The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Wednesday, April 17, 2024
Episode Date: April 17, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 13:44)‘It’s Kind of Murder. I’m Just Okay With It’ — Bill Maher Makes Chilling and Reveal...ing Comments About the Pro-Abortion PositionPart II (13:44 - 20:58)Islam Before Our Eyes.: The Inevitable Collision Between the Muslim Project and American Culture Hits USC CommencementPart III (20:58 - 24:28)Argument over Palestine Protest at the Home of Berkeley’s Law School Dean Raises Big IssuesAt Berkeley, a Protest at a Dean’s Home Tests the Limits of Free Speech by The New York Times (Vimal Patel)Part IV (24:28 - 28:11)Death to America Chants — In America? Dearborn, Michigan Becomes Epicenter of ControversyWelcome to Dearborn, America’s Jihad Capital by The Wall Street Journal (Steven Stalinsky)Condemning 'death to America' chants should be easy. Not for liberal Michigan Gov. Whitmer. by USA Today (Ingrid Jacques)Sign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
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It's Wednesday, April 17, 2024. I'm Albert Moller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Bill Maher, the American liberal comedian and commentator, used to have a television program entitled Politically Incorrect, a show that ran from 1993 to 2002.
More recently, he is the host of the program known as Real Time with Bill Maher.
But in this case, what we're really talking about is something that happened in real time.
it gets to a very real issue. An issue as important as life and death. We're talking about the
comments that Bill Maher made on his program real time with Bill Maher just in recent days on the
issue of abortion. The comments were made last Friday and the most important part of what he had to say.
And in this case, I mean not just in terms of inciting controversy, but quite frankly, of revealing
the truth of the issue, Bill Maher talking about the issue of abortion in the background of
the recent Supreme Court decision in Arizona. He said, quote, I can respect the absolutist position. I really can.
He went on to say, I scold the left when they say, oh, you know what, they just hate women, people who aren't pro-choice.
Marr went on to say that the issue is not that pro-lifers hate women, but rather that they have what he describes as an
absolutist position on abortion, and that is that human life bears dignity and is to be preserved from the moment of conception until natural death.
Bill Maher actually understands that.
Now, the entire issue is joined because Bill Maher on the program was talking about the comments made in recent days by the former president of the United States, Donald Trump, who's currently running for president and in one sense also running from the position he ran on when it comes to abortion in 2016.
Donald Trump now says there should be no federal legislation on abortion.
He wants simultaneously to take credit for the three conservative Supreme Court appointments that led to the reversal of Roe v. Wade.
a phenomenal pro-life success in 2022. But he says, after all, you have to win elections. And right now,
the public sentiment in the United States is decidedly against federal abortion restrictions, he says.
And so he said the Republican Party and his presidential campaign are going to take the position
there there should be no national legislation on abortion. The former president said, we'll leave it at the states.
Bill Maher picked it up because he detected a lack of consistency in the former president's comments,
and that's because the former president was inconsistent, a point I made on the briefing days ago.
But then Bill Maher went on, and remember he is not pro-life. He is pro-abortion,
but he does understand what is at stake, and that's what made his statement,
particularly revealing and even more so chilling.
Bill Maher went on to say the anti-abortion people think that abortion is murder.
He then said, quote, and it kind of is.
In other words, Bill Maher went on to say that so far as he understands the morality of the situation, abortion categorically is not wrongly described as a form of murder.
He wanted to say that pro-lifers think it's murder, and then he said, mark these words, and it kind of is.
Now, let's just pause for a moment and recognize that what Bill Maher has done there.
He has said that in his view, those he describes as absolutely,
absolutist holding the pro-life position are at least consistent. And not only that, he says that the
pro-life argument is accurate when it states that abortion is a form of murder. He says that in such
terms that he will come back and state, quote, and it kind of is. But then he comes back,
having just acknowledged that he kind of thinks that abortion is kind of murder and says,
here's the chilling part, quote, I'm just okay with that. I am. I mean, there's eight billion people in
the world. I'm sorry, we won't miss you. That's my position on it. End quote. Now, one of the things we need to
note is that Bill Marr is a brand. He's a comedian, entertainment, political commentator, brand. He has been
that for 30 years or so. Anyone who's been watching Bill Maher during these years, someone who
knows what he's about, knows that he's about controversy. His earlier program was entitled
politically incorrect because he sought to scandalize just about everyone on the political
in that program that first started about 30 years ago.
More recently, he's on HBO.
That tells you something right away.
