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Sorry, this I thoroughly disagree with and know quite a bit about. There is a deep hatred at the core of American Christianity. And no, Obama does not count as a "good" one, his administration took countless deliberate actions against those less fortunate that would've made "Jesus" fly into a rage like the money-changers incident. You can't be serious. Drone strikes on innocent civilians? Deporting people seeking a better life for themselves and their family? How about Guantanamo, real Christian stuff going on there? Closing that was a direct campaign promise.
This is the kind of stuff I mean, I don't think you have a very accurate view at all. Again, all the truly loving and caring Christians I meet become less "Christian" over time. It's just the ones who can tolerate the ugliness that retain the label, with exceptions (in my experience) being extremely rare.
I'm not calling Obama a saint, I'm just saying he didn't preach hatred like Republicans love to do. His drone strikes, his failure to close Guantanamo, his betrayal of whistleblowers, deportations, were absolutely not good. Personally I think a big part of it was his eagerness to compromise with Republicans. But even if it was all him, I'd say there's still a massive difference between him and any recent Republican president.
But you can have Obama if you want. It's not about him, my point is that good Christians do exist even in the US. They just don't make the most political noise. Jimmy Carter, MLK, plenty of unknown Christian activists who fight for justice in many ways. Maybe they are a minority, but at least some exist.
My point is that Christians don't get to enjoy an assumption that they don't wish for the suffering of others.
There's a kernel of hatred at the core of the religion, by way of "source of all moral truth also insists that some people will be sentenced to extreme suffering for not believing the same".
In my experience, and unsurprising given the discrimination at the very core of the belief system - the vast majority of Christians (American ones, regardless of political persuasion or even voting record) are more than happy to let that seed grow and express itself in various ways.
Your point seems to have ended with "one group of those are very vocal about that hatred" and also "there are some good Christians".
Okay.
Those are weak uninteresting points. They certainly don't justify any assumption of Christian good will. Much like any assumption of some kind of "benevolent imperialism" by the cultural "West" is thoroughly behind us today, so is any such assumption. Christians have had ample time to emphasize what matters about their Christianness and they have done so. The evidence speaks for itself.
People who loudly proclaim in the political arena how God will punish the people they happen to hate, certainly don't deserve that assumption. But they also don't deserve the assumption that they're honest Christians. They do in many ways the exact opposite of what Christ told us to do. And they preach the exact opposite.
It's heartbreaking that they have come to dominate the public view of what Christianity is. And they play that game really cleverly. But what they do is not about Christianity. It's about identity, exclusion, and justifying their hate.
I just saw someone on a different forum point out that Christian Nationalists aren't Christians who also happen to be nationalists; they're nationalists who use Christianity for their identity.