[ home / overboard / sfw / alt / cytube] [ leftypol / b / WRK / hobby / tech / edu / ga / ent / music / 777 / posad / i / a / lgbt / R9K / dead ] [ meta ]

/leftypol/ - Leftist Politically Incorrect

"The anons of the past have only shitposted on the Internets about the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it."
Name
Email
Subject
Comment
Captcha
Tor Only

Flag
File
Embed
Password (For file deletion.)

Matrix   IRC Chat   Mumble


File: 1779093288292.jpeg ( 136.73 KB , 900x600 , IMG_3588.jpeg )

 No.496525

One common stereotype regarding today’s western atheists is that they are predominantly white, male, and from Christian backgrounds, and this demographic profile stands to this day based on the latest polls on the atheist community.

And as pointed out by people like Contrapoints, both the alt-right and the SJWs of the 2010s were products of the New Atheism movement, the bulk of its members being, once again, white males from Christian households.
So this begs the question: Did they leave because the churches weren’t racist enough following the adoption of the civil rights movement’s philosophy by most churches in the 1990s?

As polemical and farfetched as it sounds, I don’t necessarily think it’s improbable given the obvious demographic profile, the fact that the decline in Christianity (in America, Canada, and Australia at least) and rise of sub-cultures were heavily driven by young middle-class white people (especially white men) who left the churches, and that was back when the churches were at least nominally anti-racist following the decline of the white nationalist movement as a significant political bloc in both the north and the new south, as well as the fact that whilst elevatorgate did drive many young white atheist men into further reactionary politics (e.g., the “redpill”, incels, scientific racism, transphobia, etc…) the reactionary streak was there since the beginning as the “four horsemen” used bait-and-switch tactics in their writings to sell the message during the GWOT era: “You don’t need to be a fundamentalist Christian to support another crusade in Iraq”, as well as the universalist civilisational rhetoric. and that was long before the “horsemen” like Harris and Dawkins began to promote a particularist view of the west as it becomes clear that its hegemony is being challenged by nominally non-liberal countries like Russia and China.

There’s also the fact that Christianity in America and elsewhere in what made up old Christendom hasn’t gained any more followers outside of mass immigration as seen how churches across Europe and elsewhere in north America and Australia need to import priests to fill the roles of the clergy as white people there don’t wanna work in churches. While it can be argued that much of it is to do with how Christianity’s universalism is clashing with the increasing particularism of white people who only want Christianity if it affirms white identitarianism, that still wouldn’t support the notion that Christianity declined when it was conservative, as churches became progressive in America in the 2010s and yet still failed to gain converts in a self-sustaining way that didn’t rely on mass immigration. Matter of fact, the new “great awakening” is occurring just as Christian’s politics has shifted further to the right and became increasingly associated with the alt-right. Examples of it include every western populist politician, and Nick Fuentes. All in all, it does support my idea that Christianity in the west has largely survived thanks to contradictory and often fragile coalition-building involving both white nationalists and liberals.
But I do have some doubts about it since the thesis largely relies on connecting the dots more than anything else.

So, is it true?
>>

 No.496526

>Christianity needs to be more racist to attract more followers
What?
>>

 No.496528

>Contrapoints
>white males are becoming atheists because they're racist
Into the trash it goes.
>>

 No.496529

>>496526
As far as Europe, Australia and North America are concerned, Christian churches will be faced with this decision as wignat ideology becomes more widespread amongst the white lumpenprole.

>>496528
Is there a lie? I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the bulk of the new atheism movement came from white men from Protestant households, and how the movement developed from the background of the 1990s backlash against evangelical “moral guardians” who preached anti-racism and tradcon ideology, especially since much of it was dominated by neocons whose distinguishing factor was their acceptance of the civil rights’ ethos in contrast to their conservative predecessors.
>>

 No.496530

>>496525
most black people are christian
>>

 No.496537

>>496529
>I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the bulk of the new atheism movement came from white men from Protestant households,
So did the bulk of the Christian Identity movement.
So do the bulk of Idaho potatoes.
So did most American bronies.
Most American circus clowns also probably came from the white protestant demographic, did you join the circus because you were racist or did you have a different reason for doing it?

Unique IPs: 6

[Return][Catalog][Top][Home][Post a Reply]
Delete Post [ ]
[ home / overboard / sfw / alt / cytube] [ leftypol / b / WRK / hobby / tech / edu / ga / ent / music / 777 / posad / i / a / lgbt / R9K / dead ] [ meta ]
ReturnCatalogTopBottomHome