The bitter tears of the American Christian supermajority

Started by josephpalazzo, March 30, 2014, 10:38:08 AM

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josephpalazzo

Quote
The most persecuted minority in the United States is not Muslims, African-Americans or immigrants. It’s our Christian supermajority that’s truly oppressed.

Verily, consider three anecdotes from the past few weeks.

On March 2, three Baptist ministers in Akron, Ohio, arranged for the local police to mock-arrest them in their churches and haul them away in handcuffs for the simple act of preaching their faith. A video was posted on YouTube to drum up buzz for an upcoming revival show. A few atheist blogs object to uniformed police taking part in a church publicity stunt, but far more people who saw the YouTube video (24,082 views), in Ohio and elsewhere, took this media stunt as reality â€" confirmation of their wildest fears about a government clampdown on Christianity.

On Feb. 26, Arizona’s conservative Gov. Jan Brewer vetoed a bill that would have allowed businesses to refuse services to people who violate their sincerely held religious beliefs â€" for example, gays and lesbians. Fox News pundit Todd Starnes tweeted that Christians have been demoted to second-class citizenship in Arizona, an opinion widely shared on the right-wing Christian blogosphere, which sees Brewer’s veto as a harbinger of even greater persecution to come.

And the feature film “Persecuted,” a political thriller about a federal government plan to censor Christianity in the name of liberalism, is due out in May. Featuring former Sen. Fred Thompson and Fox News host Gretchen Carlson, the movie received a rapturous reception at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference on March 10 and is of a piece with other Christian films such as “God’s Not Dead,” about a freshman believer bullied into proving the existence of god by an atheist professor.


Far from reality


Needless to say (or maybe not) this news ticker of persecuted American Christians floats far and free from reality. More than 75 percent of the United States identifies as Christian; 57 percent believe in the devil, and nearly 8 in 10 Americans believe the Bible to be either the “inspired word” or literal word of God. Despite the constitutional separation of church and state, the government began under President George W. Bush to outsource social welfare programs to faith-based organizations (more than 98 percent, according to one 2006 study, of them Christian churches), and schools with religious ties (mostly Christian) in several states are now well fed by direct public subsidies. But then, American places of worship (again, most of them Christian) have long enjoyed a de facto public subsidy as tax-exempt 501(c)3 organizations funded by tax-deductible contributions. Last month President Barack Obama himself held forth at National Prayer Breakfast about the importance of Jesus in his life.

To be sure, there are Christians in the world who face persecution, from Copts in Egypt to Catholics in northern Nigeria. But in the U.S., the Christian faith and its institutions have never been more pampered by the state.


http://america.aljazeera.com/opinions/2014/3/christians-persecutioncomplex.html


Gawdzilla Sama

We 'new atheists' have a reputation for being militant, but make no mistake  we didn't start this war. If you want to place blame put it on the the religious zealots who have been poisoning the minds of the  young for a long long time."
PZ Myers

stromboli

Wow, business opportunity. Selling Holy Crying Towels outside of churches. Could be the next billionaire, imo.

Savior2006

It's not "needless to say" at this point. Christianity and victimhood go together. Everyone's being mean to them because they are so awesome and their religion is so true.

No when somebody is mean to an atheist or to a gay person, then it's "religious liberty."
It took science to do what people imagine God can do.
--ApostateLois

"The closer you are to God the further you are from the truth."
--St Giordano

Gawdzilla Sama

Quote from: Savior2006 on March 30, 2014, 01:32:22 PM
It's not "needless to say" at this point. Christianity and victimhood go together. Everyone's being mean to them because they are so awesome and their religion is so true.

No when somebody is mean to an atheist or to a gay person, then it's "religious liberty."
You are very offensive when you stop someone from beating you over the head with their bible.
We 'new atheists' have a reputation for being militant, but make no mistake  we didn't start this war. If you want to place blame put it on the the religious zealots who have been poisoning the minds of the  young for a long long time."
PZ Myers

AllPurposeAtheist

You remember the giraffe in Denmark they feed to lions? it was a C H R I S T I A N giraffe. :shocked:
All hail my new signature!

Admit it. You're secretly green with envy.

RobbyPants

Yeah, their revanchism is sickening.



They have it so rough.

Solitary

In psychiatry that is called transference. This is what they do, so think it is done to them. Solitary
There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action.

charde

Quote from: Solitary on April 01, 2014, 10:42:44 PM
In psychiatry that is called transference. This is what they do, so think it is done to them. Solitary

^ That.

The thing with Obama is that, so what if he leads a prayer breakfast? That's even more offensive to the religious crowd. The right wing literally does see him as the devil incarnate and everything wrong with the United States.

He's a Democrat. he supports gay marriage. He pushed the ACA. Pretty much everything he does is just one more sign that the end of the world is coming. i still remember the stunned look on their faces when Romney didn't come close to winning after declaring victory before the election. The cognitive dissonance where they couldn't believe they no longer represented the majority of Americans -- followed quickly by the conclusion that the United States has gone to the devil and people are so steeped in sin they can't see which way is up, so they have to fight even harder.