DeSantis: ‘I don’t know how you could be a leader without having faith in God’

https://www.christianpost.com/news/ron-desantis-vows-to-restore-full-religious-freedom-in-the-us.html

DeathSantis is a Christian nationalist who believes the myth spread by Christian liars that the US is founded as a Christian nation by and for Christians.  His version of religious freedom is total control by the Christians so that they can force their views on everyone else.  His idea is to have the public pay for Christian schools and force Christian doctrines / moral standards on public school students.  He doesn’t seem to understand that there are non-Christians religious people along with people of no religious views.  He also buys deeply in to the myth that Christians are discriminated against and unfairly treated in the US.   This man and his kind must never be allowed to have authority and control over the government.  Hugs


Republican candidate vows to restore ‘full religious freedom’ in the US if elected president

Deathsantis
Republican presidential candidate Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks at the Pray Vote Stand Summit at the Omni Shoreham Hotel on September 15, 2023, in Washington, D.C. The summit featured remarks from multiple 2024 Republican Presidential candidates making their case to the conservative audience members. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Republican presidential candidate Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks at the Pray Vote Stand Summit at the Omni Shoreham Hotel on September 15, 2023, in Washington, D.C. The summit featured remarks from multiple 2024 Republican Presidential candidates making their case to the conservative audience members. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis highlighted the vital role faith in God plays in leadership as he explained how he will advance the cause of religious liberty if he becomes the 47th president of the United States. 

DeSantis, a candidate for the Republican nomination for president in 2024, addressed the crowd at the Family Research Council’s Pray, Vote, Stand Summit Friday, where he discussed his faith in God and outlined how he would protect religious liberty if elected president. 

“I don’t know how you could be a leader without having faith in God,” he said. “When you stand up for what’s right in this day and age, that is not going to be cost-free. You are going to face blowback, you’re going to face attacks, you’re going to face smears. And it’s the faith in God that gives you the strength to stand firm against the lies, against the deceit, against the opposition.” 

DeSantis credited his faith in God with giving him “the foundation to know that all the insults, all the nonsense they throw at you ultimately doesn’t matter because you are aiming higher.”

After expressing concerns about the current state of affairs in the U.S., DeSantis lamented that “we do have a spiritual decline in this country.” 

The candidate cited the practice of “forcibly closing churches and denying people their right to worship as they see fit” during the coronavirus lockdowns as one example of the spiritual decline engulfing the U.S. “The liquor stores were open, the strip clubs were open, but yet they shut the door on the people of faith,” he recalled. 

“I believe that reviving the spirit of America is essential to helping reverse America’s decline. And this revival is going to begin in our religious institutions, our places of work, each of our households, all the institutions that make up the bedrock of society,” he declared.

DeSantis warned of “threats to religious liberty the likes we have not seen throughout most of American history” and highlighted the need for “people to be able to live their faith in all aspects of their life” as “faith has been treated as secondary to secular concerns in culture.” 

“Attempts have been made to wipe our Judeo-Christian religious symbols from our national heritage and national culture. The Left, you know, they talk about saying you can’t be involved in religious practice if you’re in government because it would represent [an] ‘establishment of religion,’” he added. 

The presidential candidate refuted this argument, saying, “First of all, that’s not true. But second of all, they’re the ones that want to establish a religion. They just don’t want to establish traditional religions. They want political leftism to be the established religion of this country.”

DeSantis insisted that the effort to establish political leftism as the established religion of the country has led those who want to practice their faith in public to find themselves “only being able to do that up until the point it conflicts with [the leftist] agenda.” He pointed to the treatment of coach Joe Kennedy, a Washington state high school football coach who lost his job because of opposition to his effort to pray on the field after the game, as an example of how violations of religious liberty have become commonplace.

The governor noted that Kennedy’s victory at the U.S. Supreme Court was “hailed as a victory for religious liberty” while suggesting that “the fact that it even had to go to the U.S. Supreme Court shows us that religious liberty is not flourishing the way it should in our country.”

He then outlined how he would work to advance the cause of religious liberty if elected president.

“As your president, I’m going to get to work on restoring full religious freedom in this country,” he vowed. He pointed to nominating and placing “constitutionalist judges on the courts of appeal and on the U.S. Supreme Court” as an important step in achieving that goal, assuring the audience that “my nominees will reflect the jurisprudence of justices like Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito Jr.,” whom he referred to as “the two greatest justices on the court.” 

DeSantis also announced his intention to “end once and for all religious discrimination” by abolishing “all government regulations that force groups to choose between government funding and their faith.” He maintained that “instead, we’re going to actively incorporate the faith community in our administration.” 

“We will make sure that the faith community has a seat at the table as we work to do the business of the country,” he added. “We will also do what we’ve done in Florida. We have universal school choice in the state of Florida, and we need it nationwide. On day one, we’ll issue an executive order that ensures funding available to private non-religious schools must also be available to private, faith-based schools.” 

He continued: “We will stop the federal government from targeting men and women on the basis of their faith. Religious schools should not be pressured to violate the tenets of their faith. There will never be a question about whether a faith-based charity that serves the poor deserves First Amendment protections. We will seek the repeal of the Johnson Amendment, which suppresses the speech of our religious leaders.” 

DeSantis detailed how his administration would “ensure that the Judeo-Christian tradition and values that our nation was founded on are respected and are preserved.” Specifically, he expressed a desire to “create divisions of conscience and religious freedom in the Departments of Education, Labor, and [Health and Human Services] to protect religious liberty against all agencies of government.” 

“Even when God-fearing citizens have won in court, they have been forced to go through the time-consuming and invasive processes,” he lamented. “My Department of Justice will investigate and prosecute attacks on faith-based [crisis pregnancy] centers and pro-life activists, which the Biden administration is ignoring and they’re letting this go on.” 

DeSantis repeatedly discussed his record as Florida governor in his remarks and concluded his speech by describing his state as “the place where woke goes to die.” He told the audience, “As president, we are going to leave the woke mind virus in the dustbin of history, where it belongs, once and for all.” 

 

 

Ryan Foley is a reporter for The Christian Post. He can be reached at: ryan.foley@christianpost.com

 

If you can’t separate church and state you can’t govern and ultimately you wont survive as a country, Christianity is not the only existing religion in America Bootsie.

And his brand of “Christianity” is not the only brand.

But the unchurched Cultural Christians fall for it.

Actually, I’d much prefer a leader who understands that no invisible man in the sky is coming to save us, and we need to fix the laundry list of problems we have ourselves.

 

I’d love to see presidents and prime ministers who are openly atheist, and quite a few being openly LGBTQ+, and quite a few being ethically nonmonogamous. And, of course, all of them being progressive and genuinely committed to making their nations and the world better for ALL the people.

I don’t really care if they believe in god. I don’t but I do care about how they govern others that don’t believe as they do. That keep their beliefs private and separate from their policies.

I am sick to death of the Bible thumpers who keep acting as though non-believers have no right to leadership in America and who treat secularism and humanism as dirty words. They are full of bullshit. We are Americans. We are decent people. We do not need to be led by superstitious fools.

We have a memorial in Salem here to show that this religious terrorism has always been part of the fabric of America. In that case, it cost a number of women their lives.

The first smallpox insufflation clinic in Boston in the 18th century was firebombed by a mob shouting that it was the devil’s work.

And American culture in general is violently prudish compared to Europe, with the Puritan roots never escaped from as the reason why.

So I cannot agree that America is better. It never escaped its horrific roots to this day.

 

Speaking of countering BS, this protest sign is perfect:

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Floriduh…

HB3 AND THE CONSERVATIVE ATTACK ON ESG INVESTING

“Where Common Sense and Sound Investment Strategies Go to Die

https://thirdact.org/wp-con…

“At the time Ron DeSantis became Governor of Florida, the Florida
Retirement System (FRS1) was already in serious financial trouble, with
“unfunded pension liabilities” exceeding $30 billion. Under his
administration, that shortfall has risen to $36 billion, and losses continue to
mount. DeSantis’ politically motivated decision to promote an Anti-ESG2
investment strategy for FRS investments is increasing that funding shortfall.
This is placing the retirement savings and pensions of career state
employees at risk, unless Florida taxpayers are forced to pay for the
shortfall, to keep the FRS from failing.

“The massive FRS shortfall is only the tip of the HB3 iceberg. Governor
DeSantis’ anti-ESG political campaign has negatively affected a number of
Florida financial systems. Counties and municipalities are paying higher
interest on bonds
; Florida is walking away from billions in potential
investments and tens of thousands of good-paying jobs in renewable
energy; Florida is finding itself at a competitive disadvantage in attracting
new investments and businesses. And, just like the captain of the Titanic,
Governor DeSantis didn’t see it coming.

He’s pretty stupid, our taxes are paid to the county here for schools and fire, police and emergency and sanitation services. There is no mechanism in place since there is no state income tax to take it from Florida residents

 

6 thoughts on “DeSantis: ‘I don’t know how you could be a leader without having faith in God’

  1. Well, if DeSantis and other Republican leaders have faith in God, I don’t know which one it is; it certainly isn’t the Christian Biblical one, for certain. There’s no way they could/would do and say the things they do if they really believed in that God. There are consequences, forgiven or not.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hello Ali. Yes I do wonder at the god they worship. It seems more the OT stern vengeful god rather than the NT loving caring god. In some ways I suspect they really only worship themselves or others like them with more authority to rule. Remember these republicans do not want to represent the voters nor serve them. They want to rule. Hugs

      Liked by 1 person

      1. And even the OT vengeful God destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah because they would not feed their poorer sisters, not because of how they had sex. So their Bible and their God are not the same as the ones they tout. And He spared cities because of only a single righteous person, pointed out by one of God’s favorites, because that favorite asked. OTOH, the OT is very violent. Anyway. I think it said it all when someone recently told their minister that the Sermon on the Mount doesn’t fly anymore because it’s too weak.

        Liked by 1 person

    1. And there’s even more about how to recognize the “false prophet” (which, IMO, fits DJT perfectly).

      Plus, the Christians never or rarely read their bibles (and especially about the end times) and never hear anything from the pulpit (except how lucky they are to be “saved”) are totally clueless.

      Liked by 2 people

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