Some direct quotes from that James Hitchcock piece in Touchstone that I mentioned a couple of weeks ago:
…liberalism is now not merely a political philosophy compatible with many kinds of religion but has itself become a religion. …it is expedient for liberals that their movement not be seen as a religion, since it thereby escapes the accusations of dogmatism and intolerance that are routinely made against conventional religions.
…Liberal ideology ultimately rests on an act of faith. It can never be discredited by historical events, because the believer simply knows it to be right. Liberal ideas are considered self-evidently true, and, in their present ascendancy, liberals prefer merely to assert those ideas rather than discuss them.
…as did most Catholics and Protestants in earlier times, the religion of liberalism considers itself the one true faith that has the obligation (and the power) to impose its beliefs.
When conservative believers demand their rights as citizens, they fail to realize that, as far as the religion of liberalism is concerned, "error has no rights." The religion of liberalism holds that the media and the educational system should enshrine liberal beliefs and discredit conservative ones, that government should enforce liberal programs by law, and that it is an open question how far heretics should even enjoy freedom of expression.
There are plenty of liberals who are not as dogmatic as this, but in the nature of things they're weaker and less energetic than the vanguard, which is now most aggressively and effectively represented by the homosexual rights movement and its very successful drive to characterize anything less than enthusiasm for homosexuality as bigotry. And bigotry–or whatever can be labelled as such–is one of the things that liberalism in general is willing to suppress.
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