Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 6, 2015
The demographic decline is leading to a decline in personal identity. And vise versa, I’d argue.
Less people than ever now identify as both “White” and “Christian” in the United States.
RNS:
“The U.S. religious landscape is undergoing a dramatic transformation that is fundamentally reshaping American politics and culture,” said Dan Cox, research director for Public Religion Research Institute.
Last week, PRRI released the American Values Atlas, an interactive online tool that compiles data about Americans’ opinions, identities, and values. One of the biggest takeaways of this years’ study was that, for the first time ever, America is not a majority Protestant nation.
Part of this shift is due to the growing number of religiously unaffiliated Americans, now at 22 percent nationally and 34 percent of young people.
The study also revealed that in 19 states, white Christians are now a minority. The list of states where this is the case includes a few surprises. Several Bible Belt states such as Georgia (No. 16) made the list; Texas (No. 7) had the same population of white Christians as New York (No. 5).
While one might want to blame these shifts on “secularism,” one force at work seems to be America’s increasing ethnic diversity. According to PRRI, Hispanic Catholics are a growing proportion of Catholics and evangelical Protestants are becoming less white.
Here are the 19 states which have collapsed (Hawaii didn’t actually collapse, it was always just a colony that became a state):
1. Hawaii – 20 percent
2. California – 25 percent
3. New Mexico – 33 percent
4. Nevada – 36 percent
5. New York – 37 percent
6. Alaska – 37 percent
7. Texas – 37 percent
8. Maryland – 38 percent
9. Arizona – 38 percent
10. Washington – 42 percent
11. Florida – 42 percent
12. Oregon – 43 percent
13. New Jersey – 43 percent
14. Colorado – 44 percent
15. Illinois – 46 percent
16. Georgia – 46 percent
17. Vermont – 47 percent
18. Delaware – 48 percent
19. Louisiana – 49 percent
This included Whites who identify as any form of Christian, including Mormon.
The collapse of Christianity among Whites is the biggest thing which has led to the invasion.
To clarify: that is to say the collapse of our identity has led to the invasion, with Christianity being, traditionally, the biggest part of our identity.
To clarify further: aspects of pre-Christian Europeanism served as a basis for the Christian faith, and thus they were carried through history by the Christian faith. Beliefs about the supernatural or even the spiritual are secondary aspects of Christianity. The core of it is a system through which to define and maintain collective identity and social normalcy.
I personally identify as Christian because I identify as European. There is nothing about the traditional system of Christianity which I can take issue with. It reinforced morality, individual and collective identity and the image of man and contained in it the definitions of a cultural and social structure.
Modern Christianity is of course something very different, being a cult of personal happiness and belief in weird forms of voodoo. This has led to both a fleeing of the faith (identity) by young people, as well as a total loss of utility to those who still remain a part of what has become the mainstream of Christianity.
I do not attend church, nor do I consider myself classically religious. I simply believe in both God and in my Ancestors, and so have no reason to try and fix what isn’t broken as far as religion goes.
If we had maintained traditional Christian values, we would not be in the situation we are in right now.