Oklahoma City bureaucrats smarter than Harvard?
In 1928, the first Roman Catholic ever nominated for president, Gov. Al Smith of New York, came to campaign in Oklahoma at the height of the Ku Klux Klan's power. Smith was greeted with numerous burning crosses during the night as his train rolled across the state. When Smith spoke to a rally in Oklahoma City, the KKK burned more crosses outside of the stadium where his campaign rally was held, inciting hatred and fomenting violence. Some of Smith's relatives were listening to radio broadcasts of the proceedings and said they believed the atmosphere was so volatile that “they expected a bullet, expected to hear a gun go off.”
Smith then delivered what many consider to be the most courageous speech ever given by a presidential nominee. In it he said, “There is no greater mockery in the world today than the burning of the cross by these people who are spreading this propaganda .... (the symbol of) the Christ they are supposed to adore… . To inject bigotry, hatred, intolerance and un-American sectarian division into a campaign... . Nothing could be so contradictory of our whole history.”
Dewey Bartlett Sr. with family prior to election
As a child in 1966, I remember leaflets were dropped by an airplane over Bartlesville that read, “Don't vote for Dewey Bartlett. He is a Roman Catholic.” The fair-minded voters of Oklahoma overcame the religious prejudices and elected the best person for the job -- Bartlett, our first Catholic governor.
Despite past hobgoblins in our state history who have insulted Catholics and the Catholic Church, nothing compares in degree or kind to what the government of Oklahoma City has sanctioned at the Civic Center on September 21. A Satanic “Black mass” is scheduled on government property. One particular faith is being blasphemed, ridiculed, and mocked in what can only be called in contemporary terms, “hate speech.”
The specious legal reasoning that Oklahoma City bureaucrats used to permit this sacrilege fails standards of reason and civility. Harvard University in May canceled the same event on their campus without fear of legal reprisal or First Amendment abridgement.
It was wrong in 1928 for government officials to stand idly by as the Klan burned crosses on government property to incite violence and hatred against a presidential candidate because of his faith.
In 2014, it is wrong for government officials, in the guise of political correctness, to allow Satanists on taxpayer property to blaspheme and incite hatred against the Catholic Church.
Those bureaucrats who have sanctioned this outrage and the city elected officials who have circled around them should be released to industry to seek other opportunities.
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OK Labor Commissioner Mark Costello
About the author: Mark Costello is Oklahoma Labor Commissioner. Elected commissioner November 2, 2010, Costello won with a historic margin of 64% of the vote over an incumbent office holder. In his previous private business career Costello founded AMCAT, a telephone software company. Since selling AMCAT in 2000, he founded several technology companies. He has taken a sabbatical from his businesses to be an active Labor Commissioner.
Mark Costello kept his promises to bring a business approach to managing the Labor Department and, to date, has saved well over $500,000 in tax dollars while increasing efficiency, even turning back a portion of his own salary and using his personal vehicle rather than the allowed state car. He is a fourth generation Oklahoman born in Bartlesville. Mark has been married to Cathy for 30 years; together they are raising their 5 children in Edmond, Oklahoma.