And his current program on HBO, known as Real Time with Bill Maher, includes Marr talking
with other panelists or guests on his program, and they seek to sensationalize and they seek
to scandalize.
Otherwise, no one would want to watch.
So as we're thinking in terms of worldview analysis, let's just say we know at least that
A part of what was going on here is the entertainment value, again, chillingly enough that
Bill Maher and his fellow cast members believed was actually a part of talking about this issue
in public last week. Now, we as Christians have to understand there is no joking matter when it
comes to abortion. There isn't now. There never has been. We are talking about life and death.
And those of us who are described here as holding to the absolutist position are just holding
to the only position that's consistent in any sense. And that is, that's that.
that abortion is wrong categorically, and it is the termination of human life, categorically,
that it is rightly described in ethical terms as murder because it is the willful destruction
of a human being made in the image of God. And that was true from the moment of fertilization,
and will be true until the moment of natural death. And so when Bill Maher describes those of us
who hold to this position as absolutist, well, in the sense that we understand this truth in
absolute as terms that it's absolutely true and that thus it's absolutely wrong to arbitrarily come up
at some point at which abortion would all the sudden be acceptable on this side and unacceptable
on the other side. He understands the inconsistency of that argument. And so, and here what in
moral terms is actually so devastating in this case, Bill Maher says, you know they say it's murder?
I kind of think it is, but I'm okay with that. His exact words, again, quote, I'm just okay
with that, I am. So there's no misunderstanding here. He said he's okay with this, with abortion being
murder and holding to a basically pro-abortion position. He understands what is at stake. He says he even
kind of agrees with the fact that this is some form of murder. But then he goes on to say, I mean,
there's 8 billion people in the world. I'm sorry, we won't miss you. That's my position on it,
end quote. Now, as Christians think about a statement like this, we need to back up and say,
there are at least a couple things going on here. Number one, there is the question as to whether or not
Bill Maher means what he says. Now, a part of his brand is that he speaks what he means and he means
what he says. And so there's a sense in which it's perfectly conceivable that Bill Maher actually
believes what he said. And furthermore, over the course of his on-camera career, this isn't the
first time Bill Maher has said things that are not only politically incorrect, but quite frankly,
absolutely chilling. Now, the second dimension of what we need to think about, and Christians need
consistently to think about this. And that is that we're dealing here with words that constitute a very
clear proposition of meaning. And as we're thinking about that sentence, it really doesn't matter
who said it. The most important issue is that statement right or wrong. And then once we know whether
that statement's right or wrong, what will be the effect of that statement? So if this statement had been made by
anyone on planet Earth, it would still be equally horrifying. It would still be equally heinous.
It would still be equally morally devastating. The fact that Bill Maher said it is why we're talking
about it, because it took someone of celebrity having a media platform to say this out loud
with enough people listening. I wasn't watching the program after all, that this has made
the newswires. It has become the subject of wide public discussion. But this is one of those
situations in which you look at public controversy and you say in this case, it is absolutely justified.
It is justified in absolute terms because we're talking here about life and death.
And there are two dimensions of this. Here you have Bill Maher saying he actually agrees that
abortion is murder, kind of is, he said, but then he goes on to justify it and he justifies
it with the most grotesque argument by saying it's murder, but after all, we have enough people.
He says there's eight billion people in the world. And then he says,
to the abstracted person who's been aborted, I'm sorry, we won't miss you. Now, when you think about that
for just a moment, you recognize that that last statement is a part of the moral horror of abortion.
It is simply part of the horribleness, the deep moral evil of abortion that we are saying to people,
we won't need you, we won't miss you. What Bill Maher didn't say here, but is truly implicit in what he said,
is that we'd be better off without you.
We're talking about a planet that according to the leftist ideology is overstressed.
But at the very least, you'd have to say, what Bill Maher said here is that there's so many people,
we won't miss someone who is missing.
But from a Christian perspective, that is absolute insanity.
We will miss those who are missing.
We may not be conscious of every single person we are missing, but one day we will be.
One other thing we need to note is that when we are talking about the 8 billion people,
in the world, what Bill Maher is referencing there, is the total population of those living right now
on planet Earth. But the truth is that everyone who is now living on planet Earth was at one point
born, and that means that just before that was not yet born. And that's something you don't often
hear people reference in this kind of debate over abortion. It's kind of controversy over abortion.
There's no evidence that Bill Maher said anything about not missing someone who is alive outside the womb.
That's not something he apparently referenced in that statement.
He was referencing those who were in the womb and saying that particular population is the population of those who, if killed in the womb, won't be missed.
