š§µ 1. A Kamala Harris administration would be an unmitigated disaster for religious freedom.https://t.co/nZp2mpwBHK
— Mike Lee (@BasedMikeLee) August 10, 2024
A Mormon's 'food for thought' on this topic.
š§µ 1. A Kamala Harris administration would be an unmitigated disaster for religious freedom.https://t.co/nZp2mpwBHK
— Mike Lee (@BasedMikeLee) August 10, 2024
nortex97 said:
Exactly. I see no popular movement to suppress non-Christian's at all, least of all among Republican christian office-seekers. The obvious answer would be that the OP is referencing Trump, whose family of course includes several prominent non-Christians (jews), and whose former staff included the first openly gay cabinet official (not exactly appealing to the stereotype of 'Christian nationalists').
This is pretty absurd, imho. If one is a christian, one should first and foremost, in my opinion, be opposed to the evil that is infanticide. Second, ending silly endless wars and the death and devastation they bring to people across the globe would be a good thing. That means rooting for a GOP loss this cycle would beā¦counter productive.
Maybe I understand Christian Nationalism different, but my idea of Christian Nationalism isn't to intertwine faith and patriotism, it's to run the nation according to Christian principles; with the understanding that we are Christians first and Americans second.barbacoa taco said:
One thing to understand about Christian Nationalism is that it is by its nature a political movement, not a religious one. It seeks to inject faith (usually an extreme version of it) into governance and to completely undermine the First Amendment and religious freedom.
I believe Christian Nationalism is a dangerous ideology for a few reasons. First, it intertwines faith and patriotism to a point where the United States is perceived as a godlike figure. Any criticism of it is seen as heresy. Celebrations of it almost seem religious in nature. Think a combo of 4th of July and Easter. Like those political rallies that sometimes happen at evangelical megachurches. Second, its rigid adherence to Christian doctrine leads to extreme laws and often does so at the expense of others.
I could write an essay on why it's an abhorrent ideology, but one main point I always come back to is it assumes that the only real Americans are Christians and any non-Christians should be treated as second class.
As for Trump, it's clear he's not a Christian, but he is fully on board with enforcing hard right Christian nationalism on the country, because it has far and away won him the evangelical vote. He can pretend to not be on board with Project 2025 but everyone knows if a GOP congress passes any of those agenda items he'll sign it without thinking twice.
Which items are CN agenda items and which of the authors espouse Christian Nationalism?barbacoa taco said:
it has a bunch of Christian Nationalist agenda items on there, and was written by people who espouse that ideology. It's a Christian Nationalist wishlist.
But that's not how the country is meant to be run. You can be a Christian first and American second in your personal capacity but you shouldn't try to enforce that on everyone else. And that's what Christian nationalism is: a rigid enforcement of a Christian doctrine and worldview.Quo Vadis? said:Maybe I understand Christian Nationalism different, but my idea of Christian Nationalism isn't to intertwine faith and patriotism, it's to run the nation according to Christian principles; with the understanding that we are Christians first and Americans second.barbacoa taco said:
One thing to understand about Christian Nationalism is that it is by its nature a political movement, not a religious one. It seeks to inject faith (usually an extreme version of it) into governance and to completely undermine the First Amendment and religious freedom.
I believe Christian Nationalism is a dangerous ideology for a few reasons. First, it intertwines faith and patriotism to a point where the United States is perceived as a godlike figure. Any criticism of it is seen as heresy. Celebrations of it almost seem religious in nature. Think a combo of 4th of July and Easter. Like those political rallies that sometimes happen at evangelical megachurches. Second, its rigid adherence to Christian doctrine leads to extreme laws and often does so at the expense of others.
I could write an essay on why it's an abhorrent ideology, but one main point I always come back to is it assumes that the only real Americans are Christians and any non-Christians should be treated as second class.
As for Trump, it's clear he's not a Christian, but he is fully on board with enforcing hard right Christian nationalism on the country, because it has far and away won him the evangelical vote. He can pretend to not be on board with Project 2025 but everyone knows if a GOP congress passes any of those agenda items he'll sign it without thinking twice.
