When I unmasked an Arizona official
who made outrageous and anonymous comments on blogs, it revealed more than his
bad judgment.
By Bob
Lord
For
years I’d wondered about the identity of a gaggle of anonymous commenters on
Blog for Arizona, the website to which I frequently contribute. These guys
weighed in a lot and were very eager to burnish the reputation of Arizona
School Superintendent, John Huppenthal.
Ultimately,
my fellow writers and I explored the source of the comments. With only modest
effort, we figured out these commenters were all aliases of Huppenthal himself.
Among other things, the 60-year-old official was posting from the Arizona
Department of Education and providing details of his own childhood.
As
this strange tale draws increasing media attention, it’s clear that one of his
many unvarnished and outrageous opinions is drawing the most fire: Huppenthal
believes that people who benefit from food stamps and other features of
America’s safety net are “lazy
pigs.”
Huppenthal
said plenty of other incendiary things under his pseudonyms. But that
particular gaffe epitomizes his disdain for the millions of people he’s
supposed to serve. The “lazy pigs” line also sums up an extreme philosophy
gaining popularity among influential Republicans.
It’s
essentially a corollary to the Prosperity Gospel, a strain of Christian belief
that emerged in the 1950s. The Prosperity Gospel casts financial wealth as a
blessing from God, turning Mark 10:25 — “it is easier for a camel to go
through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of
God” — on its head.
Prosperity
Gospel suits the religious right movement. It justifies the personal wealth
belonging to its leaders and televangelists and puts those folks on the same
page as major conservative funders, like the Koch brothers.
What
could be more in sync with idolizing the rich than demonizing the poor?
Huppenthal hardly invented this demonization.
President
Ronald Reagan sneered at “welfare
queens.” During their failed
2012 bid for the White House, Mitt Romney wrote off the “47 percent” while Paul
Ryan disparaged
a majority of Americans —
as “takers.”
John
Huppenthal is a Roman Catholic but his no-longer anonymous blog comments reveal
him to be more partial to the Prosperity Gospel and its companion ethos that
the poor are bad people than to his own church’s emphasis on charity.
Pope
Francis would surely disapprove of the Arizona official’s comments, such as
this one: “You have an ethnic majority, Hispanics, oppressing an ethnic
minority, small business owners, exacting a property tax and paying to force
students to undergo a toxic indoctrination.”
In
other words, he sees the poor as un-Christian bullies, forcing the wealthy to
pay taxes to fund everything from food stamps and child protective services to
Mexican-American studies.
Huppenthal’s
comments are out of step with the growing number of Americans who aren’t
willing to blame the poor for their plight at a time when wealth and income are
increasingly concentrated and the rich are getting absurdly rich.
His
compulsive commenting isn’t the only odd online behavior exposed so far.
Huppenthal also spent an alarming amount of time scrubbing anything he didn’t
like out of his
own Wikipedia page as an “editor.”
It’s
not clear yet what this will mean for his career. He’s running for re-election
and faces competition in Arizona’s August 26 Republican primary. The Arizona
Chamber of Commerce yanked an award
it was about to bestow upon him and is considering whether to call for his
resignation.
Before
this scandal erupted, Huppenthal was already taking heat for his promotion of
private school vouchers while serving as chief of the state’s public schools.
Conservatives
abhor his support for Arizona’s version of the Common Core. Now he has to
explain his extreme views and why his anonymous commenting on websites,
including items entered during the workday from the Education Department’s
offices, was an appropriate use of his time.
I
hope Arizona voters see Huppenthal for what he is — dangerous and wrong — and
reject him. His defeat would send a strong message: Characterizing the poor as
un-Christian is politically off limits.
Bob
Lord, a veteran tax lawyer and former congressional candidate, practices and
blogs in Phoenix, Arizona. He is an Institute for Policy Studies associate
fellow.
Distributed via OtherWords.org
Distributed via OtherWords.org