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Rick Perry At Liberty University: Faith And Foreign Policy Mixed In Evangelical Address

First Posted: 09/14/2011 12:55 pm Updated: 11/14/2011 4:12 am

WASHINGTON -- Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry filled in details of his personal and spiritual biography Wednesday in a speech at the nation's largest evangelical Christian college, and outlined an approach to foreign policy that he said would imitate the nation's 40th president, Republican Ronald Reagan.

Texas Gov. Perry was introduced as a possible second coming of Reagan by Liberty University President Jerry Falwell, Jr., who said he appreciated Perry's willingness to talk off the cuff in a way that is politically incorrect. Falwell Jr. specifically mentioned Perry's oblique comments regarding whether Texas might at some point secede from the United States.

Most of Perry's remarks followed the arc of his life. He cast himself as an earthy, common man, pulled himself up from a hardscrabble childhood in Paint Creek, Texas.

"For me, indoor plumbing was a bit of a luxury until I was about five years old," Perry said. "I didn't worry about the latest fashions. My mother sewed most of my clothes. And I didn't know that we weren't wealthy in a material sense. I knew that we were rich in a lot of things that really mattered, a spiritual way."

He made light of his poor performance as a student. Of his 1968 graduation from Paint Creek High School, he said, "I graduated in the top 10 of my graduating class -- of 13."

And he sought to explain why his college transcript was filled with C's and D's, saying he intended to be a veterinarian but found he was not cut out for it. "Four semesters of organic chemistry made a pilot out of me," he joked.

Perry sketched out a searching, uncertain youth: "I spent many a night pondering my purpose, talking to God, wondering what to do with this one life, among the billions that were on the planet. What I learned as I wrestled with God is that I didn't have to have all the answers, that they would be revealed to me in due time, that I needed to trust him."

But, Perry said, he did not find his own Christian faith until he was 27.

"My faith journey is not the story of someone who turned to God because I wanted to. It was because I had nowhere else to turn. I was 27. I'd been an officer in the United States Air Force commanding a fairly substantial piece of sophisticated equipment, telling men and women what to do. But I was lost spiritually and emotionally. And I didn't know how to fix it," Perry said.

At another point in the speech he said that "Christian values" should be given supremacy over other religions in guiding the U.S. government.

"America is going to be guided by some set of values. The question is gonna be, whose values?" Perry said. "It's those Christian values that this country was based upon."

While many evangelicals will want to hear more about Perry's personal conversion experience, for now the speech was a platform for Perry to regain some of the momentum lost over the last week.

Perry's first two debates as a presidential candidate have left him bloodied. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has attacked him for his past statements on Social Security, accusing him of wanting to end the program. And on Monday night, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) and former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) savaged Perry for his 2007 attempt to mandate an HPV vaccine for sixth-grade girls at a time when his former chief of staff was a lobbyist for the drug maker, Merck, which would have manufactured the vaccine.

Polls this week have shown some signs that voters are beginning to doubt his ability to beat President Obama in a general election, though he still maintains a large lead over Romney in national polls. While that data is of some significance, it does not tell the story of the candidate's standing in key early primary states.

Perry also meandered Monday night in his answer on how the U.S. should proceed in Afghanistan. And some saw his call to "bring our young men and women home" as a nod to a more isolationist form of foreign policy that has emerged among some on the right.

But the Texan went out of his way to articulate a vision for engagement with the world, not withdrawal.

"Our response cannot be to isolate ourselves within our own borders but to engage our allies in the quest to build these enduring alliances around the globe for freedom," he said.

The central thrust of his foreign policy message was that the U.S. should be "the world's leading advocate for freedom," addressing the problem of oppression that he said he originally saw first hand as an Air Force pilot flying a C-130 transport plane through the mid-1970s.

"We must do what Ronald Reagan did at the apex of the Cold War, which is to speak past the oppressors and the illegitimate rulers and directly to their people -- the ones who live behind the walls of oppression while yearning to be free," Perry said.

Falwell Jr., the son of Liberty founder Jerry Falwell -- who died in 2007 -- said in his introduction that the current moment is similar to 1980, when Reagan ran against incumbent President Jimmy Carter, a Democrat. It was a clear comparison of Perry to Reagan, a parallel that has been discussed recently even in the Wall Street Journal.

"Thirty-one years ago this fall as a Liberty freshman, I sat mesmerized as a conservative governor from a large state told a much smaller convocation about his vision for America," Falwell Jr. said. "At that time, America was mired in an economic malaise and seemed to be waning in its standing in the world. Overreaching government control had fueled double-digit interest rates and inflation. As young college students, we feared -- just as many of you do now -- that our nation's future was in jeopardy. Ronald Reagan was that governor, and he was elected president soon thereafter, and over the following eight years he returned America to prominence and prosperity."