I will say there are other figures who I see as much more threatening (in this regard) than Trump. But Trump has and will elevate them, no doubt. Look at those megachurch pastors who are friends with Trump (like Robert Jeffress) and undoubtedly influence his policy decisions. I actually think it's a much greater threat at the state level.Quote:
I also have zero clue how you can think Trump is enforcing hard right Christian nationalism, this sounds like a talking point from the hysterical media. What about him is hard right? He's pro-choice, He's fine with gay marriage, and unfortunately, while I am a HUGE fan of Project 2025, Trump isn't. He doesn't even pay lip service to being a conservative. JD Vance is 50 times the conservative he is.
It looks like you have a strong set of moral values. What basis do you have for imposing them on those who disagree with you?Quote:
There are a number of things. Gutting reproductive rights to truly extreme levels, banning or nearly banning IVF (the Alabama justice cited the Bible in the opinion), going backwards on LGBT rights, changing school curricula to reflect a Christian nationalist bias while downplaying the history people don't want to hear about, using tax dollars to elevate religious schools, gutting voting rights and crafting laws to not explicitly favor one group but clearly have the effect of favoring that group (and often it's white Christians who benefit from it).
barbacoa taco said:But that's not how the country is meant to be run. You can be a Christian first and American second in your personal capacity but you shouldn't try to enforce that on everyone else. And that's what Christian nationalism is: a rigid enforcement of a Christian doctrine and worldview.Quo Vadis? said:Maybe I understand Christian Nationalism different, but my idea of Christian Nationalism isn't to intertwine faith and patriotism, it's to run the nation according to Christian principles; with the understanding that we are Christians first and Americans second.barbacoa taco said:
One thing to understand about Christian Nationalism is that it is by its nature a political movement, not a religious one. It seeks to inject faith (usually an extreme version of it) into governance and to completely undermine the First Amendment and religious freedom.
I believe Christian Nationalism is a dangerous ideology for a few reasons. First, it intertwines faith and patriotism to a point where the United States is perceived as a godlike figure. Any criticism of it is seen as heresy. Celebrations of it almost seem religious in nature. Think a combo of 4th of July and Easter. Like those political rallies that sometimes happen at evangelical megachurches. Second, its rigid adherence to Christian doctrine leads to extreme laws and often does so at the expense of others.
I could write an essay on why it's an abhorrent ideology, but one main point I always come back to is it assumes that the only real Americans are Christians and any non-Christians should be treated as second class.
As for Trump, it's clear he's not a Christian, but he is fully on board with enforcing hard right Christian nationalism on the country, because it has far and away won him the evangelical vote. He can pretend to not be on board with Project 2025 but everyone knows if a GOP congress passes any of those agenda items he'll sign it without thinking twice.I will say there are other figures who I see as much more threatening (in this regard) than Trump. But Trump has and will elevate them, no doubt. Look at those megachurch pastors who are friends with Trump (like Robert Jeffress) and undoubtedly influence his policy decisions. I actually think it's a much greater threat at the state level.Quote:
I also have zero clue how you can think Trump is enforcing hard right Christian nationalism, this sounds like a talking point from the hysterical media. What about him is hard right? He's pro-choice, He's fine with gay marriage, and unfortunately, while I am a HUGE fan of Project 2025, Trump isn't. He doesn't even pay lip service to being a conservative. JD Vance is 50 times the conservative he is.
There are a number of things. Gutting reproductive rights to truly extreme levels, banning or nearly banning IVF (the Alabama justice cited the Bible in the opinion), going backwards on LGBT rights, changing school curricula to reflect a Christian nationalist bias while downplaying the history people don't want to hear about, using tax dollars to elevate religious schools, gutting voting rights and crafting laws to not explicitly favor one group but clearly have the effect of favoring that group (and often it's white Christians who benefit from it).
I also think there are ancillary effects. For example, people saying "we shouldn't try to protect the environment, because God is looking out for us/the rapture will happen soon" and using that logic to completely gut environmental protections.
I'm not anti-Christian. But I am anti Christianity infusing itself into our laws and government.
Jabin said:It looks like you have a strong set of moral values. What basis do you have for imposing them on those who disagree with you?Quote:
There are a number of things. Gutting reproductive rights to truly extreme levels, banning or nearly banning IVF (the Alabama justice cited the Bible in the opinion), going backwards on LGBT rights, changing school curricula to reflect a Christian nationalist bias while downplaying the history people don't want to hear about, using tax dollars to elevate religious schools, gutting voting rights and crafting laws to not explicitly favor one group but clearly have the effect of favoring that group (and often it's white Christians who benefit from it).
