The Los Angeles Times Sunday edition had
an article entitled "The religious right bankrolls Santorum."
"The faith component that Rick and I share is that we know that we're here to be a channel of God's love to others, his hands and feet in a hurting world, and to be a blessing to every person he puts in our path"
This is from Foster Friess, "a retired mutual fund executive based in Wyoming, [who] gave $300,000 to the superPAC in 2011 . . . He contributed at least $250,000 more in the last month. . . " Some of the Fox videos on his website identify him in the title as "Billionaire Foster Friess."
What does one have to believe to say he's a channel of God's love? To say he's here "to be a blessing to every person he puts in our path?"
How is Santorum a blessing to GLBT folks? How's he a blessing to a woman whose health is threatened without an abortion?
I try to make such questions more than rhetorical. Santorum and Friess might say something like, "I'm trying to save them from themselves, show them the error of their ways so they may find everlasting peace in heaven."
What sort of view of the world must one have to take that sort of position? I can think of a few:
1. Certainty that one is right.
2. True and unwavering belief in one's interpretation of the bible.
(The first two can easily go hand in hand.)
3. A Machiavellian cunning that allows one to use people's faith in God to manipulate them with words from their holy book.
I'm sure there are more possibilities. I'm eager to hear them.
It's possibile that Friess and Santorum really believe that they channel God's word. And people on the other side of the religio/political spectrum feel they are as right about their positions as these two.
Who is Foster Friess?
The website that bears his names lists a few "key issues":
Government
Promoting the principles of limited government
and exposing the burdens of excessive regulation that stifle American
ingenuity, creativity, and enterprise
If the federal government should overpass the just bounds of its
authority and make a tyrannical use of its powers, the people, whose
creature it is, must appeal to the standard they have formed, and take
such measures to redress the injury done to the Constitution as the
exigency may suggest and prudence justify- Alexander Hamilton, Federalist No. 33
You can see Hamilton's words in
context here. He appeared to be exasperated with people opposed to clauses in the proposed constitution giving Congress power to
"to make all laws which shall be necessary and
proper for carrying into execution the powers by that
Constitution vested in the government of the United States, or in any department
or officer thereof"; and the second clause of the sixth article declares, "that
the Constitution and the laws of the United States made in pursuance thereof,
and the treaties made by their authority shall be the supreme law of the
land, any thing in the constitution or laws of any State to the contrary
notwithstanding."
Hamilton, of course, argued for a strong federal government. From the
Encyclopedia Britannica:
Though fully conscious that monarchy in America was impossible, he
wished to obtain the next best solution in an aristocratic, strongly
centralized, coercive, but representative union, with devices to give
weight to the influence of class and property.[8]
Most of the key issues listed on the site - education, climate change, health care - can be solved, the site says, via the free market. Immigration needs the borders protected - they don't mention the private sector, but neither is government mentioned for this one. Helping Peaceful Muslims is another of the key issues. (
Think Progress says Friess has funded a number of Islamophobic organizations.) Nothing about the economy. But there is a final one:
Enduring Values
Combating the negativity in our culture with uplifting, inspiring stories reminding us of the best American principles
As the great political philosophers from Plato and Aristotle to
America’s own Founding Fathers have observed, democracy very quickly
turns to tyranny when the people are not generally virtuous. To defend
our system of ordered liberty, we must always be vigilant, and we must
always strive to strengthen our culture, or our free society will be
overtaken by government.
(At left) George Washington at prayer.
How did the Friess funded Red, White, and Blue Super Pact
add to combating negativity in the Florida Republican primary and the last three caucuses?
I searched his website for "Koch" but nothing was found.
Alternet reports a Koch brothers conference in Palm Springs two weeks ago where the whole 550 room Esmerelda Renaissance was rented for the private event and connects Friess with the Koch brothers:
A private plane owned by wealthy mutual fund manager Foster Friess flew
to the area the morning of the conference, and left the day it ended.
Friess is a social conservative who has gained headlines recently for his massive backing of a super-PAC supporting Rick Santorum. He has also attended the Koch meeting in the past.
The Foster Friess website also has a video of Friess accepting the Paul Weyrich Award.
The award honors
Paul Weyrich, who, according to Wikipedia, was a co-founder, with Coors funding, of the Heritage Foundation and the Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress which,
was among the first grassroots organizations to raise funds extensively through direct mail campaigns. It also was one of the first organizations to tap into evangelical Christian churches as places to recruit and cultivate activists and support for social conservative causes. In 1977, Weyrich co-founded Christian Voice with Robert Grant. Two years later, with Jerry Falwell, he founded the Moral Majority. Weyrich coined the phrase "Moral Majority".[8]
And
Over the next two decades, Weyrich founded, co-founded, or held
prominent roles in a number of other notable conservative organizations.
Among them, he was founder of the American Legislative Exchange Council, an organization of state legislators [and heavily funded by the Koch brothers]; a co-founder of the Council for National Policy, a strategy-formulating organization for social conservatives; co-publisher of the magazine Conservative Digest;
and national chairman of Coalitions for America, an association of
conservative activist organizations. The CSFC, reorganized into the Free Congress Foundation, also remained active.
Weyrich died in 2008, but Friess is alive and active.
Aside: From the moment I saw the name Foster Friess, I couldn't help think about an ice cream cone. So when I finished writing this I googled Foster Freeze. And sure enough, there was the company that was around my California childhood all along. And it's still around, one not far from my mom's place. So I got on my bike to add a photo to this post.