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National Group Wants IRS Review of Controversial, Witch-Hunting TN Pastor

A religious freedom group wants the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to investigate a controversial, conspiracy theorist, witch-hunting Tennessee pastor for preaching politics at the pulpit. 

Americans United for Separation of Church and State claimed in a Monday letter to the IRS that Greg Locke, pastor of Mt. Juliet’s Global Vision Bible Church, violated the Johnson Amendment, a law that prevents nonprofits from endorsing or opposing political parties or candidates. 

“If you vote Democrat, I don’t even want you around this church,” Locke said in a sermon Sunday (posted online here). “You can get out. You can get out, you demon. You can get out, you baby-butchering, election thief.

“If you vote Democrat, I don’t even want you around this church. … You can get out, you baby-butchering, election thief.”

Greg Locke

“You cannot be a Christian and vote Democrat in this nation. I don’t care how mad that makes you. You can get as pissed off as you want to. You cannot be a Christian and vote Democrat in this nation.” 

In the same sermon, Locke insulted President Joe Biden many times (“that sleepy old fool is going to bust hell wide open”), claimed “Obama is behind” all of America’s problems, doubted that the recent shooting in Buffalo, New York was racially motivated, repeated the lie that the 2020 election was stolen from Donald Trump, promised another insurrection if “you keep on pushing our buttons,” and warned of demons and witchcraft. Locke also promised to be at the U.S. Supreme Court building Tuesday to “raise hell for the life of them babies.” 

President Joe Biden “is going to bust hell wide open.”

Greg Locke

“Now, when our democracy is threatened by white Christian nationalism like never before, the IRS must investigate blatant Johnson Amendment violations like Locke’s remarks and enforce the federal law that protects the integrity of both our elections and our houses of worship by ensuring nonprofits don’t engage in partisan politics,” said Rachel Laser, president and CEO of Americans United. “Tax exemption is a privilege, not a constitutional right. The government has attached sensible strings to that privilege. This rule, which is broadly popular among religious and nonreligious Americans alike, ensures charitable donations meant for the common good are not spent on corrosive partisan politics.”

“Tax exemption is a privilege, not a constitutional right.”

Rachel Laser, president and CEO of Americans United

“Global Vision Bible Church” could not not be found in database searches of charities by the IRS, the Tennessee Department of State, or nonprofit navigator Guidestar. The domain suffix of the church’s website is “.com” instead of “.org,” perhaps signaling it is a for-profit company. However, no business called “Global Vision Bible Church” appeared in a search of the Tennessee State Department site.   

Calls to the church and a media relations number requesting the church’s most-recent tax forms were not immediately answered.

A January news release from the church claimed that a “reverse offering” event at the church in December raised $66,000, which was dispersed ”among those who are carrying financial burdens and living on little.” 

“Global Vision Bible Church has a habit of giving back,” reads the news release. “Despite inflated reports and rumors of Pastor Locke’s net worth, he lives a modest life, giving abundantly in moments like the December 19th service.”

Americans United said that in his Sunday sermon, Locke “clearly told congregants to vote a certain way,” a clear violation of the Johnson Amendment. But, they said, he did not spare Republicans either. 

“You need to be delivered from voting Democrat,” Locke said. “I think in that list in mass deliverance I’m going to start putting ‘spirit of Democrat.’ Come out in Jesus’ name. 

“By the way, that doesn’t mean that I’m a full-fledged Republican, either. They’re two heads of the same snake. My loyalty is not to a party, my loyalty is the Kingdom of God.” 

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At Large Opinion

Sick Burn

No doubt, many of you are familiar with Ray Bradbury’s 1953 novel Fahrenheit 451. It was on the recommended reading list in one of my high school English classes, and I loved it.

For those not familiar with the book, the title references the autoignition temperature of paper, which is relevant because the novel is set in a future America where books are outlawed. Any that are discovered are taken and burned by the “firemen,” who also burn down the houses of those who possess books.

Bradbury’s tale is weirdly predictive: Everyone in “future” America spends their evenings watching insipid melodramas and sports on their “parlor walls,” i.e. home screens. No one reads because books have been deemed by the nation’s rulers as too dangerous for the people.

Cut to Mt. Juliet, Tennessee, last week, where an evangelical pastor and rabid Trump supporter named Greg Locke held a book-burning — a bonfire of the inanities, so to speak. The blaze targeted Harry Potter books and the Twilight series, but other books were also burned, including a copy of Fahrenheit 451. The irony was lost, obviously. Still, you can’t be too careful. Some sexy wizard vampire freedom stuff might leak out into young impressionable brains.

On the surface, such activity seems scary, but in 2022, burning books to stop someone from reading them is about as useful as trying to stop someone from listening to a particular musician by burning his CDs. Two hundred years ago, torching tomes might have kept the locals in a village from reading a particular book, but that horse is now out of the barn and on Pixar. In 2022, you can listen to anything, read anything, or see anything you want with a few keystrokes. Burning books or records is a purely performative exercise, Kabuki theater for the gullible rubes. Nobody can “ban” anything, least of all from tech-savvy young people.

Speaking of … Do you know what the No. 1 song on the Billboard 100 chart is right now? I’m gonna guess you probably don’t. It’s “We Don’t Talk About Bruno,” a Latin show-tune written by Lin-Manuel Miranda (of Hamilton fame) from the Disney film, Encanto. It’s sung by six different, mostly unknown, people and it’s been No. 1 for five weeks and counting.

How is it possible that this is the No. 1 song in America? Sure, it’s sort of catchy, in a classic Broadway musical sense, but according to those who track such things, that’s not why “We Don’t Talk About Bruno” has reached the top. Nope. “WDTAB” is No. 1 because it’s being streamed millions of times a week by elementary school-age kids, who love the film and the song and listen to it repeatedly. Stream counters don’t care who’s listening. Age doesn’t matter. Everyone’s just a number. You and I may not talk about Bruno, but American kids sure do.

Speaking of streaming … A lot of people smirked a couple weeks ago, when septuagenarian rocker Neil Young pulled his music from Spotify in protest of bro-magnon talker Joe Rogan’s podcast. It’s me or Rogan, said Young. Rogan is Spotify’s primary cash cow, so Spotify said, “see ya, Neil.”

Young’s protest was a meaningless, empty gesture, people said. Oops. Turns out Young’s protest spurred other content providers to pull their work from Spotify. Then, oops again, it was discovered that Rogan was not just an ivermectin-clogged dumbass spreading Covid misinformation, he was also a racist who casually used the “n-word” in more than 70 podcast episodes. Spotify quickly pulled the episodes in question, plus others of questionable taste and accuracy, and apologized to its users and to its employees.

Rogan’s supporters immediately began complaining about their hero being a victim of “cancel culture.” Which is different, somehow, from burning books or pulling them from school libraries, I guess.

Anyway, ol’ Neil got the last word. And we should recognize that none of this would have happened if one man hadn’t taken a conscientious stand on principle. Rogan’s racist crap would still be on Spotify. Now it’s not.

You might say that Joe Rogan got burned.