ETA: And by the way, those positions are not "Christian Nationalism", but rather historical conservative positions. Although you have not described the positions accurately or fairly.
Bob Lee said:barbacoa taco said:But that's not how the country is meant to be run. You can be a Christian first and American second in your personal capacity but you shouldn't try to enforce that on everyone else. And that's what Christian nationalism is: a rigid enforcement of a Christian doctrine and worldview.Quo Vadis? said:Maybe I understand Christian Nationalism different, but my idea of Christian Nationalism isn't to intertwine faith and patriotism, it's to run the nation according to Christian principles; with the understanding that we are Christians first and Americans second.barbacoa taco said:
One thing to understand about Christian Nationalism is that it is by its nature a political movement, not a religious one. It seeks to inject faith (usually an extreme version of it) into governance and to completely undermine the First Amendment and religious freedom.
I believe Christian Nationalism is a dangerous ideology for a few reasons. First, it intertwines faith and patriotism to a point where the United States is perceived as a godlike figure. Any criticism of it is seen as heresy. Celebrations of it almost seem religious in nature. Think a combo of 4th of July and Easter. Like those political rallies that sometimes happen at evangelical megachurches. Second, its rigid adherence to Christian doctrine leads to extreme laws and often does so at the expense of others.
I could write an essay on why it's an abhorrent ideology, but one main point I always come back to is it assumes that the only real Americans are Christians and any non-Christians should be treated as second class.
As for Trump, it's clear he's not a Christian, but he is fully on board with enforcing hard right Christian nationalism on the country, because it has far and away won him the evangelical vote. He can pretend to not be on board with Project 2025 but everyone knows if a GOP congress passes any of those agenda items he'll sign it without thinking twice.I will say there are other figures who I see as much more threatening (in this regard) than Trump. But Trump has and will elevate them, no doubt. Look at those megachurch pastors who are friends with Trump (like Robert Jeffress) and undoubtedly influence his policy decisions. I actually think it's a much greater threat at the state level.Quote:
I also have zero clue how you can think Trump is enforcing hard right Christian nationalism, this sounds like a talking point from the hysterical media. What about him is hard right? He's pro-choice, He's fine with gay marriage, and unfortunately, while I am a HUGE fan of Project 2025, Trump isn't. He doesn't even pay lip service to being a conservative. JD Vance is 50 times the conservative he is.
There are a number of things. Gutting reproductive rights to truly extreme levels, banning or nearly banning IVF (the Alabama justice cited the Bible in the opinion), going backwards on LGBT rights, changing school curricula to reflect a Christian nationalist bias while downplaying the history people don't want to hear about, using tax dollars to elevate religious schools, gutting voting rights and crafting laws to not explicitly favor one group but clearly have the effect of favoring that group (and often it's white Christians who benefit from it).
I also think there are ancillary effects. For example, people saying "we shouldn't try to protect the environment, because God is looking out for us/the rapture will happen soon" and using that logic to completely gut environmental protections.
I'm not anti-Christian. But I am anti Christianity infusing itself into our laws and government.
If a politician takes a stance because his Christian worldview informs his politics, so he thinks it's the right thing to do, how else should politicians govern? It seems like what you would say is, we shouldn't pass broad public policy that aligns well with Christian social mores, precisely BECAUSE they align well with or stem from Christianity.
Forget about Christianity for a second. If gay marriage is bad. For society and the people who engage in it, why should it be permitted?
And what I'm saying is it's more than that. Those are just political positions, albeit extreme conservative ones. Look at the name. Christian NATIONALISM. That is, an extreme form of patriotism that elevates the state (or nation) at the expense of others. In this case, at the expense of non Christians.Jabin said:It looks like you have a strong set of moral values. What basis do you have for imposing them on those who disagree with you?Quote:
There are a number of things. Gutting reproductive rights to truly extreme levels, banning or nearly banning IVF (the Alabama justice cited the Bible in the opinion), going backwards on LGBT rights, changing school curricula to reflect a Christian nationalist bias while downplaying the history people don't want to hear about, using tax dollars to elevate religious schools, gutting voting rights and crafting laws to not explicitly favor one group but clearly have the effect of favoring that group (and often it's white Christians who benefit from it).
