Christian Privilege Is Spreading Like a Virus

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Christian Privilege Is Spreading Like a Virus

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Christian supremacists like Franklin Graham feel empowered to force their beliefs on everyone, including the sick and dying.

By Alison Gill
April 17 2020 12:37 PM EDT

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At the end of March, President Trump attempted to reassure Americans who are feeling the stress of the coronavirus pandemic by inviting Mike Lindell, the CEO of MyPillow, to speak at his daily press briefing.
Calling America a “nation [that] had turned his back on God,” Mr. Lindell encouraged people to “use this time at home to get back in the Word, read our Bibles, and spend time with our families.”
Clearly, that is exactly what Americans needed — a good helping of religious guilt along with their pandemic.
Meanwhile, in New York City, a Christian organization called Samaritan's Purse, led by notoriously anti-LGBTQ Christian supremacist Franklin Graham, has set up a field hospital in Central Park to treat overflow patients in cooperation with Mt. Sinai Hospital from nearby hospitals. Even during this pandemic, this organization requires volunteers and health care workers to sign a statement of faith, proclaiming that marriage is defined as "exclusively the union of one genetic male and one genetic female" and that unbelievers are sentenced to "everlasting punishment in hell.” The group is well known for using its social services to proselytize. Last year, the organization received $39 million in government support. In an appearance on Jeannine Pirro’s Fox News program, Graham said that this pandemic happened because “man has turned his back on God.”
Graham claims that they “don’t discriminate against anybody we help,” but confirmed that they “lawfully hire staff that share our Christian beliefs.” On this last point, he is probably correct. The federal government and many states offer religious groups exemptions to civil rights laws to allow them to discriminate in employment. But why?
“Christian privilege” is the term atheists and nonreligious people frequently use to describe how Christian viewpoints, particularly conservative evangelical ones like those expressed by Lindell and Graham, are favored over nonreligious viewpoints in our law and culture. If you ask most Americans, they believe that the separation of church and state enshrined in the U.S. Constitution should apply to everyone and prevent the government from giving taxpayer dollars or special favoritism to churches. Sadly, this is less and less true.
Using their nearly unlimited wealth, access to powerful politicians like Donald Trump and Mike Pence, and increasing control over the court system, a tiny minority of Christian supremacists have done everything they can to establish special rights for religious organizations. These extremist groups are indeed achieving their goal: guaranteed government funding, free of oversight and exempt from nondiscrimination rules, to allow them to advance their religious mission as they see fit.
And there is evidence that this failure to live up to our constitutional precepts is having a significantly negative impact on those groups most reviled by Christian supremacists: LGBTQ people, religious minorities, and yes, atheists and nonreligious people.
Next month, American Atheists will launch a groundbreaking report based on the U.S. Secular Survey, a nationwide survey of nearly 34,000 atheists and nonreligious people conducted in 2019. This report confirms what we have long suspected; nonreligious people face rampant stigmatization and discrimination in the U.S., and dramatically more so in very religious communities.
Here is a bit of a preview: when it comes to health care, the tens of thousands of nonreligious people surveyed painted a bleak picture. One in ten (10.7 percent) faced discrimination in health care because of their nonreligious beliefs within the past three years, and in areas of specialized health such as mental health (17.7 percent) and substance abuse services (15.2 percent), the numbers were even higher.
The simple fact is, during this epidemic, we all need access to competent health care that we can trust. As an atheist, I don’t trust Graham’s organization to offer unbiased services, and I don’t know why any nonreligious or LGBTQ person would. Perhaps more importantly, like many people, I would never choose to receive services from such a discriminatory organization, and it violates my right to religious freedom for the government to force me to do so by providing essential social services through these organizations.
If our constitutional protections are to mean anything, they must apply equally to everyone, even during emergencies. It is incumbent on all of us to not allow Christian privilege to overcome the rule of law.
Alison Gill is the Vice President for Legal & Policy at the group American Atheists.

 
So praying for people live is forcing one's beliefs in people?

Ok fuckers, you have my permission to die.
 
This entire article in one image:
:neckbeard:
If atheists/non-religious people don’t believe in prayer, why are they offended by it? If they think it’s useless, it shouldn’t matter.
 
This is amazing. You know, sometimes there really is religious overreach. Meanwhile this bitch is complaining about a private citizen going on TV and suggesting they read the Bible. Or that people she doesn't like are helping sick people.
This is especially rich:
I don’t trust Graham’s organization to offer unbiased services, and I don’t know why any nonreligious or LGBTQ person would. Perhaps more importantly, like many people, I would never choose to receive services from such a discriminatory organization
HAHAHAHAHAHA! Yeah, I'm you'll refuse services if that's all that's available and you find yourself COOFing to death.

it violates my right to religious freedom for the government to force me to do so by providing essential social services through these organizations.
How much do you want to bet she supports the jackbooted Easter Sunday crackdowns?

