Beisner: EPA Promoting ‘The Lorax’ Violates the Separation of Church and State

Back in 2010, the Cornwall Alliance released a 12-part DVD series entitled “Resisting the Green Dragon” featuring a who’s who of Religious Right leaders attacking environmentalism and warning that it represents a dire threat to Christianity:

Calvin Beisner, the founder of the Cornwall Alliance, has become the Religious Right’s favorite “expert” in fighting any environmental effort and a regular guest on Bryan Fischer’s radio program, despite the fact that his scientific credentials appear to be limited to possessing a Ph.D. in Scottish History.

Beisner is now complaining that the Environmental Protection Agency is one of many partners involved in promoting the upcoming film “The Lorax” and that, by doing so, the agency is in “violation of the separation of church and state” because Beisner believes that environmentalism is a religion:

The film adaptation of Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax features a tiny, but tenacious creature who “speaks for the trees” and fights industrialism. Cal Beisner, national spokesman for the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation, says this is just one of many films geared toward children to spread such a message.

[W]hat really concerns Beisner is the fact that the Environmental Protection Agency is among nearly 70 partners with Universal in promoting the film.

“What you’ve got there is the mixing of taxpayer dollars into the promotion of a clear ideology that has a particular religious flavor to it,” the Cornwall Alliance spokesman concludes. “And frankly, I think that this is a violation of the separation of church and state.”