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This Month's Scripture Verse:

1 But false prophets also appeared among the people, just as there will also be false teachers among you, who will secretly introduce destructive heresies, even denying the Master who bought them, bringing swift destruction upon themselves. 2 Many will follow their indecent behavior, and because of them the way of the truth will be maligned; 3 and in their greed they will exploit you with false words; their judgment from long ago is not idle, and their destruction is not asleep..
II Peter 2:1-3

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Friday, July 17, 2026

The Dilemma That Today's Christian Fundamentalism Has Caused For Some Of Us Believers

A long time ago, in a decade that seems far, far away, I wrote an article on why Christians should support same-sex marriage in society but not in the Church (click here for the article). In that article, I claimed that the insistence by some fellow believers on banning same-sex marriage in society will cause many believers to either accept homosexuality as a Biblically accepted lifestyle or to leave the faith all in order to rightly avoid marinalizing homosexuals. The kind rejection of the modern concepts of social injustice, CRT, and wokeness, all of which are synonyms for 'Communism' according to Trump, by many fellow Christian Fundamentalists has been producing a similar results. Religiously conservative Christians are being tempted to follow religiously liberal Christianity, which is not Christianity, in order to follow their social justice convictions. And that is especially true in today's political environment where religiously conservative American Christians are still strong supporters of Trump.

First, we should define the kind rejection of more modern criticisms of the West of which I am talking about. In 1967, when speaking against the Vietnam War, Martin Luther King Jr. said the following (click here for the source):

'The Western Arrogance Of Feeling That It Has Everything To Teach Others And Nothing To Learn From Them Is Not Just'

I have mentioned this quote before. In particular, I suggested that we replace the word 'Western' with a fill-in-the-blank to see how this quote can apply to more than the West during the Vietnam War and at other times. It can be used to help provide a check on any of the groups we belong to as well as ourselves as individuals. And it can be used as a litmus test on those individual groups we are listening to.

And so perhaps it is time to apply that quote to American religiously conservatives who are overly critical of progressive or leftist ideas such as Marxism, Critical Theory, Post Modernism, CRT, wokeness, DEI, and alike. By being overly critical, I am referring to applying the quote to the situation where many religiously conservative Christians believe that there is nothing to be gained by listening to progressive and leftist ideas. We need to ask if these American religiously conservatives have succumbed to that arrogance of feeling by believing that they have nothing to learn from Marx and his modern derivatives. I am not saying that American religiously conservatives should never criticize those people and ideas just mentioned, what is being challenged is how far are they going in questioning others.

Personally, I find it very troubling when I hardly find any fellow believers who share my agreements with Marx, Critical Theory, Post Modernism, CRT, wokeness, DEI and alike. I find it very difficult when so few of my fellow believers in Christ are either silent or supportive of how the Israeli government is treating the Palestinians and its neighbors. It is also distressing when they do the same with Trump's authoritarianism and his cutting of aid to programs that provide humanitarian help to the less fortunate while he is more than eager to send in the military where they do not need to go. They also do the same with Trump's opposition to DEI and equality for the LGBT community. For those actions and decisions involve moral issues. And then when those who are theologically liberal, who are in essence without the Gospel, are pursuing and promoting justice and peace that we Christians should be supporting and practicing, I find it more distressing. It is distressing not just because I feel almost alone in supporting politically progressive ideas and causes; it is tragic because of the harm done to the reputation of the Gospel our silence.

Sign made by Protest Barb

To those who are offended by my statement saying that those who are theologically liberal are without the Gospel, we need to note what their beliefs are in comparison with the Gospel. Liberal theology can be divided into two branches: the reduction of all reality into the physical realm and the belief in universal salvation.  And to be even more specific, many of today's liberal theologians are selectively citing the Gospels to bolster their claims about Jesus and thus they are challenging the rest of the Gospels as to all that Jesus said and did. In addition, they also ignore its other parts of the New Testament such as  the book of Acts, the Epistles, and Revelation.

Many of today's liberal theologians look for those parts of the Gospels which seem to support the kind of inclusiveness that they want to see in the Church. They want to see that inclusiveness in the Church because of how the Church can influence society. In other words, they teach the Gospels in a way that instructs the Church how to be what they want society to be. And though we should want inclusiveness that they want in society, the Church is a different story because the Church is exclusively about believers in Christ.

