Talk:Moral Majority
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The characteristic of being neither moral nor a majority, a substantive view of the Moral Majority, was excised anonymously and without justification. Other historical references also. Amgine 06:13, 7 Nov 2004 (UTC)
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[edit] link removed
I removed a link to Theocracy Watch. The site is about the entire dominionist movement, with relatively little on the Moral Majority, and so is more appropriate for Dominionism. -DDerby-(talk) 01:31, 24 October 2005 (UTC)
- Actually, it does mention the Moral Majority, grantd it is largely in the context of Pat Robertson's politicking. Sweetfreek 07:15, 26 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Howard Phillips
I removed the statement Howard Phillips is Jewish. I used to intern for him, so I know he's Protestant. --68.45.161.241 23:33, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
Can someone add an explanation of why it was dissolved in 1989? Usually, powerful organizations don't just dissolve.
[edit] Removed popular culture section
I have removed this popular culture section per WP:IPC:
[edit] Pop culture references
- In 1981 a probable studio group calling themselves The Electric Church recorded a sarcastic parody song done in an upbeat pop/country style called "The Moral Majority".
In it the singer sings about all the successes The Moral Majority had in the 1980 elections (i.e. the election of Ronald Reagan as President - "We sent Jimmy back to Georgia, we moved Bonzo to D.C.") and plays the role of a hypocritical Televangelist who is only interested in money and power ("Do you know how much one of these pinky rings cost me?"). The record was released nationally on the Plantation label, which released many off-the-wall and aggressive country/rock tunes over the years, most notably "Harper Valley P.T.A." by Jeannie C. Riley. The record was produced by Shad O'Shea who was the owner of Fraternity records, a Cincinnati, Ohio based brand.
- The punk rock band Green Day makes a reference to the moral majority in their single "Minority" with the line "I want to be the minority/I don't need your authority/Down with the moral majority/'cause I want to be the minority".
- The industrial rock band "KMFDM" mentions the moral majority in their song "WW III" (or World War 3) WWIII (album), in one of their lines, "War on the moral majority, on corporate.com imperialism".
- The hardcore punk band Dead Kennedys had a song called "Moral Majority" on their EP In God We Trust, Inc. and as the B-side of their single "Nazi Punks Fuck Off!". The song's introduction is a satirical spoken word piece from the point of view of a hypocritical televangelist and a rendition of the spiritual "Rock of Ages" segueing into the Mickey Mouse Club theme.
- The Circle Jerks, another hardcore punk band, also had a song called "Moral Majority" on their second LP Wild in the Streets.
- The DC hardcore punk band, Youth Brigade (not to be confused with the California band, with the same name) put a song called Moral Majority on the 1982 Dischord Records compilation, Flex Your Head.
- In the movie Airplane II: The Sequel a large-breasted woman wears a very revealing T-shirt with the words "Moral Majority" printed upon it.
- Monty Python's "The Oral Majority" sketch is a direct parody.
- '80s/'90s band Pop Will Eat Itself use a sample of a Jerry Falwell speech in a track, opening their Cure for Sanity album, called "The Incredible PWEI vs. the Moral Majority".
- The Welsh band The Manic Street Preachers sing "Number one - the best - no excuse from me I am here to serve the moral majority" (sarcastically) in their song "Ifwhiteamericatoldthetruthforonedayitsworldwouldfallapart".
- The Infocom game Leather Goddesses of Phobos begins the game with the message "This [game] is also unsuitable for censors, members of the Moral Majority, and anyone else who thinks that sex is dirty rather than fun."
- In the Sierra On-Line game Leisure Suit Larry 5: Passionate Patti Does a Little Undercover Work, among the many signs at the airport terminals, one reads: "Where does the Moral Majority turn to promote censorship and creeping Fascism? 'Slant,' the Holier-Than-Thou Newsweekly. No liberal pandering, no pinko editorial cartoons, no objective journalism... just good ol' fashioned Fundamentalism. Printed on 100% recycled environmentalists."
- During a scene in the film Scream 2, a class of students discusses the impact of pop culture on real-life violence. When it is implied that the fictional movie Stab was the influence for the murder of a young couple, CiCi (played by Sarah Michelle Gellar) replies: "That is so moral majority."
- The Grunge band, L7 refers to itself as "neither moral, nor majority" in its song "Pretend we're dead" on its third studio album, Bricks Are Heavy.
- A popular bumper sticker displayed by opponents of the group read: "The Moral Majority is Neither!"
- In the Marvel comic Cable (comics) volume 2 #1 Garrison Kane says: "They make the SS, Khmer Rouge and Moral Majority look like a knitting club!" while referring to the future Citizen's Protectorate.
--Andrewlp1991 01:16, 12 August 2007 (UTC)

