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The demonization of the Democrat Party

A man walks past an advertisement for the Democratic National Convention at the Charlotte Douglas International Airport in Charlotte, North Carolina September 2, 2012.
A man walks past an advertisement for the Democratic National Convention at the Charlotte Douglas International Airport in Charlotte, North Carolina September 2, 2012. | (Photo: Reuters/Jessica Rinaldi)

There is no question about it. There is not even a desire to hide it. The Democrat Party continues to grow spiritually darker to the point of actually proclaiming itself the party of the religiously non-affiliated. Is it any surprise?

Back in 2012, the Washington Postreported that the Democrats were under fire for removing “God” from their national platform.

This was not missed by Paul Ryan, then a Republican presidential candidate, who stated on Fox News, “I guess I would just put the onus and the burden on them to explain why they did all this, these purges of God.”

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And was it a coincidence that the same year, the Democrats also failed to affirm Jerusalem as Israel’s capital?

To put this in perspective, the Post observed that, “God is mentioned 12 times in the 2012 GOP platform. The 2008 Democratic platform made one reference to God: the ‘God-given potential’ of working people. The 2004 platform had numerous references to God.”

How times have changed.

Two years ago, in 2017, Selena Zito claimed in the New York Post that, “The Democratic Party has a God problem.”

Remembering what happened in 2012, when it was widely reported that the Democrats booed God” (during the platform hearings), Zito argued that the Democrats have since “pushed away religious voters not simply by ignoring them but by actively repelling them with accusations of bigotry and backwardness.”

And, she added, “Unless they change that, Democrats haven’t got a prayer of solving their God problem.”

As of today, I wouldn’t be holding my breath.

The DNC has now issued a resolution stating that “religiously unaffiliated Americans overwhelmingly share the Democratic Party’s values, with 70% voting for Democrats in 2018, 80% supporting same-sex marriage, and 61% saying immigrants make American society stronger.”

Yes, the Democratic Party is the party of the religiously unaffiliated, and this is now seen as something to celebrate. “If you have no religious affiliation, we’re the party for you!”

Not surprisingly, this fairly substantial group, which is growing by the year, holds to strongly liberal social views, especially when it comes to abortion and same-sex “marriage.” And this, in particular, is something praised by the Democrats. “If you support LGBT activism and stand for abortion, we’re the party for you!”

As noted by a Pew Forum poll, “About three-quarters of white evangelical Protestants (77%) think abortion should be illegal in all or most cases.

“By contrast, 83% of religiously unaffiliated Americans say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, as do nearly two-thirds of black Protestants (64%), six-in-ten white mainline Protestants (60%) and a slim majority of Catholics (56%).”

This is a strikingly high number: 83 percent. It looks like lack of religious affiliation deeply affects one’s views of the sanctity of life, beginning in the womb.

The DNC resolution states that “the nonreligious have often been subjected to unfair bias and exclusion in American society, particularly in the areas of politics and policymaking where assumptions of religiosity have long predominated.”

This, of course, is ironic, since there has been an increasing attack on religious beliefs in America in recent decades, from the courts to the universities and beyond. Are the non-religious really being “subjected to unfair bias and exclusion in American society, particularly in the areas of politics and policymaking?”

The resolution also states that “those most loudly claiming that morals, values, and patriotism must be defined by their particular religious views have used those religious views, with misplaced claims of ‘religious liberty,’ to justify public policy that has threatened the civil rights and liberties of many Americans, including but not limited to the LGBT community, women, and ethnic and religious/nonreligious minorities.”

So, in contrast with conservative evangelicals, who are branded as religious hypocrites and who are abusing their religious power, it is the religiously non-affiliated who hold to ethical values and truly care about all Americans.

Of course, it is a good strategy for the Democrats to make such an explicit appeal to this substantial voting bloc. And it appears that the values of the religiously non-affiliated are much closer to the those of the DNC than the RNC. And, without question, there is some hypocrisy among those of us on the conservative evangelical side, which the DNC wants to highlight. (No group has a monopoly on hypocrisy. It affects all groups on all sides.)

But it is still quite enlightening to see how lack of religious affiliation (which does not theoretically mean lack of faith but simply lack of affiliation) does impact one’s worldview, as it appears that lack of religious affiliation means lack of connection to biblical mores.

Still, not everyone on the Democrat side thinks that the DNC’s resolution was wise. According to Michael Wear, who previously served as a faith adviser to President Obama, the DNC’s resolution is “stupid on a fundamental level that transcends electoral politics.”

Given that the resolution will be used as further evidence that the Democrat Party is the God-less party, Wear could well be right.

What is undeniable, though, is this. The militantly pro-abortion, pro-LGBT activism party is the party of those without religious affiliation.

This makes perfect sense.

Dr. Michael Brown (www.askdrbrown.org) is the host of the nationally syndicated Line of Fire radio program. His latest book is Jezebel's War With America: The Plot to Destroy Our Country and What We Can Do to Turn the Tide. Connect with him on FacebookTwitter, or YouTube.

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