Growing Calls to Re-Christianize

“It is clear who is in charge of the Republican Party….the Nationalists are in charge and they may be in charge for a generation or more. Given this fact, what would Jews & Zionist Christians be doing right now, if they were thinking politically, ….they would looking for ways ( ) can be the basis for common grounds with nationalist Republicans.” ~ Yoram Hazony , founder of NatCon

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There were 2 threads on the old board covering this topic. Anyway, the calls are happening against the backdrop of mass immigration, imperial decline, deteriorating economic situation, etc. This has people worried, like antichrist obsessed Peter Thiel, about a “Caesar-Papist fusion”. Or, put simply, a union of the throne & the altar.

Source: The Guardian (Peter Thiel’s Antichrist Lectures)

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After the 2024 election

“We need to re-christianize this country” ~ Steve Bannon at TPUSA AmFest

mentioned in the last 3mins

12mins

We are at a crossroads…either take the theocracy in Israel or create “our” own as a means of restoring divine favor

Source: JACOBIN

https://x.com/amconmag/status/2041289738347229407

https://x.com/clashreport/status/2046845291484049780

May 17th…rededicating the country to God. “One Nation under God”

https://x.com/PeteHegseth/status/2019471405587324996

Last year

https://x.com/MaxBlumenthal/status/2047039700066562459

‘Christians want their country back’: Reform UK council deputy leader celebrates election wins

Debate sparked as Reform-led council proposes Lord’s Prayer recital before meetings

Saying the prayer was one of a number of constitutional changes proposed by councillors, including the singing of the national anthem at the end of full council meetings, as reported by Kent Live.

“We are a Christian nation”, council chairman Richard Palmer told the chamber. Responding to opposition criticism, he said while “not all may practice that faith, we could always come together with all faiths.”

Sidenote:

Surely, Count Kalergi and fellow travelers must have anticipated this outcome as they made plans, many decades ago, to alter Europe’s demographics. Naturally, it raises questions about the players screaming “we want our Christian country back”…someone at the table must have proposed “controlling the opposition”.

“I believe it’s a moment when the Body of Christ, the church, comes together and will boldly declare that America still needs God,” said Pastor and televangelist Jentezen Franklin in a social media post. “This is an opportunity for believers to stand together as one nation under God. … I’m honored that they’ve asked me to speak and share the Gospel.”

This interpretation resonates deeply with many Americans who feel the country has drifted culturally and morally. In an era marked by political polarization, declining trust in institutions and rapid social change, appeals to faith and unity can feel stabilizing. The phrase “One Nation Under God” itself carries emotional power, especially among voters who believe religion has been unfairly pushed out of public life.

Critics argue that “Rededicate 250” goes beyond patriotic religiosity into something more exclusionary, even theocratic. The concern is not that lawmakers are praying publicly, but that the event blurs the line between church and state while advancing a selective narrative of American history. Although one Orthodox Jewish rabbi is scheduled to participate, the overwhelming emphasis is Christian, evangelical and politically conservative. The symbolism suggests that to be fully American is to share a narrow religious worldview.

https://x.com/democracynow/status/2056382771338056121