So you might say on the one head that Bill Maher here is to be acknowledged as having spoken the truth.
He revealed the truth.
He pulled back the curtain and actually acknowledged that abortion is murder.
The way he put it is to say that the absolutist think it's murder, quote, and it kind of is, end quote.
has acknowledged that abortion kind of is murder. But then he goes on to support it, even going so far as to
say that he will not miss those, that we will not miss those who are aborted. Now, quite honestly,
in the midst of this debate, where life and death is actually at the center of the question,
we often hear people say things that are careless. There's a problem with it. We often hear
people say things that are confusing. What is so shocking about this situation is that there is
no lack of clarity here. There is no confusion here. We know exactly what Bill Maher meant,
and we know exactly what he said. And in this case, they apparently happen to be exactly the same
thing. But before leaving the program, I want to go back to something that has received far less
attention. And that was the comment made by one other person on the program just before Bill Maher made
the statements that have gone so viral and deservedly so. Jillian Tet, who is the chair of the
editorial board for the Financial Times of London. I cite that quite often. It is one of the most
influential media sources on planet Earth. It is the very epitome of the British establishment.
If you're looking for an analog, it will be very similar to the British version of the Wall Street
Journal. And Jillian Tett, who is the chairman of the Financial Times editorial board, that is an extremely
powerful, institutionally mainstream organization. She said, speaking about
abortion in America, quote, the thing that's crazy is at a time when America is facing so many
geopolitical threats where there's a huge tech revolution going on, where the economy is faced
with all kinds of challenges, the idea that you're fighting an election around this issue seems
to be just strange back in the 19th century. Well, you look at that and here she's saying that
there are those in the society, certainly in the cultural elite, who thought that that issue might
actually have been relevant back in the 19th century. But
not now. And Jillian Tet went on to say, and from an incredibly powerful editorial position in the
worldwide media, she came back to say, you know, there are some real issues out there. The economy is
faced with all kinds of challenges. And in the American election, abortion is an issue how retrograde,
how backwards, or to use her own metaphor, how back to the 19th century. Now, honestly, I am very
thankful that so much attention has been given to Bill Maher's comments, I could only wish that as much
attention was given to Jillian Tett's comment because coming from someone as mainstream as she is in
her position that tells you how so many in the cultural elite think of the abortion issue. It's so
19th century. Or to put it another way, that's how little many people in the cultural and media
elite think of the issue of abortion and thus of the status of the life of the unborn. You look at
something like this and your first thought might be that this is a grotesque confusion.
It is, of course, but it's worse than that. In this case, it is a fatal confusion.
But next, with similar urgency, we're going to turn to another big controversy, and we're going
to look at three fronts of this controversy. It has to do with resurgent Islam in the United
States. And it's being presented by many in the media mainly as a collision of religious
conviction and free speech rights, but I want us to see there's a lot more to this. And so the
first place we're going to go is to the West Coast and the University of Southern California.
The controversy at USC has to do with the fact that the provost, the chief academic officer of the institution, has canceled the spring 24 valedictorian from giving a valedictory address as part of the university's commencement.
Now, that commencement's huge.
According to media reports, it annually draws about 65,000 people to a giant stadium in order for there to be a massive graduation of a very prestigious and powerful academic institution.
in Southern California, an institution which, by the way, was at least distantly established by
the Methodist in California. But we're a long way from that. Now we're looking at USC as a major
research university of great prestige in the United States. And the fact is that the provost,
Andrew Guzman, actually chose the valedictorian because we are told there was a large number of
students who qualified, and thus the provost chose in something of an academic student beauty
contest. And by that, I don't mean physical attractiveness. I mean in terms of meeting something like
a politically correct profile. And because that's really what it's about at the University of
Southern California. But the valedictory address has been canceled. Why? Well, it is because
the young woman who was chosen by the provost designated to be the valedictorian. And thus,
to give this address, she is a young woman identified as South Asian American and Muslim. And she
was outed by fellow students and graduates as a major proponent of the Palestinian cause
and as someone who identifies with the Palestinian cause in Israel's current war against
Hamas in Gaza. She identifies also as Muslim and she has at least linked to arguments
criticizing Zionism as, quote, a racist settler colonial ideology that advocates for a Jewish
ethno state built on Palestinian land, end quote. So we're talking about a young woman who is
clearly taken sides, taken the Palestinian side, and is identifying Israel as a Jewish ethno state
built on Palestinian land, and furthermore said that the ideology behind Israel is a racist
settler colonial ideology. Now, we've talked to the briefing about the fact that this is now
not surprising, but we also have to discuss once again the fact that this is often hidden behind
the headlines, and even the people at this university really don't want you to know what is at stake.
