Which American political party is this, and is it what you want for America?

Here are some definitions. Which American political party do they describe?Rick Steves - When Fascism Feels Normal…It's Too Late As... | Facebook

1. Fascism is a political ideology characterized by authoritarian ultranationalism, centralized control, suppression of opposition, and often a dictatorial leader.

It emphasizes bigotry, extreme militaristic nationalism, contempt for electoral democracy and political/cultural liberalism.

2. White supremacy is an ideology based on the belief that white people are superior to those of all other races and should, therefore, dominate society.The K.K.K. in Vermont, 1924 — Vermont Historical Society

This belief system underpins various forms of racial discrimination and segregation.

President Donald Trump referred to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador as “shithole” nations during a meeting Thursday and asked why the U.S. can’t have more immigrants from Norway.

3. Christian nationalism is a cultural framework that idealizes and advocates a fusion of Christianity with American civic life.

It is an ideology that emphasizes the idea that the United States was founded as a Christian nation and should continue to uphold Christian values in its laws and society.

Christian nationalists may believe that being a Christian is an important part of being a true American and that the government should recognize the U.S. as a Christian nation.

The movement can include various subgroups and ideas, such as the New Apostolic Reformation, which seeks a transformation of the U.S. into a Christian nation through what they see as a spiritual battle.Opinion | Whose Version of Christian Nationalism Will Win in 2024? - The New York Times

The term “white Christian nationalism” is sometimes used to describe a worldview that combines elements of white supremacy with Christian identity, often with a focus on political power and cultural dominance. See: In their own words: How Americans describe ‘Christian nationalism’
Google Trends data shows a significant rise in searches for the term following the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.  Searches for the term peaked in July 2022 after Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., declared in an interview that “We need to be the party of nationalism, and I’m a Christian, and I say it proudly, we should be Christian nationalists.” The survey asked 2,540 respondents who have heard at least “a little” about Christian nationalism: “In your own words, what does the phrase ‘Christian nationalism’ mean to you?”
Many describe “Christian nationalism” in terms of Christian dominance in society, while others associate the concept with racism, authoritarianism, bigotry and exclusion. A smaller portion of Americans describe it as the positive influence of faith and morals in society.
In a related news story:
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry is defending the state’s mandate to display the Ten Commandments inGovernor Jeff Landry signs education bills | Watch classrooms, explaining that the United States was founded upon “Judeo-Christian” principles.
There is nothing more religious than the 10 Commandments, and as is the case with all things religious, there are disagreements, interpretations, and claims of righteousness. Which 10 Commandments will Gov. Landry post, and what about religions that don’t believe in the 10 Commandments? There are multiple versions of the Ten Commandments, some of which are in fierce contention. Among the most notable is the “graven image” commandment. For centuries, arguments have raged about whether worshipping images of Jesus, Mary, and various saints violates this commandment.
Not all religions subscribe to the 10 Commandments as they are presented in the Bible. For instance, Islam does not accept the Bible’s absolute authority, including the Ten Commandments, because it believes that the text has been corrupted over time. Hinduism has “the Yamas,” which serve a similar purpose to the Ten Commandments but are different in content and scope. Are they, who follow these religions. less American? Then, there is the Talmud, which lists 613 commandments. Which should be shown as the ten? The U.S. Constitution addresses religion in the very First Amendment, which contains two clauses related to religion:

The Establishment Clause: This clause prohibits the federal government from creating an official church or favoring one religion over another.

It states, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion…”

The Free Exercise Clause: This clause protects individuals’ rights to practice their religion as they please, without interference from the government. It says, “…or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”

The purpose of these clauses is to prevent the government from sinking into a theocracy, the problems of which are:

Lack of Religious Freedom: The state endorses one religion, often leading to the suppression of other religious practices and beliefs

Potential for Intolerance: Theocratic societies may be intolerant towards immigrants, different cultures, or ethnic groups, especially those who do not share the state religion

Risk to Personal Freedoms: Disagreeing with the government can be seen as disagreeing with the divine authority itself, placing personal religious ideas or freedoms at risk.

