Once, Dixon was asked by a reporter if he was an extremist, to which he replied, "Yes, I am 'extremely' right". During the 1970s, Dixon became a veteran of the political battles of
fundamentalism. He advocated for the Church Freedom Act in the Indiana legislature. He attacked
Marion county prosecutor James Kelly for supporting gay rights. He led a group of 400 ministers to physically prevent the closing of
Lester Roloff's home for children in Texas by forming a human chain around the property. He organized rallies to support
Anita Bryant's
Save Our Children campaign. In 1980, seven months after founding the
Moral Majority, Jerry Falwell made Dixon the national secretary and president of the Indiana division of the group. In 1982, Dixon and members of the Terre Haute Moral Majority traveled to
Louisville, Nebraska, to protest the
court-ordered closure of Faith Baptist school. In 1983, Dixon resigned his posts with the Moral Majority to found the
American Coalition of Unregistered Churches (ACUC). In 1984, Dixon testified on matters of religious liberty before a congressional subcommittee. He entered a letter into the record describing the unregistered church movement as being churches that only recognize Christ as authority over the church and that government has no interest in the affairs of the church. In his testimony before the committee, Dixon stated that the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) had become a terrorist organization. In 1984, through funding from
Sun Myung Moon's
Unification Church, Dixon was involved with the formation of the
Coalition for Religious Freedom. Dixon, along with Falwell and other fundamentalists, later pulled out of the coalition, citing concerns that the Moonies controlled the finances of the organization. Dixon participated in the
Rocky Mountain Rendezvous in
Estes Park, Colorado organized by
Christian Identity minister
Pete Peters in 1992. == Federal stand-off ==