On February 7, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to establish a White House “Faith Office,” citing the necessity of “combatting anti-Semitic, anti-Christian, and additional forms of anti-religious bias” as part of the administration’s aim to “end the anti-Christian weaponization of government.”
“While I’m in the White House, we will protect Christians in our schools, in our military, in our government, in our workplaces, hospitals, and in our public squares,” he said while announcing the new task force alongside U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi at the annual National Prayer Breakfast in February. “And we will bring our country back together as one nation under God.”
Be informed, not misled.
The "Progressive" magazine is suggesting that conservatives who don't embrace so-called progressivism are White Nationalists.
The magazine recently said, "The Faith Office marks the latest in a series of moves by Trump that cater to his large voter base of Christian nationalists—those who believe that the U.S. government should actively promote Christian faith as a core part of American identity. Groups like the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty (BJC) argue that in the current political climate, Christian nationalism functions as a cultural framework that incorporates elements of white ethnonationalism alongside nativist, patriarchal, militaristic, and authoritarian views. By weaponizing Christian texts and symbols to enforce the idea that women, people of color, and queer and trans people are second-class citizens, some experts say, Christian nationalists actively push an 'us versus them' worldview."
If people are paying attention, they would know that the "us versus them" agenda has been put upon America for the last three generations of public education and "news" activism in favor of the Left.
"Progressive" continues, "Since Trump’s Inauguration, explicit appeals to conservative Christian rhetoric—and, in particular, against marginalized groups—have appeared in his approach to national policy. In an Executive Order asserting that U.S. policy would “recognize two sexes, male and female,” Trump declared that newly issued U.S. passports would no longer list preferred gender status for trans and nonbinary people, after which White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt clarified that “they can still apply to renew their passport—they just have to use their God-given sex, which was decided at birth.”
The atheist Freedom From Religion Foundation's agenda is to eradicate religion- especially Christianity from the culture under the guise of "separation of church and state."
The LGBTQ movement actively opposes any religious interference that disagrees with their "Love Wins" worldview, labeling all dissent "white nationalism."
They recently said in a statement to the media, Faithful America declares: "Christian nationalism has no place in our schools. We are deeply troubled by Donald Trump and Elon Musk's radical cuts to the Department of Education. By defunding and eliminating this crucial department, Trump and the Christian nationalist leaders supporting him clearly wish to make public schools across the country either indoctrinate our children with a certain form of Christianity or close down."
This is from activists who have perverted the minds and maligned the bodies of America's young children under the guise of "Transgenderism surgeries," or its code name, "gender-affirming healthcare".
Takeaway
I believe she speaks for many:
The following is from that article.
Homesickness is what Americans have been feeling. It’s far from the corporate media’s misuse of the term ‘Christian nationalism.’
Homesickness is at the heart of what Americans have been feeling. If there is a resurgence of nationalism along with Judeo-Christian values, I believe it means that for a while, Americans became lost and forgot who they were and now wish to return home.
As the late Sir Roger Scruton explained, a sense of nationalism is like the feeling of belonging in a family — where people might have different ideas but are bound together like neighbors with common bonds of loyalty.
So, enough with the propaganda stereotype of Trump voters as skinheads with Hitlerian dreams about “white Christian nationalism” supposedly being installed with his election. Trump voters are generally normal people who simply want to live normal lives in what was once a country that valued common sense.
As our national songs proclaim, America is our “home sweet home,” a beautiful land blessed by God with goodness and brotherhood. Our national anthem declares America the home of the free and the land of the brave. We pray by song that God would guide her “through the night with the light from above.” We pledge to strive for justice and liberty for all in one nation under God.
Christian nationalism, properly interpreted, is about a renewed ache for the profound sense of belonging Americans once had in America. This includes the longing for Christian values of forgiveness, redemption, and real love—all of which are woven into America’s heritage and founding.
This homesickness, by the way, is not the same as nostalgia, which some might call a desire to turn back the clock to the “good old days.” Americans are all about innovation and moving forward and upward, improving and growing, not going backward. The slogan “Make America Great Again” in this light is the aspiration by the dispossessed to return home and rebuild.
There is a growing awareness that we have been, in many ways, a nation in captivity. As Martin Luther King wrote, “the yearning for freedom eventually manifests itself.”
People yearn for freedom because we know in our hearts that it is our birthright and that right is inalienable.
And the American heart yearns for freedom and a return to that shining city on a hill.
Be Informed. Be Discerning. Be Vigilant. Be Engaged. Be Hopeful. Be Prayerful.