Centralized Power: Theocracies often have centralized structures of power, which can limit debate and dissent in policy-making.

Societal Compliance: Compliance is often achieved through religious means, which can include the threat of spiritual consequences for non-compliance.

Theocracies quickly evolve into dictatorships, which are especially difficult to change because the leader claims to speak for God. After reading the above, you can answer the title question for yourself: Which American political party is this, and is it what you want for America?
Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell; MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell

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The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

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Are Americans a moral people, today?

Evil cannot be prevented by those who claim evil does not exist.

Are Americans a moral people, today? Many years ago, my wife and I visited the Dachau camp, the first of the more than forty thousand (!) concentration camps and other incarceration sites run by Hitler’s Nazis. For my wife and me, it was an amazing experience.Dachau | Holocaust Encyclopedia Every nation has dark chapters in its history, some darker than others. Russia’s Stalin, China’s Mao, Germany’s Hitler, Italy’s Mussolini, all killed millions of innocents. They are examples, but not exceptions. We, humans, have a unique proclivity for killing our own. Did you ever hear of China’s Qin Shi Huang? Anyone who disagreed with him was sentenced to death. Books that criticized him were burned. (Sound familiar?). He castrated prisoners of war and enslaved those who survived. Attila the Hun, Genghis Khan, Uganda’s Idi Amin, Cambodia’s Pol Pot, the genocides of Rwanda — the list truly is endless. While we were in Dachau, we saw a movie about the horrors that took place there — the murders, tortures, medical experiments. The movie, which was created by the Allies, made no excuses for the Germans. It said that the German people cannot claim ignorance; they knew exactly what was being done, but did nothing to interfere. The amazing part of our experience was the busloads of German schoolchildren being brought there, day after day, to see what their ancestors had inflicted on innocents. Today’s Germany is determined to prevent a repeat. Germans know prevention only can be accomplished by revealing, not by hiding, the truth. It especially is important that the children could see and understand the horrors of Germany’s dark chapters, the horrors that bigotry creates, lest new generations of bigots fill the information vacuum.
Unite the Right rally - Wikipedia
Just a few crazies, or do they represent today’s white-supremacist political party?
Thus, there are no statues of Hitler in Germany. America too has had our dark chapters. Slavery was among the darkest. Like the Holocaust, slavery is an extermination, but slavery is an extermination of the mind, spirit and soul, leaving only the body to labor. For years, many (especially in the South) refused to recognize that slavery even was a dark chapter. It was termed a “proud Southern heritage,” and statues were erected to the “heroes” who fought to continue it. Most of the statues have come down now, but the bigotry remains. The confederate flags still fly from right-wing hands, to remind slavery’s children of yesterday’s bondage. The Republican party, which has been captured by the white supremacist, religious right, is enacting laws to deny history. Florida’s Gov. Ron DeSantis proudly claims his state is where “woke” comes to die.Adorable Experiment Shows Even Blindfolded Kids Always Know Their Mom – Love What Matters But what is “woke” that so frightens and antagonizes DeSantis and the religious right? To be “woke” means to be informed, educated and conscious of social injustice and racial inequality. Those German children, who saw the movie describing the terrors of Dachau, were being “informed, educated and conscious of social injustice and racial inequality.” They were “woke” and thus, far less likely to repeat Hitler’s abomination. DeSantis and the GOP do not want America’s children to have such knowledge. They want to deny America’s slavery past, and in denial, assure perpetuation of the underlying bigotry.

Woke is defined by the DeSantis administration as “the belief there are systemic injustices in American society and the need to address them,” according to DeSantis’ own general counsel.

“We reject woke ideology,” DeSantis said in his election night speech. “We will never ever surrender to the woke agenda. People have come here because of our policies.”

The pressure against “woke”-ness in Florida has already led to the apparent erasure of race-related content in education, including the rejection of an AP African American history course in state high schools and vows from college presidents against including some race-related content.