And so liberal theologians teach only parts of the Gospels. For example, when talking about homosexuality, they mention that Jesus never talked about homosexuality. And that is true. But what they leave out is when Jesus said the following (click here to see the source):

18 For truly I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or stroke of a letter shall pass from the Law, until all is accomplished!

And what we should note is that the Law, of which Jesus spoke, condemns homosexuality. Should liberal theologians mention the Old Testament dietary restrictions, they forget Peter's dream, recorded in Acts 10, about how all food has now become clean.

So a major problem with these theologians is that they leave out the rest of the New Testament. And so what they ignore is what Jesus instructed the Apostles to do as recorded in the Gospels and the book of Acts. They also ignore the fact that Jesus sent out Apostles to authoritatively represent Him. And so the book of the book of Acts, the Epistles and Revelation are vitally important.

To their credit, many who hold to liberal theology put us religiously conservative American Christians to shame with their warmth, love, wanting inclusiveness in society, and moral concerns about social justice. They also put us to shame with their opposition to Trump's authoritarianism. We religiously conservative American Christians have a lot to learn from them with regard to their characteristics and views.

But as valuable as personal characteristics and their social justice views are, their attributes and views do not present the Gospel and thus do not save us in either the present or future senses. That is because of God's demand for holiness far exceeds any goodness that we can practice. We do need a savior who takes the punishment for our sins as well as calls us to live a life of repentance because, even after believing, we fight win some/lose some battles against sin. To reduce the Christian life to just having superior moral views on social justice and good characteristics ignores how sinful each of us is and how much we need a savior and not just a teacher or role model. And to think that all will be saved ignores our need to believe in the savior.

And so here is the dilemma that many of my fine, fellow Christian Fundamentalists present. We fall short in the personal characteristics  that we should excell in while representing Christ. The same goes for many of our social justice views. For many of us, that might be because our social justice views have been compromised by our political and ideological loyalties. And so in falling short in these matters, we hurt the reputation of the Gospel and have caused some to be tempted to switch to a false gospel because of how many liberal theologians are superior to us in displaying those personal characteristics and their social justice views. For they reason how can the true Gospel produce such poor results. I know that some of my behaviors and words have hurt the reputation of the Gospel.

I should add that the above is not the only dilemma. What I find personally upsetting is that I can't have political fellowship with many of my fellow believers in Christ because of the disparity in social justice morals caused by the differences in our social justice and political views. On the other hand, I can't have religious/spiritual fellowship with theological liberals who share my political and social justice concerns because they have either latched on to another gospel or simply believe in no Gospel and thus do not recognize the true Gospel.

I should add here that the above dilemma is an American phenomenon from what I have learned from Christians in other countries. I've been told that Christian Fundamentalists from the U.K., for example, hold to neither American conservative political views nor lack adequate social justice views.

Right now, many religiously conservative Christian churches are working hard to maintain the above status quo by either being silent on social justice issues and views or by espousing views that support or promote social injustices. And that fits them fine because then they can maintain more homogenity in their congregations. The result of such an approach is either a muted call to repent and believe to non political conservatives or an implied demand that non political conservatives must become political conservatives in order to believe in Christ. And that makes the religiously conservative American churches complicite in the sins of social injustices practiced by our government.

But perhaps there is a silver lining or two around our current dark cloud that seems to engulf us. That is that if we define Christian Fundamentalists solely by beliefs in the fundamentals of the faith, we find that such fundamentalists are a diverse lot. We are not a monolithic group. And because of that, there could very well be Christian Fundamentalists who are politically liberal or even leftist. In addition, perhaps we can find that Christian Fundamentalists and nonpolitical conservatives can learn from each other in terms of how to live together on this planet. That is a lesson I've begun to learn thanks to some of my unbelieving friends who have taught me things I would have not learned elsewhere.




Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Views From The Outside For July 14, 2026

 Views From The Outside

The purpose of this page is to list news stories and reports from mostly Western sources outside of the U.S. You can use Google Translate to translate articles that are printed in another language. 

So far, news sources include:

International

From Canada

From England

From France

From Germany

From Russian Source 

From Spain

From Switzerland

From Ukraine


<< Previous Views                                                        Next Views >>


Friday, July 10, 2026

Is All Fundamentalism Bad?

Christian Fundamentalism has been taking a lot of public criticism. In fact, fundamentalism of many, if not all, stripes is being looked down on for a inflexibility that has been causing much personal harm and injustice. And so fundamentalism is seen as a negative trait.

