Guest guest Posted September 13, 2005 Report Share Posted September 13, 2005 s Mon, 12 Sep 2005 18:40:26 -0500 Radio Havana Cuba: The Gospel According to Robertson =============================================================== Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit RADIO HAVANA CUBA Editorial The Gospel According to Robertson After US Reverend Pat Robertson said that Washington should assassinate Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, he tried to apologize declaring that he had been " misunderstood " . However, once again he underestimated his audience. He forgot that those who " did not understand him " were millions of people that include brilliant personalities of all walks of life: journalists, politicians, religious leaders and even his friends. Robertson is, above all, a communicator, a person trained and qualified to speak to and make himself understood by millions of people. For over 30 years he has preached and persuaded people eventually becoming the main US so-called tele-preacher. Preaching the Gospel has allowed Robertson to amass a fortune that amounts to around one billion dollars. He is also the owner of Christian Broadcasting, the most important of all US Christian television networks. Enough to say that the program that he chose to attack President Chávez, the 700 Club, is watched by 80 million US citizens and by people in 200 countries, and it is broadcast in 70 languages. In fact, his appeal to assassinate Chávez was so clear that it immediately raised a rarely-seen world-wide and unanimous condemnation, including the US State and Defense Departments who washed their hands of Robertson's statements. However, according to Venezuelan vice president José Vicente Rangel, the fact that this kind of appeal may be broadcast by television with total impunity shows that the assassination of President Chávez is an option that may have been considered by the power elites in Washington. It is interesting to note, though, that some important media outlets even in the United States demanded Robertson to take back what he had said including the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Miami Herald, which also asked for the intervention of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Those who have criticized Robertson include Revs. Jesse Jackson, Richard Cizik and Rob Schenck, President of the National Clergy Council as well as Mvume Dandala, General Secretary of the Conference of African Churches composed of 120 million Christians from 39 countries. Robertson is not an isolated and eccentric lunatic but a key figure in the design of the US domestic policy, a decisive element in the electoral speech that led George W. Bush to a second term in the White House and an ideological mainstay of the program for the New American Century. After all, Robertson's appeal to assassinate the democratically elected president of Venezuela came, not from a " private citizen " as the US State Department said, but from a person who equals the ayatollah in an Islamic republic, the ulema or the interpreters of the Prophet's words in Afghanistan, Turkey or India. compiled by NY Transfer from http://www.radiohc.cu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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