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MSNBC: Here's how atheists can help fight Christian nationalists, who have American under siege

We’re seeing this a lot lately in the media: the panic over white supremacists has given way to a larger threat, which is Christian nationalists (who are white supremacists but worse). We see a lot of tweets about “Christofascists” taking over the country and denying women their right to choose. Holier-than-thou pundits like David French are sending up warnings. According to MSNBC, America is under siege from Christian nationalists, but a new kind of atheism can help fight back.

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MSNBC opinion columnist Zeeshan Aleem writes:

There are two pressing crises tied to the state of religion in America today. A new style of atheism can help answer both of them.

The first crisis is rooted in an excess of religion. Christian theocracy is not far-off specter but an emerging reality in America. Fueled by a radically reactionary Supreme Court that is two-thirds Catholic, Thomas Jefferson’s already-dilapidated and graffitied “wall of separation” between church and state is crumbling. The overturning of Roe v. Wade means the lives of women across the country are being held hostage by a conservative Christian conception of life. Kennedy v. Bremerton permits school officials to publicly pray and make students feel pressured to join in. Carson v. Makin allows taxpayer dollars to be used to fund religious education. And at the state level, Republican-led legislatures have invoked Christianity as they pursue a systematic assault on transgender rights, while “abortion abolitionists” convinced some Louisiana lawmakers that people who get abortions should be charged with homicide.

My belief is that an energetic, organized atheist movement — which I propose calling “communitarian atheism” — would provide an effective way to guard against the twin crises of intensifying religious extremism on one end, and the atomizing social consequences of a plunge in conventional religiosity on the other.

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“An organized atheist community can help agitate for and finance a secularist equivalent of the Federalist Society — the right-wing legal movement that helped populate the federal courts with hard right jurists and helped get us into this mess — to act as a bulwark against theocracy,” Aleem adds.

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Whenever someone in the comments asks what a Christian nationalist is, they post an old video of the KKK … who were a bunch of Democrats.

Just like the focus-grouped “Ultra-MAGA” was a flop, so will be Christian nationalism. They’ll move on to another bogeyman soon.


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