I don't do lesser evilism. This country has blood on its hands and has been involved in some war or other for most of the time it has been in existence. Yeah, other countries might be more overtly authoritarian, but this country could give those a run for their money after the lockdowns, forced masking, forced jabs (or get fired) and non…
I don't do lesser evilism. This country has blood on its hands and has been involved in some war or other for most of the time it has been in existence. Yeah, other countries might be more overtly authoritarian, but this country could give those a run for their money after the lockdowns, forced masking, forced jabs (or get fired) and non stop propaganda pumped out by the Mighty Wurlitzer for the past 2+ years. This country NEVER lived up to its promise and especially squandered the good will other countries felt toward it after WW 2. We could have been the benevolent nation instead of the global hegemon.
"I don't do lesser evilism" is irrelevant. Christianity is not a "lesser evil". Christianity is a straight up "good". It's not evil in any way at all.
To the extent that people within a society follow Christianity (actually follow it, not simply profess to follow it) that society is better.
There never has been yet a nation where everyone practised Christianity, and perhaps there never will be. But societies which adopt the guiding principles of Christianity as their cultural norms will always be less evil than if that same set of people did not. That perhaps is where "less evil" comes in, but it's not just "less evil". Adopting Christianity as a cultural norm results in not just "less evil", but "minimal evil" for the nation or group in question.
Remember utopia does not exist (Utopia is a Satanic deceit - he deludes his followers into an attempt to create it knowing that this always and inevitably instead creates dystopia). And therefore "minimal evil" is the best possible outcome. So Christianity, and a Christian nation, is not just "less evil", it is actually the best possible outcome both for the individual and the group.
I don't do lesser evilism. This country has blood on its hands and has been involved in some war or other for most of the time it has been in existence. Yeah, other countries might be more overtly authoritarian, but this country could give those a run for their money after the lockdowns, forced masking, forced jabs (or get fired) and non stop propaganda pumped out by the Mighty Wurlitzer for the past 2+ years. This country NEVER lived up to its promise and especially squandered the good will other countries felt toward it after WW 2. We could have been the benevolent nation instead of the global hegemon.
https://www.globalresearch.ca/america-has-been-at-war-93-of-the-time-222-out-of-239-years-since-1776/5565946
"I don't do lesser evilism" is irrelevant. Christianity is not a "lesser evil". Christianity is a straight up "good". It's not evil in any way at all.
To the extent that people within a society follow Christianity (actually follow it, not simply profess to follow it) that society is better.
There never has been yet a nation where everyone practised Christianity, and perhaps there never will be. But societies which adopt the guiding principles of Christianity as their cultural norms will always be less evil than if that same set of people did not. That perhaps is where "less evil" comes in, but it's not just "less evil". Adopting Christianity as a cultural norm results in not just "less evil", but "minimal evil" for the nation or group in question.
Remember utopia does not exist (Utopia is a Satanic deceit - he deludes his followers into an attempt to create it knowing that this always and inevitably instead creates dystopia). And therefore "minimal evil" is the best possible outcome. So Christianity, and a Christian nation, is not just "less evil", it is actually the best possible outcome both for the individual and the group.