God, I wish I had so few problems that this kind of shit was worth complaining about to me. Or maybe I don't. Yeah, I don't. I prefer the problems.
 
I wonder how many people complaining that they, as atheists "aren't welcome" in "especially religious communities" and fear "massive discrimination" are also terrified a black family will move into their neighborhood?

God, I wish I had so few problems that this kind of shit was worth complaining about to me. Or maybe I don't. Yeah, I don't. I prefer the problems.

Some people really WILL complain about their rescue, won't they? She seems blissfully unaware that probably 90% of the consumer goods she uses were, at one point, TOUCHED BY A CHRISTIAN! Oh noes!!! You know? Like how the fundies used to declare they'd get the gay if the person working the other side of the McD's counter was a homo? And wouldn't dare use ethnic restaurants because they couldn't be sure it wasn't cat meat? Even though the same foodservice truck drops off at both locations?
 
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Still thinking the Religious Right has any iota of cultural presence or influence in the year of our Lord 2020

The 2000s called, they want their safe, bottom of the barrel easy target back
 
This entire article in one image:
:neckbeard:
If atheists/non-religious people don’t believe in prayer, why are they offended by it? If they think it’s useless, it shouldn’t matter.
Christ Derangement Syndrome is real, and they tend to get weirdly irrationally angry any time anything Christianity gets brought up. It's like a perfect way to troll those idiots

They also turn a blind eye to Islam for whatever reason, and the most you ever get out of them when confronted is "I hate all religions" even though Islam never gets the same treatment otherwise 🤔
 
One in ten (10.7 percent) faced discrimination in health care because of their nonreligious beliefs within the past three years, and in areas of specialized health such as mental health (17.7 percent) and substance abuse services (15.2 percent), the numbers were even higher
How does this even come up? If you need services, go get them. Maybe take off your fedora and pentagram medallion if it's such a big deal.
As an atheist, I don’t trust Graham’s organization to offer unbiased services, and I don’t know why any nonreligious or LGBTQ person would.

Ah, I see now; they just assume they're biased (wonderful projection there) so they don't go and cry discrimination afterwards. That's a neat trick.
 
Still thinking the Religious Right has any presence or influence in the year of our Lord 2020

The 2000s called, they want their safe, bottom of the barrel easy target back

*chuckles*
You're freaked the fuck out aren't you?
 
Remember, brothers, youre allowed to pray for bad things to happen to people: “imprecatory prayer,” as in Psalms.

“Dear Heavenly Father, please smite my enemies with plague. Kill the New Yorker with COVID. Slaughter the San franciscoan with AIDS. Massacre the unbelievers. Amen.”
 
Remember, brothers, youre allowed to pray for bad things to happen to people: “imprecatory prayer,” as in Psalms.

“Dear Heavenly Father, please smite my enemies with plague. Kill the New Yorker with COVID. Slaughter the San franciscoan with AIDS. Massacre the unbelievers. Amen.”

That's actually true.
 
it violates my right to religious freedom for the government to force me to do so by providing essential social services through these organizations.

That's... not what the first amendment means.
 
You know I used to think the Gods Not Dead Movieswere blatant and poorly made propaganda that did more to hurt Christianity than help it... Given how clingy atheists have become though those movies might have had a point.
 
They also turn a blind eye to Islam for whatever reason, and the most you ever get out of them when confronted is "I hate all religions" even though Islam never gets the same treatment otherwise 🤔
Here’s what I believe their thought process is:
  • Muslims are POC, therefore criticizing them is racist
  • Islam doesn’t like Christianity either, so they are helpful to us
  • (If they’re deluded enough to think this) Islam is a tolerant and peaceful religion
It’s mainly the first two points that I see used whenever Islam is brought up. Although, I’ve heard a feminist or two claim the third point. If Muslims were united with Christians, they’d probably be getting much more criticism in the West than they do currently.
 
You know what the real Christian privilege is? Living in a culture that recognizes and advances human rights and personal freedom, the general welfare, equitable justice, every branch of science, every flavor of the fine arts, and essentially everything good and noble in modern civilization. This is what the philosophy of Christendom hath wrought.

Wether you believe or not, the believers of the last two millennia have shaped our society into the pinnacle of human advancement. You could call it privilege if you like.

They also turn a blind eye to Islam for whatever reason, and the most you ever get out of them when confronted is "I hate all religions" even though Islam never gets the same treatment otherwise 🤔

It's the blatant double standard that really gets me, coupled with the fact that so many of the people that I know who do this are gay degenerates. Why would you take Islam's side, bro? They will throw you off a fucking roof the second they hear the Grindr notification sound!
 
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