General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDoes anyone remember reading about a house in DC owned by a shadowy Republican organization?
Im trying to remember what it was called, so I can look it up. If memory serves, it was a gathering place for ultra-conservative/religious elected Republicans. I think some of them actually lived there as well, and it was a place where they were indoctrinated into the creepy right-wing agenda. I havent heard it mentioned for a long time, but I wonder if theres a through line from that house to what happened to the Republican Party, even before *Rump.
gopiscrap
(24,074 posts)inhabited by a bunch bunch of radical right wing religious nuts
ariadne0614
(1,826 posts). . .definitely inhabited by a bunch bunch of radical right wing religious nuts
Karadeniz
(23,061 posts)Nictuku
(3,790 posts)... I just can't remember the name of the group. I know it had something to do with "K" street.
I Googled K Street and secret republicans and found links to the "K Street Project" and this interesting article:
https://www.rizzolibookstore.com/product/wolves-k-street-secret-history-how-big-money-took-over-big-government
ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)Things got bad for the K Street gang, at least for a while:
Yet, nothing lasts forever. Amidst a populist backlash to the soaring inequality these lobbyists helped usher in, Washington's pro-business alliance suddenly began to unravel. And while new ways for corporations to control the federal government would emerge, the men who'd once built K Street found themselves under legal scrutiny and on the verge of financial collapse. One had his namesake firm ripped away by his own colleagues. Another watched his business shut down altogether. One went to prison. And one was found dead behind the 18th green of an exclusive golf club, with a bottle of $1,500 wine at his feet and a bullet in his head.
lamp_shade
(15,019 posts)ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)Midnight Writer
(22,593 posts)They call themselves The Family or The Fellowship and they definitely have a seat at the table. They are quite influential.
Jeff Sharlett wrote an excellent book about them called The Family.
Model35mech
(2,047 posts)Jose Garcia
(2,749 posts)ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)electric_blue68
(16,758 posts)Jerry2144
(2,385 posts)But more likely I think K Street has something with it. What youre talking about sounds familiar. It was owned by Christian Nationalists (AkA C-Nats)
ariadne0614
(1,826 posts). . .I wouldnt be surprised to learn theres a connection between the Family and Roberts, Scalia, AC-B, and Gorsuch.
rsdsharp
(9,780 posts)133 C Street, SE, in DC.
I remember seeing a story about them on, I think, 60 Minutes. At one point, one of the members asked what others would think if one of the members was accused of rape. The ultimate answer was that they wouldnt think negatively about such a member, because the normal rules didnt apply to them.
mountain grammy
(26,991 posts)Called 'C Street: The Fundamentalist Threat to American Democracy' He's been warning us for years.
ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)Grins
(7,658 posts)
John The Adulterer Ensign, Senator Tom Coburn and Representatives Bart Stupak, Mike Doyle, Steve Largent, Zach Wamp, Mark Appalachian Trail Sanford, Chip Pickering, and ministers Marty Sherman, Tim Coe, and David Coe.
As I recall, this house and group goes back to the 30s and FDR.
yorkster
(2,130 posts)C Street was another book by Sharlett about the same group founded by Doug Coe. At one time there were some Republican reps. who lived in the CStreet building.
Scarlett was a Dartmouth College professor, I think still is.
PatSeg
(49,517 posts)It was written by Jeff Sharlet. At the time I found it all very shocking, but now very little surprised me anymore.
I believe there is a documentary based on the book. I'll see if I can find it.
Edit to add: The documentary is on Netflix. My daughter watched it and said it was excellent.
https://www.netflix.com/title/80063867
ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)PatSeg
(49,517 posts)I added the documentary to my list on Netflix.
blm
(113,708 posts)Id love to know what theyre up to now.
brewens
(14,809 posts)piss me off.
LetMyPeopleVote
(151,525 posts)ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)malaise
(274,767 posts)The Family
Kid Berwyn
(16,996 posts)By JEFF SHARLET
Salon, July 21, 2009
I can't say I was impressed when I met Sen. John Ensign at the C Street House, the secretive religious enclave on Capitol Hill thrust into the news by its links to three political sex scandals, those of Gov. Mark Sanford; former Rep. Chip Pickering, R-Miss., who allegedly rendezvoused at the C Street House with his mistress, an executive in the industry for which he then became a lobbyist; and Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev. Although Sanford declared today that his scandal will actually turn out to be good for the people of South Carolina because he's now more firmly in God's control, the once-favored GOP presidential prospect will finish out his term and fade away. And Ensign's residence at the C Street House during his own extramarital affair now threatens to end a career that he and other Republicans hoped would lead him to the White House.
When I met Ensign, he was just back from a run, sweaty and bouncing in place, boasting about the time he'd clocked and teasing a young woman from his office. She seemed annoyed that the senator wouldn't get himself into a shower and back on the job. When I wrote about Sen. Ensign in my book about the evangelical political organization that runs the C Street House, "The Family: The Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Power," I described him as a "conservative casino heir elected to the Senate from Nevada, a brightly tanned, hapless figure who uses his Family connections to graft holiness to his gambling-fortune name."
