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As this editor has argued, “Christian nationalist” is the new “white supremacist.” “White supremacist” lost all meaning from progressives using it to describe everyone they disagreed with. Not believing in man-made climate change was white supremacist.

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The term lost its bite, so progressives had to come up with a new epithet, and they settled on Christian nationalist, citing Christians like Speaker Mike Johnson as evidence that they were taking over the country.

This editor has yet to hear a convincing, consistent definition of Christian nationalist, but POLITICO’s Heidi Przbyla went on MSNBC to define it for us. Christian nationalists — not all Christians, mind you — have one thing in common: they believe that bit about man being endowed with certain inalienable rights granted by their creator. Przbyla says they believe rights come from God and not any earthly authority — not Congress, not the Supreme Court.

And they’re right. 

President Barack Obama was a big believer that the government granted people their rights. Conservatives — not just Christian nationalists — believe that our founding documents prevent the government from taking away our rights.

Check out this brain trust:

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So if not for Christian nationalists, we’d properly believe that the right to life and liberty comes from the government. And that the government would be able to take those rights away.

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So if you’re a “good” Christian and not a Christian nationalist, you believe our inalienable rights come from Congress. OK.

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