ETA: And by the way, those positions are not "Christian Nationalism", but rather historical conservative positions. Although you have not described the positions accurately or fairly.
I'd say Trump is the only choice. Best has nothing to do with our candidates these days. Trump certainly also does not convey 'Christian Nation' himself. I do believe getting back to the core values that are based in in Judeo Christian virtues is not a bad thing and the irony that its trying to led by some one who personally eschews morality is said. I do also believe in following our Constitution and not having the government force any religion on anyone.Frok said:
I'm a Christian and I'm voting for Trump. I'm not sure what a Christian Nationalist is. In my experience it's usually used as a derogatory term to discredit people who vote for candidates like Trump.
America is a post-Christian nation, I have no desire for the government to try to be Christian. I want a government that operates per the constitution.
Trump is not that conservative in that sense but he's the best choice we have right now.
I agree with this. My issue is that we are hoping to make conservative gains by a GOP win, but I'm not sure people are seeing what is happening in tandem with that. I cannot be convinced that Trump and his family are doing any of this out of Christian beliefs or altruism. So while I hope we get what we are hoping for, we are also lowering the bar of the types of candidates we will settle for as long as we HOPE their administration will make the conservative gains we desire. The mantra of the GOP of late the last few years seems to have become "we're bad but not nearly as bad as the liberal left". We will lie, fabricate, demean, and pretend its out of necessity or supported by our Christian beliefs. And doing this because its the 'only way to beat the left' is anti-thetical to our faith. I know there are some really good faithful Christians in politics (Senator Lankford comes to mind), but these days the minute they try to do the right thing, rooted in their faith, they are eviscerated if it is in opposition to Trumps whims. Which is what happened to Lankford.nortex97 said:
Exactly. I see no popular movement to suppress non-Christian's at all, least of all among Republican christian office-seekers. The obvious answer would be that the OP is referencing Trump, whose family of course includes several prominent non-Christians (jews), and whose former staff included the first openly gay cabinet official (not exactly appealing to the stereotype of 'Christian nationalists').
This is pretty absurd, imho. If one is a christian, one should first and foremost, in my opinion, be opposed to the evil that is infanticide. Second, ending silly endless wars and the death and devastation they bring to people across the globe would be a good thing. That means rooting for a GOP loss this cycle would beā¦counter productive.
Bob Lee said:
If a politician takes a stance because his Christian worldview informs his politics, so he thinks it's the right thing to do, how else should politicians govern? It seems like what you would say is, we shouldn't pass broad public policy that aligns well with Christian social mores, precisely BECAUSE they align well with or stem from Christianity.
Forget about Christianity for a second. If gay marriage is bad. For society and the people who engage in it, why should it be permitted?
kurt vonnegut said:Bob Lee said:
If a politician takes a stance because his Christian worldview informs his politics, so he thinks it's the right thing to do, how else should politicians govern? It seems like what you would say is, we shouldn't pass broad public policy that aligns well with Christian social mores, precisely BECAUSE they align well with or stem from Christianity.
Forget about Christianity for a second. If gay marriage is bad. For society and the people who engage in it, why should it be permitted?
I think that for many Christians, there is a distinction between allowing religion to inform their views and allowing religion to directly affect policy.
To build off your example - There are many Christians that believe that gay marriage is bad, but who also believe that it should be legal. My take is that these Christians do not feel it is government's responsibility to legislate who we can and cannot marry.
To me, the question comes down to how we decide to view religious freedom. If one's idea of religious freedom is freedom to only practice one designated religion. . . . well, that isn't really religious freedom.
I don't think anyone sees an issue with passing broad public policy that happens to align with Christianity. I think the issue only arises when that policy is seen as favoring Christianity or reducing the freedoms of non-Christians.
Quote:
Marriage will either be between a man and a woman for the procreation and education of children, which is what Christians believe, or it won't.
Sapper Redux said:Quote:
Marriage will either be between a man and a woman for the procreation and education of children, which is what Christians believe, or it won't.
Except that it is for the majority of people and is not for a minority. Why is that some problem that requires the government to step into people's private lives to force them to conform to your beliefs? If an individual is sacrosanct with rights, then the government should protect their rights rather than trying to force them into the box preferred by your religious ideals.
