Summary:Christian doctrine says both atheism and “false gods” are grave sins, yet atheists get far more hostility than billions of so‑called false believers. This is not theological consistency; it is institutional risk management. Religious power structures fear people who leave the system entirely more than people who worship the “wrong” god. The paradox: fewer “sins,” […]
Tag: christian nationalism
No, America Was Not Founded as a Christian Nation
SummaryChristian nationalists love to claim the United States was founded as a Christian nation. The text that actually creates the government says otherwise. The godless Constitution and the First Amendment’s ban on religious establishment are not oversights—they are the clearest evidence that the founders chose a secular republic over a Christian one. The myth: “Christian […]
Your Bible Doesn’t Get to Control My Pregnancy
In the United States, abortion law is not just about medicine or “life.” It’s about whether the Christian Right gets to crawl up inside everyone else’s body and stay there by force. The politicians pushing bans are not offering careful bioethics; they are offering obedience to a particular reading of a particular scripture, dressed up […]
Why Christian Extremism Is a Greater Threat to America Than Muslim Extremism
If you judged by headlines and campaign speeches, you’d think “radical Islam” was the one great religious threat to America’s safety and freedom. But when you look at who actually holds power, writes laws, captures courts, and talks openly about ruling “by God’s law,” the picture is very different. The most serious religious threat to […]
Defending Secular America: Why Nonbelievers Need to Fight Back Now
Summary Christian nationalism is not a debate about private belief. It is an organized political project to rewrite laws, capture school boards, and redefine “religious freedom” so one version of Christianity gets special rights. Nonbelievers—and anyone who cares about secular democracy—are on the back foot, often watching in silence while hard‑won protections are dismantled. This […]
Don’t Say It Can’t Happen Here In America…
Summary This isn’t a warning — it’s a fire alarm. If the Christian right seizes unchecked political power and enforces a literalist, fundamentalist interpretation of the Bible, America could become a mirror of Taliban‑run Afghanistan — not in theology, but in tyranny. From legal wife‑beating to banning women from public life, from criminalizing LGBTQ+ identities […]
The Opportunity Cost of Christianity in Contemporary America
Summary When Christianity dominates American public life, it doesn’t just shape values—it displaces alternatives. Time, money, and political will that could build a more equal, evidence‑based secular democracy are instead spent defending one religion’s priorities in schools, health care, and social policy. The question is not whether Christianity should be legal or free to flourish; […]
“Abortion Is Murder”? Then Why Don’t All Religions Agree — Or Even Believe the Same God?
Summary Abortion bans in America are not grounded in neutral facts. They are rooted in one contested religious interpretation of when “life” and “murder” begin, even though other Christians and other religions disagree. Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and secular ethics all reach different conclusions about abortion, personhood, and sin. In a pluralistic society, no single […]
Christianity in America: The Ultimate Moral Relativism
Summary American Christianity presents itself as a source of absolute moral truth, but in practice it functions as moral relativism wrapped in scripture and political power. Competing denominations claim conflicting “biblical” positions on abortion, LGBTQ+ rights, war, and justice, all insisting that God is on their side. When “God said so” is treated as enough […]
Why Faith Is a Poor Standard for Public Policy
Summary In a pluralistic country, people hold many different faiths—and many have none at all. Each religion asks followers to trust claims that cannot be tested the way scientific or historical claims can. That may be acceptable for private belief, but it becomes a problem when faith is used as the standard for laws that […]