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OPINION

The Midterm Boogeyman of 'Christian Nationalism'

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

The so-called Public Broadcasting Service is anything but a "service" to Republicans. Tune in any night of the week. As a whole, Republicans are extremists; Republicans are insurrectionists; and Republicans are terrible, racist, sexist Christians.

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On Oct. 11, the "PBS NewsHour" warned all about the threat of right-wing "Christian nationalism" and what it means for the midterm elections. Anchor William Brangham reported, "A growing movement led by right-wing politicians is increasingly challenging a centuries-old value of America's political system: the separation of church and state."

PBS ran clips of Republicans Kari Lake, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert, Doug Mastriano, Dan Cox, and Ron DeSantis all speaking about drawing on their religion in public life or how, as Boebert said, "The church is supposed to direct the government. The government is not supposed to direct the church."

Media liberals hate the idea that Republicans lean on religion for their political ideas. They are so aggressively for separating church and state that they almost think religious conservatives shouldn't be allowed to vote, since they're a threat to democracy -- or at least to the Democrats.

The "NewsHour" found an agreeable expert for their secular feminist worldview. It was a professor of gender studies named Kristin Kobes Du Mez, author of the book "Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation."

Christians don't corrupt a faith when the Rev. Raphael Warnock runs for office as a "pro-choice pastor," or when politicians embrace a "religious left" that pushes amputations of breasts or penises as "gender-affirming care."

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CONSERVATIVES

According to Du Mez's book, this macho John Wayne heresy means that conservative white evangelicals allegedly link the gospel to "patriarchal authority, gender difference, and Christian nationalism, and all of these are intertwined with white racial identity."

On PBS, Du Mez offered the bizarre theory that conservative Christians shouldn't feel embattled in today's secular and "woke" culture, that they are somehow dominant in America. "Even though they are in the majority and even though they have a lot of cultural and political power, they will continue to insist that they are the ones who are embattled," she said. "Therefore, what choice do they have but to be ruthless and seize power?"

PBS anchor Laura Barron-Lopez naturally turned to Jan. 6 to associate all conservative Christians with rioting: "We saw a lot of Christian imagery in the crowd on Jan. 6, when rioters stormed the Capitol, and faith being used to justify violence there."

Du Mez briefly expressed that not all Christians supported violence at the Capitol. But then she gave PBS what it wanted. Yes, "more extreme versions of Christian nationalism, we do see a correlation between the idea that America has a special destiny, and it's a destiny that's under threat, and it must be protected. We see connections between that and a willingness to use violence."

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Barron-Lopez cited a University of Maryland poll that 61% of Republicans would favor an official declaration that the U.S. is a Christian nation, "but, also, a majority of Republicans understand that doing so would be unconstitutional." One can cite Pew polls that 63% of Americans identify as Christians -- a Christian nation -- without canceling the religious freedoms in the First Amendment. A significant chunk of those self-identified Christians is not conservative at all.

But PBS and Du Mez are preaching to the liberal choir that the Christian right is a menace that is eroding democracy and pushing "voter suppression" somehow. There's no conservative counterpoint to this midterm messaging on taxpayer-funded TV. That's somehow not eroding democracy.


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