Thursday, May 8th, 2008...12:05 pm
My new interview in Church & State
Q. What led you to begin studying the influence of Rev. Moon on American politics?
A. I couldn’t believe the absurd relationship between conservatives and the Rev. Moon wasn’t famous. Washington’s guardians of moral virtue had found a way to team up with an iconic ’70s megalomaniac.
If Moon didn’t exist, a James Bond movie would invent him. It’s not that his theology is odd, but that he gives these mad speeches about installing himself as world leader. In Washington it’s treated as a campy joke. Only it’s not, because he publishes a major newspaper.
I was drawn to the contradictions that ensue when Moon appears at fancy Beltway dinner parties and embarrasses the audience. Right-wing Republicans, keen on keeping the money flowing, will listen uncomfortably for 45 minutes to Moon as he chops the air with his hands and shouts things like, “Free sex is centered on Satan!” and, “No one can oppose me!”
Little did I know that it wasn’t just a story of wretched Washington amorality, but a haunting, 40-year epic of corruption. What hooked me was Robert Boettcher’s 1980 book Gifts of Deceit. Boettcher was a frustrated young congressional investigator, trying to warn America of Moon’s growing influence in Washington as part of a 1978 influence-peddling probe. Boettcher died a few years later, falling from his apartment, his book ignored.
There’s no one else in U.S. history like Moon. First he was accused of tricking tens of thousands of young Americans into joining a cult; in the Carter years, congressmen from both parties issued dire warnings about his apocalyptic agenda, involving a “Unification Crusade Army” that would topple democracy; and now he’s publishing The Washington Times, as if nothing ever happened.
Hope you’ll read the rest, here.

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