correct on that assessment.
SCARBOROUGH: We live in an age of terror. The key issue to
most Americans is how a president handles the war on
terror. And when it comes to that issue, before and after
the election, Republicans outpolled Democrats by 16
percentage points.
Larry Kudlow, why is that so difficult for Democrats like
Michael Moore to understand?
KUDLOW: It‘s hard to believe. I don‘t get it. I mean,
anybody can read the polls. They are as clear as day on
these key issues.
Even when Bush fell asleep during the debates and got
crushed in the polling on who won the debate, he
nonetheless had double-digit leads in all of the key
content point in the debates. Listen, I will tell you a
great story. Yesterday, I was in Albany, New York, of all
places, Governor George Pataki‘s state of the state
message. The Democratic side of that chamber, the only
time in an hour they ever clapped was when Pataki proposed
some nontoxic chemical to clean the buildings in Albany,
which is junk science.
When they talked about tax cuts, they never clapped. When
he talked about cutting the budget, they never clapped. I
mean, the Democratic Party is just locked into this
bizarre ideological anti-American position, and somebody
can pull them out. They are not that far behind, as Peggy
Noonan noted in the paper this morning, but I sure don‘t
see it yet.
SCARBOROUGH: All right, thank you, Larry Kudlow. Thank
you, Mr.
Rectenwald. I appreciate both of you being here.
And I wrote this down, junk science. Don Imus, are you
listening? Larry Kudlow just went after your wife. Larry,
you just stuck your hand into a hornet‘s nest.
Well, anyway, the big question going around the Middle
East right now is whether the Christmas tsunami was God‘s
punishment for sex-crazed tourists in Asia. That‘s what
they are saying. At least, that is what some Saudi clerics
are claiming.
We are going to be back debating it when SCARBOROUGH
COUNTRY returns.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: In the wake of the tsunami, the U.S. has been
called stingy, but we have actually pledged three times
what all the oil-soaked Arab countries have combined.
That‘s coming up next, but, first, the latest headlines
from the MSNBC News Desk.
(NEWS BREAK)
ANNOUNCER: From the press room, to the courtroom, to the
halls of Congress, Joe Scarborough has seen it all.
Welcome back to SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY.
SCARBOROUGH: You know, a few nights ago, SCARBOROUGH
COUNTRY was the first national media outlet to start
asking questions about God and the relationship with the
tsunami and how a loving God allowed something like this
to happen. The next day, “The Washington Post” picked it
up. “The L.A. Times” also started asking those same
questions.
And now Middle East media outlets are also asking the same
questions and wondering whether the sins of the people in
that region were responsible for their horrific deaths.
With me now to talk about that and other issues is Max
Lucado. He‘s the author of the best-selling book
“Traveling Light.” We also have Deroy Murdock. He‘s a
syndicated columnist with the Scripps Howard service. We
also have William Donahue of the Catholic League. And
we‘ve got MSNBC contributor Raghida Dergham of “Al Hayat,”
a Pan-Arab Arabic language newspaper.
Let me begin with you, Max Lucado.
And, Max, I know we have met. Since we are Baptists
instead of Buddhists, I know it wasn‘t in a past life, but
we met somewhere before.
MAX LUCADO, AUTHOR, “TRAVELING LIGHT”: We have. It‘s good
to see you again.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Yes, good to see you too.
I want to ask you what a lot of people have had a hard
time answering this past week, including a lot of
religious experts that we brought on to this program. How
could a loving God allow 150,000 people to die in this
horrendous way, when one-third of them were innocent
children?
LUCADO: Yes.
God‘s priority is not this world, but the next. He has
never promised us that there would be no suffering in this
life. In fact, he has promised that the suffering could be
used to prepare us for and help us to make decisions about
the life to come. The 150,000 deaths tragically remind us
how frail our life is and how brief our time on Earth is.
The question is, can God be both good and strong? I
believe he can. I believe he is a good God, and what he
does always has a purpose. It has a reason. I believe he
is strong. I don‘t believe he is capricious or careless. I
don‘t understand his ways. Whoever does understand his
ways claims a falsehood, because his ways are higher than
ours, but I do believe that he will use this to glorify
his name and to awaken people to the brevity of this life.
