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  • A key line for me ...

    "Would you rather have someone whose tongue is maybe a little wild, but has incredibly good policies that make your life better?" he asked the congregation. "Or someone who has a silver tongue and says all the right things and has terrible policies which ruin your life and those of your children and grandchildren?"

    Partly out of confirmation bias as I've been saying this since before his victory in 2016 and highlighting it as the thing lefty/intellectual/"elites" don't get about his appeal. Trump hits the "right" buttons while his wildness, lack of "refinement" and apparent sense-making are all features. So many want "change" ... Trump is "change", right from his personal nature and demeanour.


    Another ...

    And he said that the decline in church attendance over time had meant that many of those who considered themselves religious were less influenced by spiritual leaders and more by right-wing media and politicians - Mr Trump foremost among them.

    Oh ... JFC!! I suppose this is a good predictor of how the west collapses. Deepening class separation across all spheres of civil life allowing chaotic manipulation by demagogues. Can't help but think of the fall of the Roman Republic and Dune here. Also can't help but think that the whole Hitchens/Dawkins anti-religion thing, which feels like it got a bit old for the mainstream, really has an essentially important fundamental point ... as a whole type of institution and cultural phenomenon, it may simply not be worth it on the whole.

  • Their theology is as bad as their choice of political candidate. I cannot think of any other politician that embodies the "Seven Deadly Sins" in public/private life moreso than Mr. Trump. I honestly do not get how the same "conservatives" used to crow about character being of the highest importance for an officeholder/candidate during the 90s, can get on this godawful bandwagon. I still am a Christian and live my life rather "conservatively", but if this is what Christianity and Conservatism has become, it is no wonder the next generation is saying "Count me out...".

  • As discussed in the article, of was never really about religion. It was about rhetoric. The bar for Democrats to keep states like Iowa blue was so incredibly low, requiring only action. But none could be taken, and it will now be incredibly difficult to overcome this loss.

    • The bar for Democrats to keep states like Iowa blue was so incredibly low, requiring only action.

      What would Democrats have had to do? Is there any chance that any sort of Evangelical appeal from a Democratic candidate wouldn't be appealing to the rest of the democratic voters?

      • It goes back, I don't know, 30 years? With both agricultural US and union areas (sometimes the same places) the Democratic party consistently expected those votes without actually delivering anything. Bill Clinton and the party get blamed for things like NAFTA and jobs moving to other countries, etc. So eventually these folks drift to the Republican party. Many of these people were broadly conservative anyways. Later, the religious aspects and toxicity of what started with Newt manifested to what we see now.

        I don't know if an evangelical Democrat would fly now. It's a really bad situation with very entrenched beliefs.

  • 🤖 I'm a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles: ::: spoiler Click here to see the summary In 2016, Mr Trump picked up just 22% of this group on the way to a second-place finish behind Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who like previous Iowa Republican winners made faith a major part of his campaign.

    But since that time, when many were still sceptical of the blunt-talking New York businessman trailed by sex scandals, Mr Trump has made born-again Christians a key part of his voter base.

    Self-described conservative evangelical David Pautsch is a huge fan of Mr Trump, and the former president is part of the reason he's decided to run for Congress in Iowa's 1st district, challenging a Republican incumbent from the right.

    Mr Pautsch lives here in Davenport, a city of around 100,000 people in eastern Iowa, and was collecting signatures to back his campaign from hundreds of locals who braved frigid weather to visit a gun show at an exhibition centre.

    Kedron Bardwell, a political science professor at Simpson College in Indianola, just outside Des Moines, said that Mr Trump had a key advantage over his rivals - a track record that aligned with evangelical priorities.

    His appointment of three conservative justices to the Supreme Court - and the overturning of Roe v Wade, which for decades had held that there is a constitutional right to abortion - is a key part of that record, as is his decision to move the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.


    Saved 82% of original text. :::

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