Realitybites said:
Harrison Bergeron said:
Another grift.
Lisa Jacob says she has felt the impact of Christian nationalism since she was a young girl. When she was growing up in the D-FW area, neighbors would cross the street to avoid her family and strangers would say to "go back to where you came from."
"Shortly after 9/11, my family and I experienced a lot of harassment," said Jacob, whose parents immigrated to the U.S. from India. Her family is Christian, she said, but still felt the impact of Islamophobia.
Now, the 35-year-old former pastor is combatting Christian nationalism as the first North Texas field organizer and the first field organizer in the country for Christians Against Christian Nationalism, a group that fights a religious ideology seen by many as a growing threat in America.
Jacob, who began the role in November, describes Christian nationalism as "a convergence of religious and national identities in such a way that to be Christian is to engage politically in a very narrow way, and to be American is to uphold Christian values and Christian identity." That ideology results in anyone who either isn't or doesn't appear to be Christian being treated as "less-than" and un-American, she said.
One of my major concerns about the future of American society is that having abandoned the faith, that it will degenerate into the sort of ethnic tribalism that helped bring down Byzantium. It already seems to be heading down that road.
we have been abandoning faith for a long time. God has been replaced by sports, money, govt, fame, sex, and other individualistic wants
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