SCARBOROUGH: Max, what do you say to people like the
college professor I had that said—basically said I was
yahoo for believing in a God that would allow millions of
innocent people to die in wars and earthquakes and
holocausts and tsunamis? What do you say to those people
out there right now that say this guy is basically saying
that God, a loving God, allowed this to happen, and if he
were a powerful God, well, he just chose not to stop it?
LUCADO: Well...
SCARBOROUGH: God could have stopped this if he wanted to,
right?
This is the same God that you and I worship that parted
the Red Sea.
LUCADO: Absolutely.
The answer to that comes on so many different levels, Joe.
First of all, I would urge humility. Who are we to tell
God how to run this world? We don‘t do very good
ourselves. We abort several -- 10 or 15 times that many
people every single year, talking about the death of
babies. Who are we to question God‘s will?
But I think we have to go back and remember that the
priority of God has never been earthly comfort. The
priority of God has always been eternal salvation. And
throughout scripture, he does whatever it takes. He brings
burdens or he brings blessings to awaken us. Now, we all
raise our hand and say, hey, I will take some of those
blessings, but when God allows burdens to come into the
world to remind us of the frailty of the human condition,
to alert us, to wake us up to who he is and how strong he
is, we typically back away and say, hey, you can‘t do
that.
But God can do anything he wants, chiefly because, from
the Christian perspective, he himself became flesh and
received on himself the ultimate of human suffering, not
just the physical suffering of Jesus on the cross, but he
received our sin on him and, consequently, was separated
from God, rose from the dead and proved that he is the son
of God. And so he has the right to do whatever he wants
to. He is the maker. He is the monarch. He is the king.
And I believe that he is a good God, and he is going to
use this to his glory and his purpose.
SCARBOROUGH: Raghida, we have heard the Christian
perspective over the past week. We have heard the
perspective of rabbis. Today, we are starting to slowly,
but surely get reaction from Middle East clerics.
And the Middle East Media Research Institute follows and
translates Arab television, and they found and reported
that the head of the Islamic relief organization in Mecca
said this—quote—“This disaster is a warning from Allah to
all those who went to those places and their sinning peers
to serve as a lesson and a warning for them.”
Is there a belief, from what you have gathered, from
listening to—talking to people in your news operation and
across the Middle East that Muslims believe that this
disaster, like this cleric, was the result of sin?
RAGHIDA DERGHAM, NBC FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYST: Not at all.
This cleric represents his point of view. It‘s a very
small minority. Actually, we heard the same thing after
9/11 from the religious right here, and then they had to
retract it, because it was a very bigoted comment. So is
this one.
The majority of Muslims feel that this is the will of God.
The expression is that you cannot challenge the will of
God. Of course, at any level, any of us parents, when our
children, God forbid, would slip out of our hands, then,
at moments, probably will have a moment of anger with God,
to say, why? Why didn‘t you take me instead?
I think this is a very religious society in Indonesia and
throughout, and I fear that their anger with God is only
probably why they lived and outlived their loved ones.
SCARBOROUGH: Let me read another quote, this from the
Middle East Media Research Institute also.
They translated an adviser to a Saudi justice minister.
And he said this: “Whoever reads the Koran given by the
maker of the world can see how these nations were
destroyed. There is one reason. They lied. They sinned and
they were infidels.”
(CROSSTALK)
DERGHAM: I don‘t know—you know what? But today—today
also—today also, Al-Jazeera, for example, and other
networks, what they did is that they hosted several
leading religious leaders, clerics, both Christian and
Muslims. And they hosted them in order to call on the
people, to exhort the people to contribute for the victims
of the tsunami.
So, you would have—whatever this service you are talking
about, they might have picked up one comment or another
here and there, and these people should be condemned for
saying that, but the majority actually are very touched
with what happened . And they feel that they are coming a
bit late at helping, which they have they should
raised—risen and helped much more at the beginning.
But at least now we have them call on the people to
contribute. And maybe this should be an institutionalized
charity, rather than only every now and then, so that
there would be aid for victims in Somalia and Sudan.
There‘s a difference between only an emergency relief and
then the need, the desperate need for contributions
worldwide.
SCARBOROUGH: Bill Donahue—let me bring in Bill Donahue.
Bill Donahue, you are the head of the Catholic League.
What is the Catholic Church‘s take? I know, in the Middle
Ages, disasters were often blamed on people straying from
God‘s will. Is that the position of the church? Does the
pope believe these people died because they were sinful
people?
