The shocking details of Leisha Pickeringโs suit against the alleged mistress of former U.S. Rep. Chip Pickering is only the latest scandal connected with C Street House, a Washington, D.C.-based political fraternity and Christian fellowship home. The Capitol institution hosted the likes of South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford (who secretly ran off to Argentina for some serious south-of-the-border frolicking) and Republican Nevada Sen. John Ensign (who recently admitted to an eight-month affair with former campaign aide Cindy Hampton).
Pickeringโs long-time wife claims he has been using the C Street house as a place to conduct trysts since he reconnected with his college girlfriend, Elizabeth Creekmore-Byrd. Author Jeff Sharletโs book โThe Family: The Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Powerโ (Harper, 2008, $24.95) might support that theory, and is causing more people to question the establishment and its ties to adulterous politicians.
The Jackson Free Press spoke to Sharlet last month just after Pickeringโs wife filed a civil suit against Creekmore-Byrd.
The book makes C Street look like National Lampoonโs โAnimal House.โ
There is a fundamental frat-house vibe. These guys see themselves as a kind of brotherhood that vows to keep each otherโs secrets. Thatโs literally in the documents of the core group. Theyโve got this macho rhetoric; itโs like the Marines. We give veto rights to one another over our lives, and we set up a publicly invisible, but privately identifiable, group of companions. I went through this phase, tooโwhen I was 11. I had a secret club.
But these guys are doing that now and whatโs really interesting about it โฆ is that they completely surrender their personal responsibility. Everyone admires humility, but when you have these very powerful men, and they get in this club, and they say: โMan, you know what? Iโm just nothing. I didnโt do anything to get myself into this place. This is all Jesusโ doing.โ Well, that sounds great for a second until you think: โNo, you did do something to get yourself into this place. You asked us, the voters, to vote for you, and we did and now you have a responsibility, so donโt go telling me โฆ youโre off the hook, and itโs all in Jesusโ hands.โ
Is that the way they put it?
Look at Gov. Sanfordโs editorial that he published in a South Carolina newspaper, The State. He said: โIโve learned from all this. Iโm going to be a better governor, a better husband, and you all are lucky to have me as a governor because I know Iโm not in control of anything. Godโs in control of everything.โ
Youโve got to understand that The Family really does believe in an extremely interventionist God, on a level that has not been familiar to most conservative Christians. They filter everything through what Jesus wants. The problem is, though, that none of them know what Jesus wants from reading the Bible. None of these guys know much about the Bible, to be frank. They really donโt. You hardly ever see a Bible over there.
So how do they know what Jesus wants, then?
How do you learn what Jesus wants? You talk with your buddies, of course.
You mean C Street buddies who donโt read the Bible?
That goes back to the beginning of the group, in Seattle in 1935, when this began as an anti-New Deal coalition. The founder (Abraham Vereide) got together 19 affluent businessmen in Seattle, and he felt that organized labor was satanic, and he was going to fight back against that. He noticed none of (the businessmen) were churchgoers. As far as they were concerned, church was for women. These guys didnโt need to bother opening their Bibles before one guy named Arthur Langley stands up and says, โI got a message from God saying Iโve got to run for office.โ Langley became one of the longest-serving governors in the state of Washington. He tried to pass a law that would allow him to abolish any state law he didnโt like.
What is so satanic about the New Deal?
They have this idea called biblical capitalism. A friend of mine at the Cato Instituteโa very conservative think tank (I thought he was going to skewer my book)โthey talk about the free market, but this is self interest by proxy. Its crony capitalism is what it is. They believe that any attempt to regulate the market, like the New Deal, is an attempt to overturn Godโs order. Basically, if youโre rich, and Iโm poor, thatโs the way God wants it. God is all-powerful, and your role is not to complain, but to accept it.
Whatโs their responsewhen you hit them with Jesusโ allegory of camels, rich people and needle eyes?
Thereโs a real cognitive dissonance going on there. They would say, โThat was so deep. Thank you for sharing that word with me, Adam,โ but at the same time they would say โGod has chosen some of us to be powerful.โ
Youโre personally selected by God to get through that proverbial eye of the needle?
Hereโs the thing. If you were a rich man, and youโre proud of your wealth and you say you earned all this money, well, youโre not getting into heaven. But if youโre like, say Dennis Bakke, (former CEO) of AES (Corp.), one of the big energy corporations, or Tom Phillips, (retired) CEO of Raytheonโwho helped them buy their headquartersโand youโre of the mind that you didnโt do anything to deserve this wealth, then youโve cleared a path around the needle. If you say, โI had nothing to do with it. This is all Godโs grace, and Iโm lucky to be in this wealth, and Iโm nothing, Iโm a worthless person,โ youโre saved.
But, you see, thatโs a problem. When powerful people declare themselves nothing, theyโre letting themselves off the hook. When the (retired) CEO of Raytheon says heโs done nothing to get that wealth, heโs not mentioning all those lobbyists who helped make him wealthy.
Sounds like your greater message in the book wasnโt loose underwear.
Not really. Take Chip Pickering: โฆ Keep in mind that itโs always a โthreesomeโ over there at the C Street House. Steven Largentโremember him? Largent left Congress to become the head of the industry association that represents cellular issues and, of course, Cellular South is on their board of directors, and in that capacity he paid for travel for Pickering. The question that no one is talking about is one of the C Street brothers paying for his other C Street brother to go see his (alleged) mistress, a lobbyist with Cellular South. (Creekmore-Byrd works with the Cellular South Foundation.)
Why donโt peopleโerโwhy donโt reporters watch the people of C Street?
This comes from a good place and a bad place. The good place is the First Amendment, the freedom of religion. The press really believes in freedom of religion in the United States. We donโt always practice itโthatโs why (Republican presidential hopeful) Mitt Romney had to make his Mormon speech, because of all the people who do not believe in the freedom in religion in this country. But the problem is that most reporters donโt understand the First Amendment. They think theyโre being respectful of someoneโs religion if they donโt ask any questions about it.
You can see this example over time. I remember when Sen. (John) Ashcroft became Attorney General Ashcroft, and The New Yorker did a big profile on him and they noticed that he had a weekly prayer meeting that influenced policy-making in his office. At that point, if this was any other source of influence, if he said, โI have a weekly group of advisers,โ any reporter wouldโve asked: โWho are they? What are their ideas?โ But reporters hear the words โprayer meeting,โ and they donโt think, โWell, what kind of prayer? What do you pray for?โ Those questions are respectful. You can ask them and still be respectful of religion. We have an absolutely illiterate press corps when it comes to religion.
Previous Comments
great interview Adam
#151065 | Author: chimneyville | Date: Aug 20 2009
God Golly, Adam!!!! You out-did yourself on this one. The only fitting and appropriate thing I can think of is: OH WHAT A TANGLED WEB WE WEAVE WHEN FIRST WE PRACTICE TO DECEIVE.
#151067 | Author: justjess | Date: Aug 20 2009
Yeah, Buddy; God’s people in the republican party are off the chain. They’re as loose as a goose. As fly as a horse fly. And as holy as a mad cow or bull.
#151075 | Author: Walt | Date: Aug 20 2009