There is much anecdotal evidence that supports the negative reaction that fundamentalism receives. And so the label itself allows people to automatically dismiss or reject what a person or group might say if they are called fundamentalists. That automatic dismissal means that the actual fundamentals that a group adheres to are automatically ignored because of the label.

But instead of reflexively rejecting what a person or group is saying because they are fundamentalists, shouldn't fairness and intellectual integrity cause us to ask any fundamentalist what are the specific fundamentals they believe in before disagreeing with them? One would think so. For example, take the 3 core tenets of the French Revolution. They are liberty, equality, and fraternity. Nevermind the inconsistent employment of those tenets by those leading that revolution, if those tenets are one's fundamentals, then should one be looked down on for being a fundamentalist?

And so let's look at the fundamentalism I follow: Christian Fundamentalism. We should immediately note here that Christian Fundamentalists are not, as might be expected, a monolithic group. Way back in 2005, ZNet, the name of the site has been slightly modified since then, posted a letter of mine defending Christian Fundamentalism as an article (click here for the article). It is the only article of mine that they posted. I made the case that the fundamentals of the Christian faith do not imply support for any social injustice. Those fundamentals include what is involved in the recognition of Jesus Christ as being fully God and fully man, His mission on earth, His return, and the errancy of the original autographs of the Scriptures. The latter referring to the original documents containing the Gospels, the Acts, the Epistles, and the book of Revelation along with the books of the Old Testament. That that inerrancy included neither copies of manuscripts nor translations of any of the manuscripts into other languages. The logic supported this belief in inerrancy is to teach that what we can know about God's redemptive revelation about Himself must be revealed by God alone rather than discovered by man. It should be noted that these tenets form the original definition of Christian Fundamentalism and were used, and still work, to distinguish Christian Fundamentalism from Liberal Theology.

However, despite the fact that this fundamental tenet on inerrancy does not imply support for any social injustice, the belief in inerrancy seems to have caused support for practicing some social injustices such as those supported by Christian Zionism. And so injustices have been performed because of the belief in the inerrancy of the original autographs of the Scriptures. And so, what gives? Why the disparity between the claim that the fundamental tenet on inerrancy does not imply support for social injustices and what we see in the world around us?

What gives is how the belief in the inerrancy of the original transcripts is applied by many of my fellow believers in Christ. To many of my fellow believers, to accept this tenet means that we must literally interpret the Scriptures as often as possible. In essence, this is an all-or-nothing approach to  interpreting the belief in the errancy of the original manuscripts. The good news here is that that approach has little, if any, support in Church history. The bad news is that many literal interpretations are valid. So how do we tell the difference when to accept a part of the Bible as being literally true and when to apply a more allegorical interpretation.

To illustrate one approach that helps us to tell the difference, I will refer to my current state of health, I am old. And I do not consider my olden years to be my golden years. Because of a conglomeration of events, I now need a cane to walk. I am hoping to see the day when I can, but not necessarily will, throw away the cane. I refer to that future day as: The Cane Mutiny. Anyway, the question becomes is whether or not my cane is a crutch. The literalist will always answer that it can never be a crutch because it is a cane. But those who would first consider the context of my health at the time will say 'yes' if I am using it when I no longer need to.

And so it is with certain parts of the Scriptures. Context can determine whether we should take a scripture passage literally. Take Genesis 17:9-13 which includes part of the covenant that God made with Abraham for example. That passage says (click here for the source):

9 God said further to Abraham, “Now as for you, you shall keep My covenant, you and your descendants after you throughout their generations. 10 This is My covenant, which you shall keep, between Me and you and your descendants after you: every male among you shall be circumcised. 11 And you shall be circumcised in the flesh of your foreskin, and it shall be the sign of the covenant between Me and you. 12 And every male among you who is eight days old shall be circumcised throughout your generations, including a slave who is born in the house or who is bought with money from any foreigner, who is not of your descendants. 13 A slave who is born in your house or who is bought with your money shall certainly be circumcised; so My covenant shall be in your flesh as an everlasting covenant. 14 But as for an uncircumcised male, one who is not circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin, that person shall be cut off from his people; he has broken My covenant.”