Do the great masses of Republicans truly believe there are not “systematic injustices in American society and the need to address them”? Do they truly believe that blacks are not disproportionately mistreated by police? Or, that women are not paid less than men for doing the same jobs? Or that indigenous Americans are cheated out of their land, again and again by lying American politicians and broken treaties? Or that Americans of Japanese heritage were cheated out of their freedoms during the internments of World War II? Or that Jews, blacks, gays, Muslims, and Orientals are not discriminated against by juries, judges, police, insurance companies, banks, law firms, realtors? Do they truly believe the way to combat prejudice is to hide its existence from our children and to punish anyone who reveals it? Or is combating prejudice not the goal? Republican racial denial seems part of a greater pattern, in which everything that does not comport with the official line is denied. The Republicans are the party of denial. They deny global warming. They deny the benefits of wind and solar energy. They denied the seriousness of COVID. They deny the benefits of vaccination. They deny the January 6th coup even took place, and instead claim it was a normal tourist day. They deny the benefits of Obamacare. They deny they gave a tax break that primarily aided the rich. They currently deny they wish to cut the benefits from Social Security, Medicare, Obamacare and other social programs. They deny every Trump negative, from his cheating on three wives to his Trump University cheating, to his Trump Foundation lies, to his bribing of his whores to lie. They deny the importance of Trump’s multi-thousand lies, his many bankruptcies, his incompetence, his physical attacks on women and bragging about it, his many attempts to overturn the election, his stealing and hiding of classified documents, They deny he was a draft dodger who insulted those who gave their lives for America. They deny he lost the election. And now, they deny that America has had, and still experiences, “systemic injustices in American society and the need to address them.” The title question was, “Are Americans a moral people, today?” One measure of morality is a willingness to admit ones misdeeds as a first step toward preventing future misdeeds. All religions involve confessing one’s sins. The Catholics have a formalized process involving a priest. Other religions do it directly to their Gods. Some merely recommend or reference some form of confession as an integral process toward morality. But all intelligent, reasonable people understand that the cure for bad behavior requires first a recognition and an admission that bad behavior has taken place. Evil cannot be prevented by those who claim evil does not exist. Denial leads to the acceptance of evil. The first step to morality is enlightenment, and that is a step the Republican party does not wish to take. DeSantis gives revelations of our past villainy the pejorative, “indoctrination.” He does not want our children to be “indoctrinated” with the facts. He denies history, to make us forget the bad our ancestors may have done. Right wingers are all too willing to have the evil continue simply by denying it exists. Ignore, deny, forget. Ignore, deny, forget. It is the proven pattern of the bigot. It is how bigotry lasts through centuries. There is neither logic, nor reason, nor thought. It is how those who never have known or interacted with a Jew can, through the centuries, despise all Jews, yet claim to love Jesus, who was not only a Jew but a rabbi. None are responsible for what their forebears have done. Neither blame nor credit should be passed through generations. But that does not include ignorance. We all are responsible for our ignorance. That a proportionately large number of Jews has won Nobel prices is a source of pride to all Jews. But it does not mean every Jew can take credit. Similarly, every Italian cannot be blamed for the Mafia. All Japanese cannot be held responsible for Pearl Harbor. But should the Mafia and Pearl Harbor not be mentioned to schoolchildren lest some be embarrassed by the facts? The learning of factual history does not require any one’s personal shame. It is a necessary rite of passage into teens and adulthood. As George Santayana said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it,” and Winston Churchill said, “Those that fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it”. First you must know the past. Then you must learn from it, and finally you must remember it as a foundation for your future actions. The past is happening right now. Denial of the past is a danger to America and to our democracy. Our children must know the past and the denials; they must learn from them, and remember them when the past again returns in its ugliness. Else we are condemned. Are Americans a moral people, today? Like all people, we are good and we are bad, and in some years we are better than in others. The next few months and years may help answer the question. They will demonstrate whether childhood ignorance condemns us to repeat our evils Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY