Hey Mr President! I represent evangelicals, televangelists and scientology like Kenneth Copeland, Joel Osteen, David Miscavige, etc.
We collectively call you out as a raping pedophile piece of shit living specimen who wouldn’t dare come after our tax-free status. FUCK YOU!
Honestly, churches should have always stayed the fuck out of politics or lose their tax exempt status. Of course, that rule does not apply to the weepy Republicans, because the rules never do. They cry about “religious freedom”, but want their cake and eat it, too, of course: the most radically right wing churches can say whatever the hell they want regarding telling their people how to vote and we all get to fund it, effectively.
Having the cake and eating it too is not an option for liberal churches, though.
please do, treasonous pedo rapist, please do. sew some division amongst your band of idiots
Is there some way we can make this more likely to occur? Maybe some AI videos of clergy calling him a shitty-pantsed child molester with small hands and short skyscrapers?
Seriously. Look, the piece of shit is in the oval office already, that ship has sailed. But we might actually have a good use for the cunt in this case. Let’s make the most of it!
Might be a good post for /c/LeopardsAteMyFace
How did religious people ever think he wasn’t just wrapping himself in the garb of piety to get elected? He was on tape talking about grabbing women by the pussy because ‘when you are famous they just let you do it’! Before the LAST time he was elected. Sheesh.
And… Scientology, on the issue of tax exempt status, really? Wow. Criminals. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Snow_White
The most religious of people seem to defer critical thinking to their leaders because it makes their brain too hurt to do so. They just want to be told what to do and what to think.
There are at least a couple groups:
- Those who believe that not suspending their disbelief will invite the devil into their hearts. They fear letting doubt in.
- Those who go to church for social connections. They fear not fitting in, or being pushed out.
- “brain too hurt”
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American Evangelicism is just fascism with wrapping paper and a bow. Their beliefs stand in stark constant to what Jesus actually taught, and they pick, choose, and misinterpret the Bible to support their pre-existing beliefs while discarding the rest. They lie to themselves and each other and speak in coded language. Since their outward appearance is simply a veneer covering their true beliefs, when Trump came along and started saying everything they felt, and doing the hideous actions they all want to do, it didn’t matter that he doesn’t hide behind a veneer or speak in coded language. He is a perfect reflection of who they truly are, and as a result they see him as a prophet or even Messiah.
It’s because the American Evangelicals are not, and have never been, who they claim to be. They’re hideous, hateful, selfish people that somewhere deep down knew they needed a cover for their horrendous nature.
Social media is a powerful tool in the post-truth world
He will only attack orgs that are against him. This will lead to the loss of many different kinds of 501©(3) organizations with good missions and actions. This is a continuation of dismantling current institutions, and silencing dissent.
He just might accidentally do one good thing.
Had me in the first half
Oh please let him actually do it. It would be one of the only positive things to come out of this toxic festering dung heap of an administration.
Unfortunately, it will only be the helpful and tolerant ones. TST, UU, Episcopal, etc. The worst will be supported and amplified.
I don’t think he’d have the ability to target specific churches like that, he’d have to remove the blanket religious tax exemption so it would apply to all of them. I think the only way he could target specific churches is if he somehow got them reclassified as not religious institutions and I’m not sure how he would manage that. Doing that to something like the church of scientology is one thing, it’s already on shaky ground, but trying the same thing on something like the Episcopal church is something else entirely. Unfortunately I could see him maybe succeeding at getting TST reclassified.
I am not certain that a trivial issue like “that’s unconstitutional” is going to present any kind of impediment to him.
amplified
It would not surprise me if he started appropriating our taxpayer dollars towards them.
Hey Mormons!!! What do you think of Trump?
During the last Presidential election, Utah’s numbers did not shift right. Historically Mormon’s vote as a block.
Emigration from other states is changing voting behavior in Utah with only 50% of the current population being LDS. Emigration might even be moving the state rightward since right radicals leave states like California for Republican states like Utah or Idaho.
A problem Mormon’s fail to understand is that they are not seen as Christian by Evangelicals. Thereby when religious purges come, Mormon’s are on the menu.
All churches in America need to start praying for Donny’s demise, show us what your god can do…
Seriously…
Wow 😮 Really coming full circle fucking around threatening a church’s tax exemption status because you don’t like free speech. If he wasn’t just a fucking dumbass narcissist, I would almost think he’s being clever, but there is no way.
The religious right movement was born when the federal government took away the tax exemption status of Bob Jones University for refusing to desegregate. This would become the first (but certainly not the last) major case argued in court by the new right against the federal government on the grounds of religious freedom.
I really have to wonder if sometimes his sycophants give him really bad advice on purpose because they think it’s funny that he’s always too dumb to get the joke until it’s too late to take it back.
Or maybe not and the fabric of reality has just torn. Heritage Foundation. The moral majority. Ronald Reagan. Donald Trump. Project 2025. This is literally where it all started:
The real origins of the religious right
They’ll tell you it was abortion. Sorry, the historical record’s clear: It was segregation.