Now compare verses 10-13 with what Paul says in Galatians regarding who is a descendant of Abraham according to this covenant:

Galations 3:6-9 (click here for the source)

6 Just as Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness. 7 Therefore, recognize that it is those who are of faith who are sons of Abraham. 8 The Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the gospel beforehand to Abraham, saying, “All the nations will be blessed in you.” 9 So then, those who are of faith are blessed with Abraham, the believer

And Galatians 5:1-6 (click here for the source)

1 It was for freedom that Christ set us free; therefore keep standing firm and do not be subject again to a yoke of slavery.

2 Look! I, Paul, tell you that if you have yourselves circumcised, Christ will be of no benefit to you. 3 And I testify again to every man who has himself circumcised, that he is obligated to keep the whole Law. 4 You have been severed from Christ, you who are seeking to be justified by the Law; you have fallen from grace. 5 For we, through the Spirit, by faith, are waiting for the hope of righteousness. 6 For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything, but faith working through love.

When Paul wrote to the church at Galatia, he was addressing a problem caused by some Jewish Christians who were in what was called the Circumcision Party. Because of what was written in Genesis 17:10-13, those in the Circumcision Party claimed if Christian believers were going to be counted as the descendants of Abraham, then Christians had to be circumcised according to the Abrahamic Covenant. In other words, these Jews were the literalists of their day when it came to interpreting the Abrahamic Covenant. So why wasn't Paul being a literalist? It was because the context had drastically changed from when the Abrahamic Covenant was made to the time after which Jesus was crucified, rose from the dead, and ascended into heaven. And because the context had changed, the meaning of the Abrahamic Covenant was applied differently and its true intent revealed. For the Abrahamic Covenant wasn't about the physical descendants of Abraham, it was about the children of the promise vs those of the flesh. In Romans 9:6-8, Paul also talks about these two sets of children. That convenant was about Christ and what made us become the children of the promise, the descendants of Abraham, rather than the children of the flesh. 

Now there are some fellow believers who, because of their insistence on literally interpreting the above part of Genesis say that there are now two groups of people who are people of God. But what Peter wrote in his 1st letter contradicts that claim. Peter wrote in I Peter 2:4-11 (click here for the source):

4 And coming to Him as to a living stone which has been rejected by people, but is choice and precious in the sight of God, 5 you also, as living stones, are being built up as a spiritual house for a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices that are acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. 6 For this is contained in Scripture:
“Behold, I am laying in Zion a choice stone, a precious cornerstone,
And the one who believes in Him will not be put to shame.”
7 This precious value, then, is for you who believe; but for unbelievers,
“A stone which the builders rejected,
This became the chief cornerstone,”
8 and,
“A stone of stumbling and a rock of offense”;
for they stumble because they are disobedient to the word, and to this they were also appointed.
9 But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession, so that you may proclaim the excellencies of Him who has called you out of darkness into His marvelous light; 10 for you once were not a people, but now you are the people of God; you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy

Note how, according to Peter, it those who believe in Christ who are counted as a 'holy nation' and a 'royal priesthood.' Those were descriptions God gave to Israel in Exodus 19. Then consider how Peter calls fellow believers 'the people of God.' Note that those who don't believe are not those things regardless of their ethnicity. And so here, 2 points should be made. First, we see a mix in the above passages of parts that are meant too be literally interpreted for today and those that are not. And second, though some might be offended by the exclusiveness of who is considered to be the people of God, it does not imply any support for practicing social injustices. That is because later on in the same chapter of I Peter, Peter instructs Christians to suffer persecution silently in the same way Christ endured his trial and crucifixion. And in another part of the letter he tells Christians not to dominate others. And so whether what is written above about taking Genesis 17 literally in New Testament times, which helps debunk Christian Zionism, or the call to suffer persecution as Christ did, which helps debunk Christians ruling over society, we see that the belief in the inerrancy of the original autographs of the Scriptures does not imply support for or the practice of social injustices such as what we see in Christian Zionism or what we might see in a Christian ethnocracy such as Christian Nationalism.

Those fellow believers who, IMO, literally interpret the Scriptures when they shouldn't are often driven to do so by either their eschatology (study of the end times), their inability to fully see the correct relationship between the Old and New Testaments, or by a need to compensate for how liberal theologians interpreted most of the Scriptures allegorically or morally because those theologians did not believe in the diety of Christ and the supernatural realm described in the Bible. In terms of what is the correct relationship between the Old and New Testaments, the Old Testament was primarily about a veiled foretelling of Jesus Christ and his coming into the world while the New Testament tells us the story of Jesus Christ in the Gospels, a partial story of the Apostles, how to interpret His life, death, and resurrection in the Epistles, and an overall picture of the last days in Revelation. 