Falwell Jr. then welcomed Perry to the podium saying, "I have a feeling today that history is about to repeat itself."

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03:37 PM on 09/18/2011
Rick Perry - a Texas-born and bred, white conservative Christian who was a sub-par student at best. Barely graduated with a 2.5, half-worked for a while, and then joined the Air Force (apparently recruiting standards aren't what they used to be) because 'he was too much of a free spirit'. If this story sounds all too familiar, it's because it is. And then, after becoming aimless after separation, he became a Christian.

I'm sorry, but enlisting as a means to get your sh*t straight is a p-poor reason to join the Armed Services. I'd go so far to say that it's a one-fingered salute to our personnel from this and past generations who joined out of a sense of duty, civic pride, and love of country. And post-separation anxiety isn't what I'd call a model pillar of faith, either. I'm fairly sure my old Army chaplain would have said of that, "You're either lying to yourself, or you're setting yourself up for a terrible fall from grace."

It strikes me as doubly ironic that he now uses this 'faith' as a platform to voice his ethical and moral strength, when the total and utter lack of these virtues is what brought him to know God in the first place.

Perry may be Christian by his own ideologue, but he's not a good one... and that he is dragging his own twisted view of faith into American politics is evidence of it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NER2
HardWrknMan
08:30 PM on 09/15/2011
"At another point in the speech he said that 'Christian values' should be given supremacy over other religions in guiding the U.S. government." Interesting. I wonder what he'll say when it's time to talk to Jewish organizations in America.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MalleusMaleficarum
Global nomad.
01:04 PM on 09/15/2011
This is rich. Perry took some big punches at the last debate. So, to recover he lurches to the right and hightails it over to Liberty University - in a replay of George W. Bush's appearance at Bob Jones University in 2000. Bush was lambasted for appearing at a "university' where interracial dating was prohibited. In Perry's case, he lurched to Liberty which has repelled gays as recently as 2005 when the library refused the Equality Ride's offer to donate books about homosexuality. 24 gay activists were arrested at Liberty for trespassing in one of the most nauseous episodes in the hate-filled era of homophobia - an era that is still lashing out against gays from coast to coast. Jerry Falwell accused gays of causing 9/11 by forcing the retribution of the almighty. Jerry Falwell, Jr. is cut from the same cloth. You know what the Bible says, Like father, like son. Perry is now clearly the Son of a Bush.
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LILLYPUTT
10:17 PM on 09/15/2011
And the Son of a b....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
So silly
12:21 PM on 09/15/2011
"For me, indoor plumbing was a bit of a luxury until I was about five years old,"

Oh man! That made me laugh! I don't know too many 5 year old boys who are too concerned with indoor plumbing! They don't exactly wash dishes, do laundry, run their own baths, etc. I also noticed they don't seem to have much of a problem going behind a tree with Dad to relieve themselves. He must have been quite the fussy little boy if one of his main concerns at age 4 was indoor plumbing!
07:50 PM on 09/15/2011
Is that your best attempt at a critique? Pointless.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
So silly
10:15 PM on 09/15/2011
No, I could critisize Perry in regards to Texas' rank in state by state comparisons on all things relevant. Education, healthcare, poverty, etc. What would that mean for our country that the leader of a state that clearly fails on education and healthcare hold the highest ranking office? I could critique the fact that he says he never has a moment's doubt when it comes to putting someone to death while claiming to value all human life.

I just thought that quote was very absurd and came across as so fake that it should be pointed out.

Is that your best attempt at a critique of my post Charity Aileen? Why don't you write something relevant and I will respond.

LOL I am glad you never saw any of my posts about that man's hair! Your little head might explode sweetie!
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LILLYPUTT
10:18 PM on 09/15/2011
He was a cheer leader in school.Maybe he is more fussy like a girl.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
So silly
11:16 PM on 09/15/2011
I don't know whether Rick Perry had running water before age 5 and if that caused retardation but that man sure can pose in front of a flag. The American flag, a Texas flag, a treasonous rebel secessionist flag (I forget what the South calls it), blah blah blah

Can someone get Bachman's speech writer to fill in here? I already used "I don't know if.." but there is one more that is evading my mind.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mausinn
Don't Expect a Response
12:01 PM on 09/15/2011
This is the kind of inaugural celebration we can expect from someone with this mental acumen.

"Perry invited his friend, rock musician Ted Nugent, to perform at a black-tie gala hours after Perry's second inauguration ceremony on January 16, 2007. Nugent appeared onstage during the inaugural ball wearing a cutoff T-shirt emblazoned with the Confederate flag and shouting derogatory remarks about non-English speakers, according to press reports."

YeeeeeHawwww.
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LILLYPUTT
10:22 PM on 09/15/2011
Ignorance, South of my boarder! Corn pone and shine for refreshments.
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Gestas
Mountain Man
11:48 AM on 09/15/2011
Replacing Obama with Rick (Ponzi) Perry is the same as poking your eyes out.
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LILLYPUTT
10:23 PM on 09/15/2011
And then someone sticking a hot poker in the eye sockets.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mausinn
Don't Expect a Response
11:45 AM on 09/15/2011
"Perry's first two debates as a presidential candidate have left him bloodied."

If he thinks those guys were tough, just wait until he tries to take on a a graduate of Columbia University and Harvard Law School, and a guy who was the president of the Harvard Law Review.
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The Right is Wrong
Pissing off CONS for more than 56 years!
11:33 AM on 09/15/2011
"I graduated in the top 10 of my graduating class -- of 13."

He sounds proud of the fact!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mausinn
Don't Expect a Response
11:46 AM on 09/15/2011
To me he sounds typical of his supporters.
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gmikejake
resist evil
06:41 PM on 09/15/2011
The origins of the Republican party emerged from the national Know Nothing Party. Anti-intellectualism has been one of their characteristics for a very, very long time.
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chriss0114
the meanderings of a madman
11:23 AM on 09/15/2011
MAYBE Ricky can save us a BUNDLE!

he cut Texas fire fighting funding in the midst of raging multiple fire by a whopping SEVENTY-FIVE PERCENT!

Then he organized a prayer rally

maybe he will do the same with the US defense budget? cut it by 75% and organize a pryer rally for defense too
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nana-anne
just trying to make sense of the senseless
11:10 AM on 09/15/2011
Is this really the time, in the history of the U.S,. to elevate mediocrity and ignorance to a position of Leader of the Free World? When a candidate boasts of poor grades and dismisses the preponderance of scientific findings in favor of personal gain and arrogance, he or she should be instantly disqualified to hold any public office. This is an age of quantum leaps in science and the ability to quantify facts more quickly and efficiently, which can lead to longer, healthier and more productive lives. The rest of the industrialized world is moving forward aggressively while the Conservative right in this country is advocating a scientific foot-dragging and outright halt to accepted scientific fact.

If any of them believed in NEANDERTHAL mentality, that's what I would call them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tired of tea baggers
I refuse to drink the tea or kool-aid.
11:07 AM on 09/15/2011
"It's those Christian values that this country was based upon."
I thought Christian values were laying up treasures in heaven, not earth. Jesus said to give all you had to the poor and to take care of the sick and less fortunate. He said a camel could pass thru the eye of a needle easier than a rich man can get into heaven.
I'm sick of this Christianity being forced down my throat. Until they live it like their bible commands I don't want to hear any more of this bs from them.
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nana-anne
just trying to make sense of the senseless
11:16 AM on 09/15/2011
I totally understand why you are "tired". Me too. You have to understand these people believe the Bible as well as the Constitution are like a menu from a Chinese restaurant, you get to pick and choose only the things that you need at the moment. Fanned.
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So silly
12:22 PM on 09/15/2011
But I don't get to pick and choose what other people can order from a Chinese restaurant menu.
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Mausinn
Don't Expect a Response
11:06 AM on 09/15/2011
LOL!!! I'm 5t00pid!

Nice... a guy who has minimal understanding of ... anything, wanting to be our next President. He's much better then that Harvard Law Revue guy. With his intelligence and logic.
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majorwiblit
Mr Natural says,,,"Don't mean Sheeet!"
10:57 AM on 09/15/2011
You gotta love it!,a bible in one hand,,a gun in the other

"I'm God fearing and Gun toten"!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
So silly
12:23 PM on 09/15/2011
It's no wonder they need the gun, walking around in fear all the time like that!
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theRealAmerica
bruised,battered and scarred...but hard
10:56 AM on 09/15/2011
Beavis comes to mind. If Perry was Black...nevermind.
10:37 AM on 09/15/2011
Book smarts doesn't always translate to real world success........
10:47 AM on 09/15/2011
a lack of book smarts often translates to stupidity
02:11 PM on 09/16/2011
too much book smarts sometimes translates to a lack of common sense............
11:07 AM on 09/15/2011
Totally. Ask any heroin dealer.