In the unlikely event that you need a reminder that the Harris-Waltz presidential nomination is the most radical in U.S. history, this article is for you.
Harris recently hired a campaign manager who viciously attacked white Christians and claimed America was an imperial “cult” and a “bloodthirsty beast.” Did I mention that the new hire is not only Kamala’s “faith” campaign manager, but also a Presbyterian minister? Yes.
The so-called “progressive” pastor Jennifer Butler argues that “white racists” have “hijacked” the Christian faith – a “characteristic” that seems to fit perfectly with Harris and Walz’s ad nauseam attack on white (and black) conservatives. Butler’s task will therefore be to woo people of faith – Hm — on the Harris-Walz ticket. Oh, and Butler is running a program to “eradicate” alleged “white nationalism” from the Christian faith.
Here is Butler in 2020 from her book, “Who stole my Bible?“
Today we face fundamental threats to democracy. The rich are overwhelmingly white, and those who are systematically economically disadvantaged are people of color.
The many-headed beasts reveal the corruption of the imperial system around us. The imperial cult of the United States of America, whose stock market is booming while unemployment is soaring, has numbed many of us to our own reality.
I don’t mean to be nitpicky, but let’s assume for a moment that Butler’s assumption is that the wealthy are predominantly white and the economically disadvantaged are predominantly people of color. Why is this premise synonymous with “white supremacy”? Of course not – and there are certainly more than enough examples to the contrary.
As for the hyperbolic nonsense about the “many-headed beast”, perhaps Pastor Butler could have given us some specifics. And maybe she could have mentioned a direct link between a booming stock market and unemployment. Oh, wait—she couldn’t have.
Butler was far from finished spewing her “Christian” toxic waste.
[T]These disasters are an apocalypse… a revelation… of the greedy, bloodthirsty imperial beast beneath the fine linens.
I believe the pastor has missed her calling as an author of economical, melodramatic fiction.
Christians must “come out of their care,” she continued, and “witness the word of justice in the face of a brutal empire asserting its control. They must resist the temptation to join the imperialist… military status quo.”
And of course:
Individualism triumphs over charity and freedom over equality. Communities of color are particularly difficult hit.
Bla bla bla.
And then a direct attack on white Christians.
With a enormous percentage of white Christians marching to the beat of white nationalism, nothing could be more crucial than reclaiming this radical book called the Bible and making its vision of radical justice, equality, and liberation a reality.
Yes, I disagree, Pastor. More crucial is the growing number of Hamas-loving, Israel-hating radicals in this country. Even more crucial is showing us where in the Bible your vile bitterness is justified.
Butler claimed that white Christians had used their religious freedom as a “weapon,” writing, “Instead of using religious freedom as a shield, Christians use it as a sword.”
And again: What is it like? How does the behavior of white Christians compare to that of radical left-wing pro-Hamas and anti-Israel mobs (some of whom attack Jews in the streets and on college campuses)? Or to that of Black Lives Matter rioters after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis?
There was something really… weird about the DNC
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What does the Bible say, Reverend Butler?
You hypocrite, first remove the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly how to remove the speck out of your brother’s eye.
That would be the King James Bible, 7:5Rev. (I assume it’s not one of your favorite Bible quotes.)