Now, of course, I know I was wrong: John Ensign is a brightly tanned, hapless figure who used his Family connections to cover up the fruits of his flirtations, to make moral decisions for him, and to do his dirty work when his secret romance sputtered. Doug Hampton, the friend and former aide whom Ensign cuckolded, tells us that it was Family leader David Coe, along with Coe's brother Tim and Family "brother" Sen. Tom Coburn, who delivered the pink slip when it was time to put Cynthia Hampton out of Ensign's reach.
If sexual license was all the Family offered the C Street men, however, that would merely be seedy and self-serving. But Family men are more than hypocritical. They're followers of a political religion that embraces elitism, disdains democracy, and pursues power for its members the better to "advance the Kingdom." They say they're working for Jesus, but their Christ is a power-hungry, inside-the-Beltway savior not many churchgoers would recognize. Sexual peccadilloes aside, the Family acts today like the most powerful lobby in America that isn't registered as a lobby -- and is thus immune from the scrutiny attending the other powerful organizations like Big Pharma and Big Insurance that exert pressure on public policy.
The Family likes to call itself a "Christian Mafia," but it began 74 years ago as an anti-New Deal coalition of businessmen convinced that organized labor was under the sway of Satan. The Great Depression, they believed, was a punishment from God for what they viewed as FDR's socialism. The Family's goal was the "consecration" of America to God, first through the repeal of New Deal reforms, then through the aggressive expansion of American power during the Cold War. They called this a "Worldwide Spiritual Offensive," but in Washington, it amounted to the nation's first fundamentalist lobby. Early participants included Southern Sens. Strom Thurmond, Herman Talmadge and Absalom Willis Robertson -- Pat Robertson's father. Membership lists stored in the Family's archive at the Billy Graham Center at evangelical Wheaton College in Illinois show active participation at any given time over the years by dozens of congressmen.
SNIP...
Family leaders consider their political network to be Christ's avant garde, an elite that transcends not just conventional morality but also earthly laws regulating lobbying. In the Family's early days, they debated registering as "a lobby for God's Kingdom." Instead, founder Abraham Vereide decided that the group could be more effective by working personally with politicians. "The more invisible you can make your organization," Vereide's successor, current leader Doug Coe preaches, "the more influence you can have." That's true -- which is why we have laws requiring lobbyists to identify themselves as such.
CONTINUES...
https://www.salon.com/2009/07/21/c_street/
ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)The response to my question provided an embarrassment of riches.
lanlady
(7,172 posts)There was a wonderful documentary about it called The Family. It's on Netflix.
sdfernando
(5,215 posts)ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)In February 2010, the president of the Fellowship, Richard Carver, told The Columbus Dispatch that his "charitable organization" does not own the C Street Center "and has no control over its policy."[1] Carver added he does not know who owns or runs the center: "It is simply not a part of anything we do."[1]
In response to Carver's statement, MSNBC host Rachel Maddow produced an official Corrective Deed of September 23, 2009 for C Street signed on behalf of C Street Center, Inc. by Marty B. Sherman, Secretary, who is listed as "Associate" on the Family's 2008 tax filing.[13] Property records show that in 1980, C Street was purchased by Youth with a Mission, Washington, D.C., Inc. On July 19, 1983, the organization changed its name to "Youth with a Mission Renewal Ministries, Inc." On November 28, 1984, the organization changed its name to "FaithAmerica". On September 3, 1985, the organization changed its name to "Youth with a Mission National Christian Center, Inc." On February 27, 1992, the organization changed its name to "C Street Center, Inc." The aforementioned Corrective Deed signed by a Fellowship Associate changed the name on the title to reflect changes in name of its owner.
Onthefly
(384 posts)erronis
(16,369 posts)Anne Nelson's wonderful expose.
And Chuck Colson, one of the plumbers for Richard Nixon, who started a shadowy "xian" brotherhood in Reston, VA.
ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)LeftInTX
(28,819 posts)ariadne0614
(1,826 posts)Bundbuster
(4,018 posts)The neverending machinations of these slimy christofascist groups literally make my skin crawl. They stand against everything I believe in, and they never relent in their goal of ruling not just America but the entire world. To me, it's the most dangerous and repellant ideology of my long lifetime.
Hotler
(11,777 posts)Inside the Little Green House on K Street, D.C.s Most Scandalous Private Club
https://www.thedailybeast.com/inside-the-little-green-house-on-k-street-dcs-most-scandalous-private-club
The Little Green House on K Street was a residence at 1625 K Street, NW, Washington DC, USA, where the notoriously corrupt deals of Warren Harding's presidency (19211923) are believed to have been planned.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Green_House_on_K_Street
The name entered the American lexicon as a symbol of political corruption and cronyism.