I hesitate to continue writing about Donald Trump, as I want to be clear that I do not view him as any kind of messianic figure, savior of the nation, or a “Christian” hero. He is not—he is simply the result of a nation that is, if nothing but for a momentary reprieve in our ever-downward spiral, waking up to the corruption that has taken place in our government and that our churches and leaders have gone along with.
However, it is without a doubt undeniable that he has done a lot of good things since taking office. And one of the best moves of his presidency was wielding the axe against the bloated, parasitic bureaucracy known as USAID.
For years, this so-called "aid" agency has been nothing but a taxpayer-funded slush fund for the leftist agenda, funneling billions into the pockets of radical activists, globalist NGOs, and fraudulent "Christian" organizations that exist solely to undermine a truly conservative worldview. Trump saw through it, slashed its funding, and sent nearly 10,000 of its globe-trotting bureaucrats packing. And really, good riddance.
For a country already drowning in debt, hemorrhaging taxpayer dollars to fund anti-American nonsense is beyond foolish—it’s criminal. Why should hardworking Americans be forced to bankroll groups like World Relief, a "Christian" organization that takes millions in federal funding only to push leftist open-border policies and soft-pedal woke ideology under the guise of "compassion"? (And, by the way, if you haven’t read up on them, do yourself a favor: World Relief is a left-wing front). These organizations aren’t "Christian ministries"—they’re just Democrat-aligned activist groups wrapped in Bible-speak, a pious smokescreen for political subversion.
But what if I told you that one of these leftist groups, an Evangelical political organization known as Redeeming Babel, who created the infamous The After Party Sunday School curriculum, was getting its own cut of that sweet, sweet taxpayer cash?
You may remember last year when these radical leftist evangelical infiltrators—Curtis Chang, Russell Moore, and David French—decided to bless us with yet another attempt at pacifying the church into docility. They called it The After Party, a curriculum supposedly designed to "heal political divisions" in the church.
Sounds noble, right? Until you remember that the people pushing it are the exact same people who have spent years attacking conservative Christians while cozying up to progressives.
Remember Chang? You might recall that I published a clip of this guy making one of the most mind-numbingly stupid theological statements in recent history. Chang—this self-styled theological thought leader—actually claimed that getting the COVID vaccine was like ‘redeeming an abortion’. This is not satire. According to Chang, sticking a government-mandated needle in your arm is some kind of theological atonement for the murder of the unborn.
Here’s that clip: