Colorado Springs Independent
Tuesday, January 6, 2009 :   Last Update: Monday, 1:01pm
Home » Local News » Local News


Smoke and debris
Mikey Weinstein's war comes to Barnes & Noble

By CARA DEGETTE

Mikey Weinstein, plaintiff in a lawsuit against the Air 
Force, uses aliases when staying in Colorado Springs 
hotels.
_
Mikey Weinstein, plaintiff in a lawsuit against the Air Force, uses aliases when staying in Colorado Springs hotels.
Photo By Kathy Conarro

You may remember Mikey Weinstein; he's hard to forget. Last year, the 1977 Air Force Academy honors graduate filed a lawsuit against the United States Air Force for allowing, even promoting, aggressive evangelical Christian proselytizing at his alma mater.

Several events led up to the lawsuit, including Weinstein's son, a cadet, being warned he would burn in the eternal fires of hell because he is Jewish.

The subject of a March 2 Independent cover story (csindy.com/csindy/2006-03-02/cover.html), Weinstein, an attorney who worked in the Reagan White House, is the founder of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, designed to expand the battle for plurality and against religious intolerance through the military. His bombast and fiery quotes have made him a household name for supporters — and a nemesis to Christian evangelicals who maintain the First Amendment secures their right to proselytize at tax-funded military installations.

Weinstein's recently published book, With God on Our Side: One Man's War Against an Evangelical Coup in America's Military, is a firsthand account of his personal battle.

Since Weinstein filed his lawsuit and firmly planted himself in the public spotlight, he claims to have been called "the field general of the godless army of Satan"; had feces thrown at his house and smeared on his car windshields; and had his tires slashed. He's had people call him up and, in sort of a "chorus prayer," chant, "Mikey Weinstein, bullet in the head / Praise the Lord, he's finally dead."

When he comes to the Springs, he says, he checks into his hotel under an alias. The first time, he says, he used the name "Dobson."

Indy: What is the state of the lawsuit?

MW: The judge has ruled on nothing.

Indy: You've gotten plenty of publicity. So why a book?

MW: The only other real way to get your story out, with the exception of the Colorado Springs Independent, is to buy advertising, This is 209 pages of text, and people can read the story, and the appendix with all the supporting documentation. I defy anyone to read it and say there is nothing here but smoke and mirrors. It's important to draw the line in the sand, once and for all.

Indy: What is happening with MRFF?

MW: We have a newsletter, membership drives, fundraisers all over the country. We've heard from the whole corporeal body of the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps, complaining about the imperious contagion of imperial triumphantalism. Thousands of sailors and airman have contacted us (at least 96 percent are Christian) and say they're being abused, prayed upon and preyed upon by fundamental Christians. I'm out here with the gunsmoke — and all that's left of the wall between separation of church and state, is smoke and debris.

Indy: Is it too late to reverse the trend?

MW: No, it's not too late ——it's close to being too late. And I [paraphrase] Machiavelli: "The darkest place in hell is still reserved for those who in times of moral crisis remain neutral." We're not going into the dark night; we want our Constitution back.

Indy: So what's next?

MW: We're in negotiations for the film rights, and my family is also in a movie, Constantine's Sword, a history of the Jews and the Christ, which is based on the New York Times bestseller and is [hitting the film festival circuit] in the next 90 days. They were looking for something to anchor the film to 2006. I haven't seen it yet, but the director called me today said it very profoundly stretches from the birth of Christ to the Weinstein family.

Indy: Who is going to play you?

MW: It's a documentary, so I get to play me. But in the movie version of my book, I hope that it will be Mel Gibson. We are the same age,—both 51,—and—it will be good for his therapy. I'm going to strongly suggest it as a way to make amends.

Indy: What else have you encountered?

MW: I'll be speaking at an event, and I'll ask, "Who is familiar with how the Bible says, "The Lord helps those who help themselves'?" And I will get a few hands in the air, and I'll say, "No, that's actually Ben Franklin, from Poor Richard's Almanack." So don't give me anything about how we're a Christian nation ...

Indy: What do you have to say to critics who accuse you of going too far?

MW: We are not going to stop; we are not going to stop. That is not going to happen. We have the sword at their throat, and we are not going to put it down. If they think I'm a monster, they're the ones who created me.

Mikey Weinstein signs With God on Our Side: One Man's War Against an Evangelical Coup in America's Military

Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 1565 Briargate Blvd.

Thursday, Oct. 19, 11 a.m.

Call 266-9960 for more.

COMMENTS
0 comments posted for this article
There are no comments yet for this story. You can be the first.



ALSO BY CARA DEGETTE
See you in the pixel papers
One of the Independent's founders says farewell after 15 years in the Public Eye. [April 24, 2008]
Forcing Hope where there is none
So much for local control, D-11 discovers. [April 17, 2008]
Beware of outsiders
A millionaire with no Colorado ties is sponsoring an amendment to obliterate the state's last vestiges of affirmative action. [April 10, 2008]


Click here to see
the BEST OF Volume 1


Click here to see
the BEST OF Volume 2

2008 Dish
Click here to see
the 2008 Dish

2008 Annual Manual - Digital Edition
Click here to see the
2008 Annual Manual: Digital Edition


Submit an Event Listing!

Job Openings & Internships