WILLIAM DONAHUE, PRESIDENT, CATHOLIC LEAGUE: No, not at
all. As a matter of fact, Christianity, and particularly
Roman Catholicism, is an inherently optimistic religion.
Just think about the symbolism of the cross. What does the
cross mean? It means suffering, but it also means
redemption. It means death, but it also means life. It
means darkness, but it also means light. The fact of the
matter is that what—we can‘t figure out exactly as mortal
human beings what is exactly at work. Job certainly didn‘t
understand it in the New Testament. Talk about Murphy‘s
Law. Everything that could have gone wrong for that guy
went wrong.
But what did it do to his faith? He kept his faith in God.
There are strange things that happen. But we do one thing,
that Catholicism in particular is a theology of suffering,
as Cardinal O‘Connor once said. Cardinal O‘Connor once
stunned the Jewish community by saying that the great gift
of Judaism was the Holocaust. He didn‘t mean that to
insult Jews.
What he was saying was this. There is no greater suffering
than what Christ did. He died on the cross, but that‘s a
source of optimism. That‘s a source of redemption. So, I
think we have to look at this in a positive sense. In one
strange sense, then, what‘s happening to these poor Asian
people is their gift to the world. It makes us think about
our mortality and about salvation and about redemption.
That‘s what we should be thinking about.
SCARBOROUGH: All right, Bill, we need to take a quick
break.
But we are going to have more of this debate on the panel.
And we are also going to be debating whether Saudi Arabia
and other countries in the Middle East are contributing
their fair share to take care of the suffering people in
South Asia.
That‘s when SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY returns.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: You know, a U.N. official caused quite a stir
when he accused the United States of America of being
stingy with its foreign aid. But how are the oil-soaked
billionaires of the Middle East helping out in the tsunami
relief effort?
I want to go back to my panel.
I want to start with Deroy Murdock.
Deroy, you wrote a column earlier today saying that,
actually, those in the Middle East aren‘t doing their fair
share. Explain.
DEROY MURDOCK, SYNDICATED COLUMNIST: Well, the Middle
Eastern countries, Middle East, North Africa, most of
which are members of OPEC and are producing oil and making
a lot of money now that oil is up at $42 a barrel or so,
have been very, very stingy, to use that word, about
contributing to the relief effort in South Asia.
You have the most populous Muslim country in Indonesia.
You‘ve got Sumatra, which is a very devoutly Muslim
province, which was almost vacuumed off the face of the
Earth. And yet the amount of money that has come out of
Saudi Arabia, for example, was just $10 million early on.
They upped it to 30. You go across seven other countries
in the Middle East, it adds up to a total $91 million,
which is probably about four or five hours worth of oil
production.
SCARBOROUGH: Why is that? What is their justification for
that?
MURDOCK: I think part of it is just attitude which is not
very charitable, unfortunately. I think, as you pointed
out, there have been a number of clerics who have
explained that they see this as basically Allah‘s justice
for the misbehavior of the infidels.
There have been a number of comments like that, even
though Sumatra, as I say, is a very, very devoutly Muslim
area. I wonder if in fact Allah were upset at us, why Las
Vegas wasn‘t flattened or why the red light district of
Bangkok is still standing, whereas a place like Phuket,
which actually has a Muslim minority, was so badly hurt.
SCARBOROUGH: So, in your column, you are actually saying
that the reason why some of these Middle Eastern countries
aren‘t helping their Muslim brothers and sisters may be
because they do believe that this is God‘s vengeance
exacted against them?
MURDOCK: I think that may be a part of it. I think
another, there have been a number of—Jihad Watch, for
example, took a look at this issue—a number of readings
from Islamic religious texts that suggest that charity
only should be given to help Muslims.
And there have been statements in fact by some Kuwaiti
charities that they only wanted to give money that would
go directly to Muslims, and the fear was that some of the
money would go to non-Muslim victims of the tsunami. And
that may in fact have kept some of the checkbooks more
closed than they should have been.
DERGHAM: Joe, may I?
SCARBOROUGH: Raghida.
DERGHAM: Yes, please, thank you.
First of all, this is—to write a column here in New York
is fine, but you should see the many Arab columnists that
have written, criticizing the shortcomings of Arab
contributions for this terrible, terrible tragedy. So, we
didn‘t have an Arab columnist to wait until an American
columnist told us what to do. We all wrote criticizing
what has happened.
