The following article claims that within a year or two the percent of
the US population that is "protestant" will have fallen bellow 50% for
the first time since Jamestown settlers.
I disagree with this assessment if one is going to call "protestant"
those denominations that have been for individual conscience against the
imposition of theocracy -- which is its original foundation.
We in the US have been living in a de facto theocracy
at least since Brown vs the Board of Education in 1954. Correct me if I'm wrong, but that is
the first time that protestant leadership capitulated, en masse,
to a government action which violated freedom of association and
hence freedom of religion. (One can easily argue that prior imposition of public education did not so violate the desires of association of the communities in which it was applied, except in principle. School bussing and other follow-ons to the 1954 ruling were clearly taking this theoretic violation to practice in a way that the vast majority disagreed with at that time.) That it was done to the children is
even more in line with historic maneuvers of theocracy. The only
other contender I can think of is the Telecommunications Act of
1934 when monopoly rights to new broadcast technologies were
granted by the government to private concerns -- but that is a
bit more problematic as it merely violated freedom of speech, an
obviously lesser principle than freedom of religion which entails
freedom of speech only to the extent that one is allowed to
declare one's independence -- one's secession -- which may, in turn,
entail expulsion from the fora of one's former order.
At the present time the war is on between theocracies: Catholic,
Islamic and, of course, the currently ruling de facto theocracy
of political correctness which is largely a secularized Jewish
construction (see Kevin MacDonald's "Culture of Critique"), as
was the Telecommunications Act of 1934 in its grant of monopoly
rights to the networks (see Neal Gabler's "An Empire of Their Own:
How the Jews Invented Hollywood")
Some people say the US died at earlier points in time -- perhaps.
However, the underlying principle of the Declaration of Independence,
that every human has a right to "the separate and equal station to which
the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them" is protestant.
This established the right of secession as the primordial right over all
others -- including the divine right of kings, popes or other
potentates. That is the true origin of protestantism, of freedom of
religion (to choose the social order in which one invests one's life)
and of abolition of slavery.
Such a declaration is anathema to many who otherwise think of themselves
as opposed to political correctness. They're just substituting one
theocracy for another and they have in common, with political
correctness, a slave-making mentality.
July 21, 2004, 12:18AM
Study finds number of Protestants is falling
Soon, less than 50% of Americans will claim the faith
By RICHARD VARA
Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle
For the first time in U.S. history, the number of Protestants soon will
slip below 50 percent of the nation's population, according to a new survey.
"As early as this year and certainly, if the projections hold, within
the next two years, the majority of American adults will not be
Protestants for the first time since the founding of colonial
Jamestown," said Tom W. Smith, director of the National Opinion Research
Center's General Social Survey.
"We were always at least a majority Protestant country, and that is
about to change."
The survey, which was released Tuesday, has studied various aspects of
American life, including its religious dimension, for 32 years.
From 1972 to 1993, it found that Protestants constituted 63 percent of
the national population. But the total declined to 52 percent in 2002.
The study mirrors results from a recent Harris County survey.
Protestants decreased from 56 percent in 1994 to 34 percent in 2004,
according to the Houston Area Survey directed by Stephen Klineberg, a
Rice University sociology professor.
...
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