- Pronoun
- she/her
This discussion is ridiculous. My point was, explicitly, that you can say it, if you define it strictly as meaning just "this happens to be the majority". However, Pwnemon was not using it like that; he was implicitly reasoning, on the basis that the US is a "Christian nation", that church and state don't particularly need to be separated. My argument is that "there happens to be a Christian majority" does not equal "the state should grant privileges to Christians" (and yes, establishing a state church is granting privileges to Christians: it's funding their religious institution with everyone's tax dollars), any more than "there happens to be a white majority" equals "the state should grant privileges to white people". Calling the US a "Christian nation" is just a way of dressing this argument up to look less unfortunate implications-y than otherwise.
(Before somebody starts complaining about things like state-sponsored health care being the same thing: no, it isn't, because then the health care is for everyone; you just happen not to end up needing it unless you get sick or have an accident. It is still there for you when you need it. A Christian church, on the other hand, is only/mostly there for Christians, hence the privilege.)
(Before somebody starts complaining about things like state-sponsored health care being the same thing: no, it isn't, because then the health care is for everyone; you just happen not to end up needing it unless you get sick or have an accident. It is still there for you when you need it. A Christian church, on the other hand, is only/mostly there for Christians, hence the privilege.)
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