They are facing controversy here because they canceled a valedictory address before 65,000 people,
and the provost said it was done because of the threat of danger, presumably to the speaker,
but also to other people in the multiple tens of thousands who would be gathered at this event.
The implication is that this could lead to an outbreak of protest and violence and mayhem,
and that is not what the commencement is to be all about.
So let's just back up for a moment.
Let's just say the University of Southern California has been caught here,
in an act of political correctness. And many students are saying on the left that they simply caved to
corporate or political pressure and to the Zionist cause. And this is a university that has put itself
in this position. But furthermore, we are a culture that has put ourselves in this position. And I have
to discuss on the briefing today, what is these days, well, to go back to Bill Maher's program called
Politically Incorrect, this is politically incorrect. But it is worldview essential. And that
is this. There is an inevitable collision between classical Islam and the American project. There just is.
There is a massive collision inevitable between the Muslim project and Western civilization. There
just is. And the University of Southern California and so many others in the liberal elite want to
have it both ways. They want to act as if they are cultural relativists when it's convenient
and politically correct. But when they face the reality that having this argument made at commencement
just might lead to huge problems.
And by the way, some of the students on the left are saying,
they're not really concerned about violence.
They're worried about losing donor support.
Well, bingo, to a certain extent, those students are absolutely right.
And as you reach out and try to say you have sympathy for the university here,
quite frankly, the university is a part of the problem.
You have liberal American cultural institutions saying,
there's no problem between classical Islam and Western civilization.
It's a form of Islamophobia to make that argument.
And yet, as we're considering right now, you have a big problem with that when you have the
outbreak of something as irrefutable as Israel's war on Hamas. They came after the terrorist
organization on October the 7th, brutally attacked Israel, killing innocent people, and quite frankly
calling for the death, the non-existence of Israel as a nation. Now, you can imagine where the
situation at USC is going. It is going into the court of public opinion, and in all likelihood,
will eventually go into the courts. But you're also looking at the claim, on the one hand, that Islam
really factors into this and the argument that it doesn't. But you know, the argument that it
doesn't simply has no validity at all? And finally, anyone looking at this honestly finds that out.
You also have the deep inroads here of critical theory and Marxist ideology describing Israel as a
Zionist project, quote, a racist settler colonial ideology that advocates for a Jewish
ethno state.
End quote.
Now, as you might expect, there's a little bit more to this.
It's fascinating, and it tells you a lot about higher education.
How else is the University of Southern California complicit in this problem?
It is because we are told that this graduate to be recognized as valedictorian had as a major
at the University of Southern California biomedical engineering and as a minor resistance
to genocide.
That is to say, the University of Southern California has a minor.
an academic minor in resistance to genocide. Now, you might say, well, we should resist genocide. Any
moral person would resist genocide. Yes, certainly we should. But we need to understand that that is
one of those academic fields that has been increasingly taken over by a neo-Marxist ideology.
And thus the nation of Israel, which was established by the United Nations in 1947, 48,
precisely because of the genocide of the Holocaust, it is now being blamed for genocide.
Now, there is no doubt that Israel, just like the United States, as a nation, is a moral actor, responsible for moral actions.
But that's not really what is at stake here. What's at stake here is that this university has produced a student body.
Not only that, it recruited it. And it has produced a graduating class that includes people that undoubtedly gained a lot of the ideology now turned on the university from the university.
But next, we're going to just go up the coast. We're going to go to Berkeley, California, and already.
you know, this is going to be interesting. The University of California at Berkeley, the flagship state
university, USC is a private university, although it takes federal funds. As you look at the University
of California, Berkeley, you're looking at the metaphor, the symbol for campus liberalism in the
revolts of 1968. Well, as you know, the University of California at Berkeley has a law school,
and the current dean of that law school is Erwin Chimerensky, who is a leading theorist on the legal
left, a major critic of the current conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court,
Timmerinsky is Jewish, as is his wife, and Timmerinsky himself has faced opposition from
students in this incredibly liberal law school and this incredibly liberal university because he's
Jewish, and there have actually been cartoons and other things that are openly anti-Semitic.
And it has to do with the fact that you do have the same kind of pattern here.
