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They’ll believe anything

I try not to be critical of conservative Evangelicals’ religious beliefs but ever since they threw in their lot with the libertine conman Donald Trump it’s been clear that they don’t actually walk the walk. It’s more like a social club or a tribal identity than a real religion and I don’t think we need to keep up the pretense that there is some spiritual element to their political activities. They are right wingers, period.

And guess what? It’s all blowing back on the religious leaders now:

QAnon conspiracy theories have burrowed so deeply into American churches that pastors are expressing alarm — and a new poll shows the bogus teachings have become as widespread as some denominations.

The problem with misinformation and disinformation is that people — lots of people — believe it. And they don’t believe reality coming from the media and even their ministers.

Russell Moore,one of America’s most respected evangelical Christian thinkers, told me he’s “talking literally every day to pastors, of virtually every denomination, who are exhausted by these theories blowing through their churches or communities.”

“Several pastors told me that they once had to talk to parents dismayed about the un-Christian beliefs of their grown children,” Moore added. But now, the tables have turned.

That stunning window into the country’s congregations followed a major poll, out last week: 15% of Americans, the poll found, agree with the QAnon contention that “the government, media, and financial worlds in the U.S. are controlled by a group of Satan-worshipping pedophiles who run a global child sex trafficking operation.”

The online poll was taken by Ipsos in March for the Public Religion Research Institute and Interfaith Youth Core. (Poll: 5,625 U.S. adults. Margin of error for full survey: ±1.5%)

“For those who hope that the events of January 6 are in our past, I think this data gives little in the way of assurance,” said Kristin Du Mez, a Calvin University historian of gender, faith and politics, and author of “Jesus and John Wayne.”

The poll found that Hispanic Protestants (26%) and white evangelical Protestants (25%) were more likely to agree with the QAnon philosophies than other groups. (Black Protestants were 15%, white Catholics were 11% and white mainline Protestants were 10%.)

As a New York Times headline put it: “QAnon Now as Popular in U.S. as Some Major Religions, Poll Suggests.”

Du Mez told me that the factors that produced this result include the decades conservative evangelicals spent “sowing seeds of doubt about the mainstream media”:

“There’s also an emphasis in certain circles on deciphering biblical prophecies that bears some similarities to decoding QAnon conspiracies — the idea that there is a secret meaning hidden within the text that can be discerned by individuals who have eyes to see.”

“This isn’t just a problem for faith communities, of course,” the professor added. “It is deeply troubling in terms of the health of our democracy.”

Moore, who recently joined Christianity Today magazine after serving as the top political voice of the Southern Baptist Convention, said that for many, QAnon is “taking on all of the characteristics of a cult, from authoritarian gurus … to predictions that don’t come true.”

Context: Q first took hold on social media with a videogame-like structure, inviting the curious on a quest to unlock successive layers of hidden knowledge, Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg points out.

Then its anonymous gurus promised a series of millenarian-style big reveals that never materialized.

They don’t care if the reveals never materialize. They are superstitious primitives who can obviously rationalize anything. As I have said many times, the upside is that we no longer have to allow them to dictate the definition of morality for the whole country as they were allowed to do for at least 3 decades.

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