Bob Lee said:
But on topics where the government can't be silent. Marriage will either be between a man and a woman for the procreation and education of children, which is what Christians believe, or it won't. How can a Christian politician advocate for anything but the Christian understanding of what marriage? Aka, marriage.
kurt vonnegut said:Bob Lee said:
But on topics where the government can't be silent. Marriage will either be between a man and a woman for the procreation and education of children, which is what Christians believe, or it won't. How can a Christian politician advocate for anything but the Christian understanding of what marriage? Aka, marriage.
Is being a Christian incompatible with allowing others the freedom to reject Christianity?
Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Quote:
Marriage will either be between a man and a woman for the procreation and education of children, which is what Christians believe, or it won't.
Except that it is for the majority of people and is not for a minority. Why is that some problem that requires the government to step into people's private lives to force them to conform to your beliefs? If an individual is sacrosanct with rights, then the government should protect their rights rather than trying to force them into the box preferred by your religious ideals.
I agree rights should be protected. I just don't fashion them for myself out of thin air.
Bob Lee said:kurt vonnegut said:Bob Lee said:
But on topics where the government can't be silent. Marriage will either be between a man and a woman for the procreation and education of children, which is what Christians believe, or it won't. How can a Christian politician advocate for anything but the Christian understanding of what marriage? Aka, marriage.
Is being a Christian incompatible with allowing others the freedom to reject Christianity?
No. Is the government not pretending gay couplings are in the same kind of relationship as those capable of begetting children incompatible with freedom?
Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:kurt vonnegut said:Bob Lee said:
But on topics where the government can't be silent. Marriage will either be between a man and a woman for the procreation and education of children, which is what Christians believe, or it won't. How can a Christian politician advocate for anything but the Christian understanding of what marriage? Aka, marriage.
Is being a Christian incompatible with allowing others the freedom to reject Christianity?
No. Is the government not pretending gay couplings are in the same kind of relationship as those capable of begetting children incompatible with freedom?
Violates equal rights and equal protection.
Bob Lee said:
No. Is the government not pretending gay couplings are in the same kind of relationship as those capable of begetting children incompatible with freedom?
Bob Lee said:
This is true in the same way men's inability to gestate children is violative of equal rights.
kurt vonnegut said:Bob Lee said:
This is true in the same way men's inability to gestate children is violative of equal rights.
The inability of biological men to have children is based on a physical limitation. The ability of two people of the same sex to have a relationship (call it whatever term you want) is not limited similarly. I don't think your comparison works well.
kurt vonnegut said:Bob Lee said:
No. Is the government not pretending gay couplings are in the same kind of relationship as those capable of begetting children incompatible with freedom?
Is your concern that you think it is illegal for you to believe gay relationships are different? Or is it your concern that the government does not explicitly endorse one arrangement over another. Or something else?
Bob Lee said:
I'm married. And I have relationships with people that could not be categorized as marriages. The inability of 2 men to consummate a marriage (as opposed to sticking an extremity into his buddy's orifice), or have children under any circumstances, is a physical limitation that precludes marriage.
Bob Lee said:
I think it's not harmless to pretend different categories of things are exactly the same and exactly equal in value if it's not true.
kurt vonnegut said:Bob Lee said:
I'm married. And I have relationships with people that could not be categorized as marriages. The inability of 2 men to consummate a marriage (as opposed to sticking an extremity into his buddy's orifice), or have children under any circumstances, is a physical limitation that precludes marriage.
Are you okay with full legality and all equal legal standings of same sex relationships - just provided that they don't use the term 'marriage'?
kurt vonnegut said:Bob Lee said:
I think it's not harmless to pretend different categories of things are exactly the same and exactly equal in value if it's not true.
For a personal worldview, fine. But, what is government to do? What are the standards by which government is to evaluate and assign value?
I would suspect that you do not think your faith and my secularism are the same or of the same value. I have no issue with your holding this as a personal belief. But, should this translate into lesser rights or freedoms? Is my freedom of religion lesser than yours because my 'religion' is of lesser value in your opinion?
Sapper Redux said:Quote:
Marriage will either be between a man and a woman for the procreation and education of children, which is what Christians believe, or it won't.
Except that it is for the majority of people and is not for a minority. Why is that some problem that requires the government to step into people's private lives to force them to conform to your beliefs? If an individual is sacrosanct with rights, then the government should protect their rights rather than trying to force them into the box preferred by your religious ideals.