You have students who are identifying as Muslim or as Arab, they are identifying with the Palestinian
cause. Irwin Chimurinsky and his wife, who is a professor in the law school, held very generously a dinner
for some of the members of the class there at the University of California Law School. And what happened
is that a Palestinian student, and evidently there was at least the knowledge that something like this
might happen, at their private residence at the Chimurinsky home, the student took a microphone
and commandeered the event in order to start to unleash a diatribe on Israel. Now, the situation
at this point, is on video, and I can just tell you in advance, it gets pretty messy. At one point,
Timmerinsky's wife physically tried to take the microphone away from the student. There was an
exchange. I'll just say in legal terms, it's a mess. The student claimed to have a First Amendment
freedom, Chimorinsky, again, dean of the law school, major constitutional scholar of the left,
came back and said it's a private residence. This is my private home. We invited you here. The First
Amendment doesn't apply. Well, as I've already said,
it gets really messy. My guess is it's going to make the legal situation at USC turn out to be really tame.
But this is another situation in which Erwin Chimarinsky, I think, has helped to contribute to this problem by identifying with the political correctness that has taken over America's academic left.
He has also made constitutional arguments, which, by the way, appear to try to extend something like First Amendment rights, far beyond official state actors and
official state space, government space, that is to say,
Erwin Jimmerinsky may have to go into court now and argue against Erwin Jimorinsky.
And I just want to point out that here again, the academic, cultural, political left in the
United States has sown the seeds of this, and you simply can't get around the fact that it's not
just a neo-Marxist ideology in favor of the Palestinians here. It is a form of ideological
Marxism. It is a form of critical theory. It is a form that is destructive of
civilization, and intentionally so. Because if you're going to argue that Israel is an illegitimate
state because of what's identified as the ideology and critique of settler colonialism, then you can do
the math real fast. So is the nation currently known as the United States of America. But we're
the nation that is currently engaged in this experiment in denying that religion can matter, theology
can matter, worldview can matter, to the extent that this just could undermine the American
experiment. But before we leave this today, we need to go to Dearborn, Michigan, where some of the folks
there who are very clearly identified as Muslim have made that point emphatically so. Just a matter of
days ago, a rally was held in Dearborn, Michigan when some of those gathered. Remember,
Michigan. When some of those gathered were chanting death to America. Now, this made the mainstream
media. This is not just something that appeared in the conservative media sphere. This made
the Detroit Free Press. It also made national news coverage. And as there were deeper investigations
into this situation, this isn't the first time something like this has happened. This is a very
large Arab population. It is a center of Muslim influence in the United States. And just a matter
of a few weeks ago, in the pages of the Wall Street Journal, there ran an article entitled,
Welcome to Dearborn America's Jihad Capital. That was written by Steven Stilinski. And as we're
talking about, just being honest about this situation, this.
collision of worldviews between Islam and the West, and increasingly those who champion the Palestinian
cause in so many ways, those who are making this kind of argument, they eventually get to death
to America. But in the article, Stilinski makes this point, quote, support for terrorism in southern Michigan
has long been a concern for U.S. counterterrorism officials. A 2001 Michigan State Police assessment
submitted to the Justice Department after 9-11 called Dearborn, quote, a major financial support center
and a, quote, recruiting area and potential support base for international terror groups.
There is one major figure there in Dearborn, Michigan. Remember, Dearborn Michigan, USA, on his
Twitter account on October 7th, the day that Hamas savagely and murderously attacked Israel,
he went on and retweeted a post that said, quote, the hearts haven't been overjoyed like this in so long, end quote.
Ingrid Jock, in an article that appeared as an opinion piece in USA today,
in recent days, asked the question, why is Gretchen Whitmer, the governor of Michigan, not
condemning the statement? Protesters in her own state, crying out death to America.
John pointed out that even the White House, which is actively seeking Arab votes and trying
to placate the Muslim community in the United States, and it has to do with its policy towards
Israel as well, and we all know it. But even the White House condemned the statement.
there was an editor's note appended to the current online edition of the Ingrid Jock article,
and that editor's note is this, quote, this column was originally published Sunday morning.
According to a Fox News report published Monday, a spokesperson for Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer
issued a statement to the outlet saying she condemned the Dearborn Chance, end quote.
Oh, my, well, we're going to have to leave this, but evidently, the governor of Michigan
couldn't just put out a blanket clear statement, but rather the editor's note says,
that the statement was made to another news agency in which, in effect, she said that she
condemned the Dearborn Chants. Remember again, that chant was death to America.
Just to make the point bluntly, that statement didn't come from nowhere, and it is headed somewhere.
And that's where we're going to have to leave it today. Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmuller.com. You can find me on Twitter by going to
Twitter.com forward slash Albert Moller.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.
For information on Boise College, just go to Boisecollege.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
