Cybernetic Railgun
3.5K posts



All this hate for evangelicals when, statistically, we are the only bloc consistently holding it down for biblical marriage, the pro-life cause, secure borders, and every other issue. We are by far the most conservative and united in every political, cultural, and moral area. This is not statistically contested. Without the strength and cohesion of this group, conservatives lose everything. Consequently, the country loses everything. Not an exaggeration. So ask yourself: why would someone want to divide, destroy, and demoralize this stalwart group? The answer is obvious if the person is progressive, but it becomes a bit murky when the people targeting this group are on the “right,” right? Something to ponder

Let’s be honest, the reason “evangelicals” are conservative is because they’re southern, not because they’re evangelical. Southern Catholics, as ironic as it may be, are probably more conservative







This is low IQ poasting.



I do think that as an individual spiritual matter the most expedient possible route would be for every Christian and especially my fellow Catholics to make their faith as private a thing as possible, a secret thing only revealed to someone one trusts completely and otherwise kept exclusively in one’s one heart. You either converted or remained Catholic based on some sort of individual decision making process and your progress in the faith to the degree you are pursuing it at all should be kept to the same dwelling place within yourself.

I don’t want Israel dictating our foreign policy either. I want no foreign powers, whether Catholic or Jewish, dictating American foreign policy. The only thing that should be dictating American foreign policy is what is best for Americans.

I am not trying to make my Catholic friends, who I love, angry with this statement. But this entire episode is starting to explain to me why so many Americans were concerned about a Catholic president for so long. I have no interest in Rome trying to dictate American policy. And if it continues to loudly make its opinions heard on our foreign policy, I believe they’re going to find a lot of American Protestants feeling a lot less ecumenical than we have been in the more recent past.










@GreeneMan6 Protestantism still needs to be crushed. It is the root of all our problems, and they won't be solved if we don't kill the root first.





