www.splcenter.org
Sitemap | Contact | Search | Employment
 
  Subscribe to SPLC news:
  Intelligence Project History  
  Intelligence Report  
  Hate Groups Map  
  Hate Incidents  
  Law Enforcement Training  
Hate Map
Hate Map

  Radical Religion
Creationism gets a dash of anti-Semitism
 
 
Do you think the theory of evolution is a Satanic plot to bring about the New World Order? Are you worried that Darwin's idea produced "Communism, Socialism, Naziism, abortion, liberalism and the New Age Movement?" Then Dr. Kent Hovind is for you.

Hovind, who runs the Creation Science Evangelism ministry from Pensacola, Fla., says the whole Bible is literally true and that the Earth is only 6,000 years old. While that may seem par for the creationist course, Hovind also sells anti-Semitic books like Fourth Reich of the Rich and has recommended The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a book blaming the world's problems on a Jewish conspiracy.

Environmentalism and income taxes, Hovind says, are designed to destroy the United States and "bring it under Communism." "Democracy," he says, "is evil and contrary to God's law."

Every religion has fundamentalists bordering on extremism; Hovind is notable for his wide reception and for his promulgating of conspiracy theories favored by the antigovernment "Patriot" movement.

A recent Hovind speech at East Memorial Baptist Church, a relatively mainstream church in Prattville, Ala., drew 500 supporters. Hovind says he speaks each month at dozens of churches and even at public schools nationwide.

Creationism is a fundamentalist issue with wide appeal. By tying it to more radical antigovernment and conspiracy ideas — for instance, the "unregistered church" movement (see article Church vs. State) — Hovind is attempting to draw conservatives into a world of far-right conspiracy-mongering and anti-Semitism.

Hovind does allow for loose interpretation of the Bible on at least one issue, though. His Web site, www.drdino.com, suggests that "the mark of the beast" from Revelations 13:16 is actually the UPC bar code.

"Four people have called me from Arkansas and Missouri," writes Hovind, "to report seeing customers at the grocery store pay for purchases by scanning their hand."

 
 
 
  Subscribe to the Intelligence Report  
 
 
  Advanced Search: Intelligence Report  
 
 
Memories of 'Patriotism'
Issue 102 | Summer 2001
 
EDITORIAL
Into the Shadows
ON THE COVER:
THE RISE AND DECLINE OF THE 'PATRIOTS'
Antigovernment Fervor Dies With McVeigh
Biography misses key points
FALSE PATRIOTS
Profiles of 40 Antigovernment Leaders
'Patriot' movement timeline
TERROR FROM THE RIGHT
30 Plots Foiled Since Oklahoma City
ORGANIZING FREEDOM
Antigovernment 'County' Founders
CHURCH VS. STATE
'Unregistered Churches' Persist
REEVALUATING THE NET
Where's the Real Cyber-Extremism?
COMING OUT
Leaving a Christian Identity Church
INTELLIGENCE BRIEFS
Woman's Death Exposes Prison Scam
German Extremist Loses Asylum Bid
Creationism Gets A Dash of Anti-Semitism
Racist Preacher Gets 30 Years in Kidnapping
Tough-Talking Racialist Tells All
Nazi Compound To Become Civil Rights Center
Accused Assassin Arrested in France
Florida 'Church' Leaders Guilty in Scam
LEGAL BRIEF
A Ruling for Gun Rights
THE LAST WORD
ELF Is On the March