Now that the Huck is a major national figure in the Christian Republican White People's Party, the
Arkansas Blog at the
Arkansas Times Web site is becoming a daily online stop for me.
In
Did Pastor Huck Flub Marriage Question? 01/16/08, ABC's Justin Rood seems willing to believe that the Huck was in favor of dames doing what their husbands tell them to do before he was against it. Except the quote in Rood's article didn't say Huck was changing his mind, only restating it in "moderate" terms that those not hip to fundi lingo like "servant leadership" wouldn't get:
At a debate sponsored by Fox News last week, Huckabee, who has made his faith a central component to his campaign, was asked about his public endorsement of a controversial 1998 statement on family and marriage by the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), the organizing body of Southern Baptists.
The statement, which ran along with signatures from Huckabee, his wife and more than 100 other prominent figures, said that while "husband and wife are of equal worth before God," the wife "is to submit herself graciously to the servant leadership of her husband[.]"
"Women voters in both parties harshly criticize that," Fox's Carl Cameron said to Huckabee. "Is that position politically viable in the general election of 2008, sir?"
"The point," Huckabee responded, "is that as wives submit themselves to the husbands, the husbands also submit themselves, and it's not a matter of one being somehow superior over the other."
Speaking of the Huck, Southerners often complain - and often with good reason - that Yankees have dumbass stereotypes of Southerners. But one reason for that impression is that Southerners like the Huck happily play to
Hee-Haw! notions. As in the Huck's fond memories of eatin' fried squirrel:
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