We also find that there are a variety of writing styles used in both Testaments. Those styles of writing can also indicate to us what parts of the Bible are to be interpreted literally and what parts are not. But it is the inability to distinguish when to interpret the Scriptures literally from when not to that has, for the most part, made the label 'Christian Fundamentalism' a bad name because of how it has been used by some to support Christian Zionism or a Christian ethnocracy such as Christian Nationalism. What the New Testament instead calls us to is the reliance on both serving others and evangelism evangelism to spread the Gospel.

And so, again, as mentioned in the article cited above. there is nothing in the original definition of Christian Fundamentalism that supports or promotes practicing social injustices. I say that though appearances can be quite deceiving considering how many of us Christian Fundamentalists have often concluded that it is our duty to do otherwise.





Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Views From The Outside For July 7, 2026

 Views From The Outside

The purpose of this page is to list news stories and reports from mostly Western sources outside of the U.S. You can use Google Translate to translate articles that are printed in another language. 

So far, news sources include:

International

From Canada

From England

From France

From Germany

From Russian Source 

From Spain

From Switzerland

From Ukraine


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Friday, July 3, 2026

America At 250

 Benjamin Franklin said that our nation is 'a republic if you can keep it.' Historian Chalmers Johnson said that a nation cannot continue to be both a republic and an empire. In saying that, he was focussing on the Roman Empire, Great Britain, and the United States. According to Johnson, Rome chose empire while Great Britain chose a republic when the choices had to be made. Johnson said what he said because the demands of each form sabotages the other. And finally we have President Trump. Trump called U.S. policy toward the rest of the nations in the Western Hemisphere the 'Donroe Doctrine,' which seems to be a more intense form of the Monroe Doctrine. For America's 250th birthday, does the Donroe Doctrine tell us which path America has chosen between empire and republic?

To answer that question, one could consider Trump's request for a $600 billion increase in defense spending. This is despite the fact that the U.S. spent more on defense in 2025 than the combined spending of the next 6 nations. Also consider that with the war possibilities that Trump anticipates, Trump claimed that the U.S. government cannot also support Medicare, Medicaid, and daycare programs while financially supporting the military.


How does Trump justify his Donroe Doctrine? For one thing he claims that the U.S. has a right to clean up its own backyard, with its backyard referring to the rest of the nations in the Western Hemisphere. The problem with the comparison is apparent to anyone who has owned a house. One's backyard is a part of one's own property, not someone else's. And so when Trump refers to the rest of the Western Hemisphere as America's backyard, he is implying U.S. ownership over that land.

And so the demands of the Donroe Doctrine as well as Trump's other foreign interests require reducing our government's responsibilities to that of financing its military. But are the President's priorities here the same as the majority of Americans? 

Why the big increase in defense spending? Did not Trump say that it was in anticipation for fighting new wars?  What new wars is Trump talking about? Is Trump speculating what it might take to get some of the nations in the Western Hemisphere in line with his agenda? Here, Trump has had success in influencing some elections in some Western Hemisphere nations. But what will he do to those nations that are not so influenced? Also, is Trump anticipating more Middle East entanglements? And is Trump planning to eventually have a war with China? Are Americans willing to sacrifice their republic to satisfy Trump's appetite for domination and/or acquisition?

And speaking of imperialism, didn't Trump express imperial intentions when he talked about annexing Canada or threatening to use force to do the same to Greenland? Didn't Trump say that he could do anything he wanted to do with Cuba?

And so it seems that Trump is seeking a position of an emperor and/or hegemon. Does the cost of that combination require such executive control of the budget and other facets of government, that allows the President to curtail or eliminate certain rights and benefits? Are there other reasons why Trump wants to remove the Federal Government's support for our current social safety net programs?

And what about the American people. I don't know what the polls say but my preliminary reading of the MAGA doctrine says that Trump's vision for the future includes some key elements which go against what MAGA devotees voted for. And, being that many of those MAGA followers are some of my fellow religiously conservative Christians, I can safely say that at least some of them are no longer keen on keeping the Republic. For some prefer a strongman leader because we religiously conservative Christians have a penchant for authoritarianism. For others, the emergence of the LGBT community from the margins of society have caused  them to lose faith in our democracy. I have even heard some of them even say that they prefer a government led by Putin to supporting full equality for those in the LGBT community. And considering that Project 2025, which Trump seems to be following, is the work of organizations like the Heritage Foundation, conservative preference for a strongman leader as opposed to a republic is significant.

