Pundits who want to equate peaceable Christian fundamentalists with Al-Qaeda murderers do. But columnist Maggie Gallagher pokes a hole in the theory:
In a letter to the Buffalo News and in conversations with author Dan Herbeck, McVeigh said he had no firm convictions about an afterlife: “And he told us that when he finds out if there’s an afterlife, he will improvise, adapt and overcome, just like they taught him in the Army,” Herbeck said. In May 2001, Esquire published 13 letters of McVeigh’s. In them, he portrays himself variously as a patriot, a lover of “The Simpsons,” a “Star Trek junkie,” a fan of the movie “Unforgiven,” a reader of Ayn Rand’s “Atlas Shrugged,” an enthusiastic consumer of Hustler and Penthouse magazines. His only direct religious reference (other than a Christmas card) was a letter dated April 11, 1998: “Yesterday was Good Friday; tomorrow is Easter; and it’s been so long since I’ve been to church (except Christian Identity) (kidding!).”