In Green v. Kennedy (David Kennedy was secretary of the treasury at the time), decided in January 1970, the plaintiffs won a preliminary injunction, which denied the “segregation academies” tax-exempt status until further review.… Later that year, President Richard Nixon ordered the Internal Revenue Service to enact a new policy denying tax exemptions to all segregated schools in the United States. Under the provisions of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which forbade racial segregation and discrimination, discriminatory schools were not—by definition—“charitable” educational organizations, and therefore they had no claims to tax-exempt status; similarly, donations to such organizations would no longer qualify as tax-deductible contributions.
On June 30, 1971, the United States District Court for the District of Columbia issued its ruling in the case, now Green v. Connally (John Connally had replaced David Kennedy as secretary of the Treasury). The decision upheld the new IRS policy: “Under the Internal Revenue Code, properly construed, racially discriminatory private schools are not entitled to the Federal tax exemption provided for charitable, educational institutions, and persons making gifts to such schools are not entitled to the deductions provided in case of gifts to charitable, educational institutions.”
Paul Weyrich, the late religious conservative political activist and co-founder of the Heritage Foundation, saw his opening. The Green v. Connally ruling provided a necessary first step: It captured the attention of evangelical leaders , especially as the IRS began sending questionnaires to church-related “segregation academies,” including Falwell’s own Lynchburg Christian School, inquiring about their racial policies. Falwell was furious. “In some states,” he famously complained, “It’s easier to open a massage parlor than a Christian school.”
One such school, Bob Jones University—a fundamentalist college in Greenville, South Carolina—was especially obdurate. The IRS had sent its first letter to Bob Jones University in November 1970 to ascertain whether or not it discriminated on the basis of race. The school responded defiantly: It did not admit African Americans.
Although Bob Jones Jr., the school’s founder, argued that racial segregation was mandated by the Bible, Falwell and Weyrich quickly sought to shift the grounds of the debate, framing their opposition in terms of religious freedom rather than in defense of racial segregation. For decades, evangelical leaders had boasted that because their educational institutions accepted no federal money (except for, of course, not having to pay taxes) the government could not tell them how to run their shops—whom to hire or not, whom to admit or reject. The Civil Rights Act, however, changed that calculus.
Bob Jones University did, in fact, try to placate the IRS—in its own way. Following initial inquiries into the school’s racial policies, Bob Jones admitted one African-American, a worker in its radio station, as a part-time student; he dropped out a month later. In 1975, again in an attempt to forestall IRS action, the school admitted blacks to the student body, but, out of fears of miscegenation, refused to admit unmarried African-Americans. The school also stipulated that any students who engaged in interracial dating, or who were even associated with organizations that advocated interracial dating, would be expelled.
The IRS was not placated. On January 19, 1976, after years of warnings—integrate or pay taxes—the agency rescinded the school’s tax exemption.
For many evangelical leaders, who had been following the issue since Green v. Connally, Bob Jones University was the final straw. As Elmer L. Rumminger, longtime administrator at Bob Jones University, told me in an interview, the IRS actions against his school “alerted the Christian school community about what could happen with government interference” in the affairs of evangelical institutions. “That was really the major issue that got us all involved.”
Weyrich saw that he had the beginnings of a conservative political movement, which is why, several years into President Jimmy Carter’s term, he and other leaders of the nascent religious right blamed the Democratic president for the IRS actions against segregated schools—even though the policy was mandated by Nixon, and Bob Jones University had lost its tax exemption a year and a day before Carter was inaugurated as president. Falwell, Weyrich and others were undeterred by the niceties of facts. In their determination to elect a conservative, they would do anything to deny a Democrat, even a fellow evangelical like Carter, another term in the White House.
The Bob Jones University case merits a postscript. When the school’s appeal finally reached the Supreme Court in 1982, the Reagan administration announced that it planned to argue in defense of Bob Jones University and its racial policies. A public outcry forced the administration to reconsider; Reagan backpedaled by saying that the legislature should determine such matters, not the courts. The Supreme Court’s decision in the case, handed down on May 24, 1983, ruled against Bob Jones University in an 8-to-1 decision. Three years later Reagan elevated the sole dissenter, William Rehnquist, to chief justice of the Supreme Court.
Thank you. I don’t think xtian segregation academies are discussed nearly enough in the typical discourse.
Omg to this day, school voucher programs are still linked up to heritage foundation spin offs and are such a fucking racket for this fucking cult.
To be clear, by cult I mean the “religious” right movement, not Christianity. There is nothing Christian about any of this. From the very beginning it has always just been a pyramid scheme to allow people to gain power and profit from the most despicable shit while claiming they do it all in the name of Jesus.
This is the shit that Jesus warned about; Woe to the world because of the things that cause people to stumble. Such things must come, but woe to the person through whom they come.
In other words, everyone stumbles and messes up from time to time. It’s an inevitable fact of life. But that is very different than being the vehicle that brings stumbling blocks to other people. The religious right movement and everybody that has ever profited or continues to profit from it, acts as the vehicle that helps intentionally spread this propaganda and misinformation to other people.
He only has one trick, bully.
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Haha Mike Johnson finally gets the inevitable slap in his face by this two faced troll.
This is a fascist country. That’s fascist behavior. Welcome to the New Normal.
Always was even from the start. Rotten to the core with a thin veneer of liberalism for looks only.