And that‘s why, one of the reasons why Saudis and others
realized that contributions were so little. Therefore,
they multiplied it and they should do more. Still, this is
not enough. And there‘s a drive right now going on, on a
national level.
But to say this is because they decided Allah is getting
angry with the infidels, this is nonsense. Truly, it‘s
nonsense. It‘s irresponsible, particularly at a time when
there‘s telethons and people are praying and they‘re
gathering money and they‘re feeling guilty that they did
not give enough from the very beginning. They should feel
guilty and they should do more. But the other argument is
total nonsense.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Hold on a second.
I want to look at some of the numbers here that Raghida
and, Deroy, you are talking about. The European Union,
Australia, Japan and the United States together pledged
nearly $3 billion for the tsunami relief effort.
But the Muslim nations of the world have responded this
way so far, Saudi Arabia, $30 million, Qatar $25 million,
the United Arab Emirates $20 million, Kuwait $10 million,
Bahrain $2 million.
I suspect, as Raghida has said, those numbers will go up.
Max Lucado, I want to bring you back in here. I find it
very interesting that—I read a column by a “New York
Times” that has not always been charitable towards
Christians, but he said that Christians over the past 10
years have become the new internationalists and have
started worrying about sex trafficking and poverty and
other issues.
And he wrote this actually before the tsunami hit. It was
Kristol (sic) in “The New York Times.” What is your
response to that? Why is that happening?
LUCADO: No one is more highly motivated to be benevolent
than a Christian, because a Christian, at the core of our
faith, we believe that everything we have received is a
gift. Consequently, we have been given everything. We
should be willing to give everything.
In contrast with other world religions, where your
salvation is dependent upon your works or your service or
your performance, the Christian faith at its core teaches
that you are saved by what Christ has done for us.
Consequently, I would hope that the Christian populace
would be driven to be more benevolent, because we have
been given so much. And what can we do but give.
SCARBOROUGH: Yes.
LUCADO: Jesus even said that when we reach out to help
those, we are actually reaching out and helping him. So
there‘s a spiritual element there that we honor and
respect.
SCARBOROUGH: And that was Nic Kristof. Actually, I
said—not Bill Kristol. Nic Kristof wrote that before.
Bill Donahue, I‘ll give you the last word.
DONAHUE: Well, I think Americans are perplexed by this,
because, quite frankly, we have become a nation of brats.
We want the quick fix. We think that somehow pain and
suffering is anathema, that it‘s a form of injustice. So
we have a society of do-gooders, of feel-good people. We
have all these kids who feel that their self-esteem is so
high, even though most of them are illiterate. But we are
supposed to feel good.
So, as soon as pain and suffering comes about, we feel
cheated. Well, it‘s about time we stopped acting like a
nation of brats, got back to our roots, and understand
that, through suffering, comes redemption. If you
understand what Christ taught us about and what the
meaning of the cross is, people can get over it. And I
wish they would.
SCARBOROUGH: All right. Thank you so much.
Max Lucado, Deroy Murdock, William Donahue and Raghida
Dergham, we greatly appreciate you being with us tonight,
talking about this extraordinarily complex, but important
subject.
We‘ll be right back in SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY in just a
minute.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: Tomorrow night in SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY, we are
going to talk about why HBO is premiering a new film that
some are saying glorifies 20 hijackers of 9/11. That‘s
tomorrow night.
But we got more SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY straight ahead.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: And now for some facts we thought you might
want to know.
If Alberto Gonzales is confirmed by the Senate, he is
going to become the 81st United States attorney general
and the first Hispanic. The office was created by the
Judiciary Act of 1789, and George Washington appointed
Edmund Randolph to be the nation‘s first top cop.
Now, at the time, the attorney general was not a Cabinet
position, but that all changed in 1870, when the nation‘s
top lawyer was also made the head of the Justice
Department. And one of the original duties of the attorney
general was to represent the United States in all cases
before the Supreme Court, but now that job is usually
taken up by the solicitor general.
Janet Reno became the country‘s first female attorney
general when she was appointed by President Bill Clinton
in 1993. Today, the attorney general is said to be the
head of the world‘s largest law office, just some facts we
thought you would want to know.
Hey, listen, we really appreciate you being with us
tonight in
SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY.
Chris Matthews is coming up next. And make sure you watch
Imus tomorrow morning, as he takes apart Lawrence Kudlow
piece by piece.
We‘ll see you tomorrow night in SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY
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