Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley’s recent First Things essay, “Our Christian Nation,” may warm the hearts of Christian nationalists and confound historians and theologians who worry about continuing threats to the separation of church and state.

  • @A_Random_Idiot
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    1810 months ago

    Yeah, the people that came to build european colonies on this land were christian extremists, but that doesnt make America a christian nation… Especially since the very foundation of the nation, a staunch separation of church and state with no law establishing one religion over another, was one of the very beginning principles.

    Its right there in the first amendment.

    America is a land where religion should have no more presence but between a person and their god, as far as Jefferson was concerned at least, and I’m sure many other founders shared that sentiment.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      -1210 months ago

      Yeah, the people that came to build european colonies on this land were christian extremists, but that doesnt make America a christian nation…

      Not anymore. But that’s a product of the current generation divesting (or simply losing touch with) the religious communities of their elders. Go back 40 years and you could very credibly claim that America was a Christian Nation in every way that mattered. Billy Graham was a fixture in every White House. Religious fundamentalism was driving foreign and domestic policy. Individual elected delegates were de facto required to be members of large religious communities in order to take and hold office or mobilize large bodies of political activism.

      Its right there in the first amendment.

      The First Amendment has no teeth. Religious minorities in the US are routinely persecuted, by the state, both explicitly and implicitly for their membership and their beliefs. This hit the ceiling in the wake of 9/11, when any kind of Muslim religious affiliation was borderline criminal. Police wiretapping and surveillance and extrajudicial punishment of Muslim individuals and groups (very obvious breaches of the 4th and 5th and 8th amendments) was routine. People were deported entirely on the grounds of their religious affiliation. States passed laws outright banning the practice of Sharia custom and culture. And that’s just in the last few decades.

      You can find all sorts of crazy prohibitions, sanctions, and outright persecution of religious minorities, from the hounding of Mormons across the American Midwest to the denial of legal asylum to Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi persecution.

      America is a land where religion should have no more presence but between a person and their god

      Okay, sure, that’s a beautiful ideal. But it isn’t the reality on the ground. Certainly not in a country where clery post the names and addresses of abortion providers, encourage their congregants to kill them, and then suffer no meaningful legal culpability.

      The separation between church and state, in practice, is a fig leaf that serves more to protect religious institution from taxation and regulation than to keep religious beliefs from affecting public policy or election results. If anything, it has created a kind of paradox in which religious leaders have more influence over politics than lay congregants.

      • @[email protected]
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        710 months ago

        The United States of America, the nation standing above all others as being most desperately in need of being put out of the collective misery of all the people of the Earth. I wish I had something positive to say about it however I have that odd compunction against lying.

        • @dumpsterlid
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          110 months ago

          Well fuck the United States, it is a shithole of a country (despite hoarding a good chunk of the worlds money and power).

          Turtle Island though? That place is dope.

        • @UnderpantsWeevil
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          -210 months ago

          If you’ve never felt the need to lie, you’ve lived a blessed existence.

          • @Cuttlefish1111
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            310 months ago

            It’s a common theme. Why lie? Why live in denial blaming demons for urges when if you face reality you live a much happier existence.

            • @UnderpantsWeevil
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              10 months ago

              Why lie?

              Cause your parents will throw you out of the house if they know your true feelings toward people of the same gender or what’s in that vape pen.

              Cause your teachers will fail you if you express your real political views or historical understanding on a term paper. Or your future prospective employer won’t hire you, if they know you’ve got union sympathies.

              Cause the ER won’t treat you if they know you’re pregnant, in a state that has made it politically dangerous to care for someone having a miscarriage.

              Cause your migrant status means always lying about your real nationality.

              Cause you live in a Christian Nation and your financial, social, and physical well-being are predicated on people believing you aren’t some kind of baby-eating Satanist for holding heretical beliefs.

              When the truth is an excuse to do violence against people, lies are a commonplace means of self-defense.

              • @Cuttlefish1111
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                410 months ago

                Your entire rebuttal is right wing fantasy. Not everyone has religious parents they live with, let alone have the need to lie to constantly. You may perceive this country as religious, but it is not, by law. Law and money run things in this country. Not sky Fairies.

                • @UnderpantsWeevil
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                  10 months ago

                  Your entire rebuttal is right wing fantasy

                  Not a right-wing fantasy. Its what happens when you live in a right-wing community.

                  Law and money run things in this country. Not sky Fairies.

                  When the law and the money believe in the sky fairies, they will enact the Sky Fairy Will in some truly brutal fashion.

                  • @Cuttlefish1111
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                    210 months ago

                    This would require the sky fairy to be real. Your culture is on its way to the landfill. All you have are two bit con artist snake oil salesmen like Kenneth Copeland, filling their pockets. Morons. Scum. The death rattle of a bygone era, relegated to the dustbin of history. You should stop fighting progress, they’ll be the ones your children will grow to love.

                  • @Cuttlefish1111
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                    10 months ago

                    Brutal violence , like good Christian folk. Cowards can’t even have a conversation without trying to threaten people.

                    Edit: typical Conservative, threatening people to intimidate them, then erasing it. Cowards

                • @dvoraqs
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                  10 months ago

                  I think you’ve lost the thread. They are explaining why you are privileged not to have to lie by giving examples of situations that would compel many people to lie.

                  Would you say that you’ve been in any of those situations?

                  • @Buddahriffic
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                    410 months ago

                    The whole lying bit itself was a “lost the thread” moment because it was in response to someone saying that they couldn’t say something nice about USA without lying. Which has nothing to do with lying to protect yourself or your position. Turning an offhand “I don’t like lying” into a lecture about privilege isn’t going to win any allies.

                  • @Cuttlefish1111
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                    110 months ago

                    Lost the thread to a theist on an atheist instance. Lol sure. Atheist are not as incredibly dumb as theists and have a bit more logical thought than that.