And finally, we need to look at who financially benefits from Trump's imperial and hegemonic dreams. Is it not the Military Industrial Complex including the executives, shareholders, and those employed by the companies in that complex? And there are others besides those in the Military Industrial Complex who also greatly benefit from Trump's imperial and hegemonic dreams. How many of them prefer personal financial gain to keeping our republic?

Because of Trump values-free agenda, he has majored in promoting a transactional agenda. That agenda measures the value of decisions by profit margins. And so all decisions are measured by the amount of profit that can be acrued by Trump and his major donors. The problem with a republic, when the republic takes the form of a representative democracy, is that its emphasis on principles of equality and the value of each individual  person works against the governmental needs of supporting an empire. And the question for America is whether there are enough Americans, most of whom if not all, who have been raised in a consumer-oriented society, who are concerned enough with principles of equality and the value of each person to still prefer a republic.

What values and prinicples are needed to maintain a representative democratic republic? One value is treasuring the sanctity of human life. Besides the abortion issue, when a nation so values the human life of immigrants, especially those who are emigrating to escape poverty and/or violence, so that it freely takes in those who are emigrating to stay alive. Another way of valuing the sanctity of human life is to try to ensure that there are enough jobs with living wages, enough affordable access to food and healthcare, and the realistic chance of economic upward mobility for those in the lower economic classes.

Another essential value to our democratic republic is to protect the equal rights of all people within one's borders regardless of race, religion, national identity, language, sexual orientation, or gender identity. We should note that regardless of the democratic processes we employ, without equality we have no democracy. What we would have instead is some kind of ethnocracy or classocracy with the latter consisting of either oligarchy or plutocracy. And the best way of preserving equality is to work to ensure the equal rights of others.

There are other ways of preserving a democratic republic, especially in the area of voting rights. We need to realize that federal id cards for voting based on birth certificates usually makes it difficult for many in economic lower classes where birth records are more difficult to recover because of the recovery process or the lack of formal record keeping at the time of birth. Those who want federal id cards for voting are not concerned with the obstacles that many in the lower economic classes face in obtaining such id cards. Instead, they are more concerned with restricting voting to only certain American citizens.

The U.S.A. will soon be 250 years-old. It has a complicated history. While those obsessed with patriotism will, at best, acknowledge that America is not perfect; others will point out that perfection is not the issue, direction is. And up until Trump's Republican Party Revolution, we could see a very slow but positive social-justice direction of the nation just by looking at the number and identity of groups that were emerging from the margins of society. That direction was positive however slight and slow it was. That positive direction was due to prioritizing values over interests, principles over transactionalism when the they clashed.

Trump's Republican Party Revolution has changed the direction of the nation in several ways. Not only has the nation more strongly pursuing a transactional direction that prioritizes profit margins over people, it is becoming more authoritarian. And note the pairing here. When we are more concerned with principles of equality and the value of people, we tend to be more democratic in how we are governed. When we measure value by profit margins, we also place a higher value on domination, we look to authoritarianism. And that is not only true when we passively look on while oligarchy gains more influence on our government, it is also the case when we become more ethnocratic such as what exists in Christian Nationalism.

And so America at 250 faces a crossroads. Will it restore that slight but positive direction toward a more equal and just society and nation, or will Trump's Republican Revolution become more and more the status quo of our nation. Please note that all of the negative end results that Marx saw in Capitalism are incarnated in Trump. We cannot have both Trump's Republican Revolution providing the new status quo for our nation while maintaining a democracy with equality. The more we slide down Trump's rabbit hole, the more authoritarian, and thus darker, our status quo and thus our future becomes. And the defense against such a future is simple. We need to be vigilant in defending the equality of others in the nation. For in so doing, we prioritize principles of equality and the value of each person  over profit margins when they clash.




Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Views From The Outside For June 30, 2026

 Views From The Outside

The purpose of this page is to list news stories and reports from mostly Western sources outside of the U.S. You can use Google Translate to translate articles that are printed in another language. 

So far, news sources include:

International

From Canada

From England

From France

From Germany

From Russian Source 

From Spain

From Switzerland

From Ukraine


<< Previous Views                                                        Next Views >>