The global assault upon Christianity comes largely from the same body of elites who are engaged in the general war against free speech. Probably the attack upon Christianity has been going on much longer, at least throughout the 20th century, beginning with the liberal Christian critique of the established Christian doctrines. Much earlier, people like Thomas Paine, in The Age of Reason (1794), Paine being one of the American Founding Fathers, argued that Christianity was false, although he claimed to believe in a God (deism), but did not say which one. Variants of these sorts of arguments have filtered down over time, and found their place in many books on Amazon.com, now.
While there has been an intellectual movement to atheism, particularly from communism, the West has shed its Chrisian values with each passing year and decade. Thus, abortion, once illegal and a sin (it is still a sin, regardless of what the majority think), is now accepted by the majority of both the US and Australian populations, men and women included. Homosexuality now as well. But is never ended there, as now people can be arrested for silently praying outside abortion clinics, these places being the new temples of libertarianism.
Brownstone has done a good job joining the dots on this one. In summary, the attack upon Christianity by the ruling elites has occurred as they are seeking absolute power now and want no competition.
https://brownstone.org/articles/the-global-assault-on-religious-freedom/
"Aspiring tyrants are now brazen in their crusade against free speech. John Kerry, Tim Walz, Hillary Clinton, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Kentanji Brown Jackson, Letitia James, and their allies in academia and the media have been unequivocal in their calls to usurp the protections of the First Amendment.
These threats are not hypothetical. The West has weaponized the judicial system to punish Steve Bannon, Julian Assange, Mark Steyn, Douglass Mackey, VDARE, Roger Ver, Pavel Durov, and others for their disobedience to the Washington establishment.
But beyond these political persecutions, a more insidious – and far less reported – assault on free expression is taking place.
Christianity is under attack in the West, yet the statement sounds hyperbolic because our news media shuns the subject.
In England this week, a British Army veteran named Adam Smith-Connor was convicted for praying silently on a public street. Police approached Smith-Connor and told him they were there to "inquire as to [his] activities." "Well, I'm praying," he explained in an exchange captured on video.
The officer followed up, "What is the nature of your prayer today?" "I'm praying for my son," he responded.
Smith-Connor was praying silently near an abortion facility, which the British police ruled violated censorship laws in the United Kingdom. He prayed with his back to the facility "to avoid any impression of approaching or engaging any women entering or leaving the facility," his lawyers wrote.
His legal fund explained, "According to the rules of the censorship zone in which he was praying, if Adam were thinking about any other issue – the economy, immigration, or healthcare, for example – he wouldn't have been fined. It was the nature of his thoughts, his silent prayer, that got him in legal trouble."
The Judge found Smith-Connor guilty because his "hands were clasped, and his head was slightly bowed."
While British authorities warp the legal system to attack peaceful, silent prayer, Canada's government has been complicit in the mass destruction of homes of Christian faith.
In Canada, arsonists have torched dozens of churches since a 2021 hoax spread that there were mass graves of Indigenous children buried under Canadian churches. At the time, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that anger against the Catholic Church was "fully understandable."
Three years later, the claims have been debunked, yet the arson continues. Notably, Trudeau and allies like Kerry and Clinton have nothing to denounce the disinformation that spawned this destruction.
From the Jacobins in France to the Bolsheviks in Russia, Christianity has long been the target of revolutionaries and society's nihilistic malcontents. America long considered itself an exception to the religious persecutions of Europe, but the Covid response disproved this point of pride.
In May of 2020, Kentucky State Police arrived at an Easter service to issue notices that attendance was criminal. They recorded the congregants' license plate numbers and issued warnings that violators were subject to further sanction. In Mississippi that year, police issued citations to a church congregation that hosted a drive-in service despite attendees remaining in their vehicles for the entire service.
In Idaho, police arrested Christians for removing their masks to sing psalms outdoors in September 2020. "We were just singing songs," said Christ Church Pastor Ben Zornes. But that was no excuse for the sin of violating an irrational and unscientific cloth commandment. "At some point in time you have to enforce," the local police chief explained.
In New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo threatened residents with $1,000 fines for attending "drive-in" services in May 2020. "We're not trying to be rebellious," said Pastor Samson Ryman. "We're just trying to be safe and reach our community with the gospel of Jesus Christ in these difficult times when people are having anxiety, worry, different mental concerns, and they want to get some spiritual help, through the word of God." On May 3, 2020, Ryman held his first drive-in service in upstate New York with 23 attendees in 18 vehicles. The next day, Cuomo's police force issued a cease-and-desist letter.
In California, the Santa Clara Health Department used GPS data to monitor congregants at a local evangelical church. The government partnered with a data mining company to create a "geofence" (a digital boundary) around the church's property, monitoring over 65,000 mobile devices to record any citizens that spent more than four minutes in the area.
Governor Gavin Newsom limited church attendance to 25% of capacity and banned singing. In Nevada, the Governor allowed casinos to hold 500 gamblers while churches were limited to 50 congregants, no matter their respective capacity limits.
Around the country, governors deemed churches "non-essential" and barred them from opening their doors. Meanwhile, marijuana dispensaries, liquor stores, abortionists, and lotteries received the protection of the arbitrary label of "essential services."
The Supreme Court – as a result of Chief Justice John Roberts' decisive fifth vote – upheld the attacks on religion until the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the appointment of Amy Coney Barrett in October 2020.
Notably, leaders had a much different approach to the George Floyd riots that June. When asked about the double standard, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio responded, "When you see a nation, an entire nation, simultaneously grappling with an extraordinary crisis seeded in 400 years of American racism, I'm sorry, that is not the same question as the understandably aggrieved store owner or devout religious person who wants to go back to services."
The message to that "devout religious person" was clear: there is a state religion that supersedes your First Amendment right to worship. They anointed secular saints and banished heretics.
In Washington, DC, the Mayor renamed Christmas Eve "Dr. Anthony S. Fauci Day" in 2020, a declaration only rivaled by President Biden's proclamation naming Easter Sunday "Transgender Day of Visibility" in 2024.
Christianity threatens the regime because it demands faith in something greater than the state and devotion to a creed more defined than the ever-changing slogans of socially fashionable talking points. The assault on religion is not collateral damage in the war against free expression; suppressing worship is fundamental to the cause of tyranny."