And why should they be, when we see crazy cult stuff like this every time it snows?
The cult is still going strong https://t.co/GgOkxm3UFR
— William Teach2 ??????? #refuseresist (@WTeach2) November 20, 2022
Most U.S. adults — including a solid majority of those identifying as Christians and large numbers of people who follow other major religious traditions — consider the Earth sacred and believe God gave humans a duty to care for its oceans, forests and breathable air, according to a new survey.
That view doesn’t necessarily translate to an active role in limiting climate change, however. And while politics can explain the bulk of the reason, there are other factors at work.
A Pew Research Center survey out Thursday finds that highly religious Americans (those who say they pray each day, regularly attend religious services and consider religion very important in their lives) are far less likely than other U.S. adults to express concern about warming temperatures around the globe.
Perhaps they just aren’t interested in joining a cult based less on science and more on political power?
The Pew survey reveals several reasons why religious Americans tend to be less concerned about climate change. First and foremost: politics: The main driver of U.S. public opinion about the climate is political party, not religion.
Highly religious Americans are more inclined than others to identify with or lean toward the Republican Party, and Republicans tend to be much less likely than Democrats to believe that human activity (such as burning fossil fuels CL00, +0.19% to heat and cool homes, ship in-demand goods, or take to the country’s vast highway system) is warming the Earth. And, most of these respondents, even those tying humans to climate change, do not necessarily believe that climate change ranks as a serious problem, Pew said.
It could be that they see that they see the Democrats loathing the religious, denigrating them, trying to limit their ability to practice their religion, hence, they lean Republican. They see a political party that loves to kill the unborn. And worshiping Doing Something about ‘climate change’, which requires subservience to the State.
Climate change does not seem to be a major area of focus in U.S. congregations. Among all U.S. adults who say they attend religious services at least once or twice a month, just 8% say they hear a great deal or quite a bit about climate change in sermons.
Why would they? They’re there to hear the Word of God, the teachings of Jesus, not a state pushed cult.
(CBS News) Those surveyed who said “they pray each day, regularly attend religious services and consider religion very important in their lives,” were much less likely to be concerned about rising temperatures, in comparison to non-religious Americans, or Americans of non-Christian religions, Pew found. And only 8% of those who identified as highly religious said they were “very concerned” about climate change.
Just 8%. They have other concerns. Homelessness, feeding the hungry, giving shelter, and so much more, things they can do something about, not cult beliefs that require them to give up their Christian beliefs and worship government.
On the other hand, the study found that “members of non-Christian religions and people who do not identify with any religion…consistently express the highest levels of concern about climate change.” Nine in 10 atheists surveyed said the Earth is getting warmer, mostly due to human activity.
Yet, those same atheists tend to do almost nothing in their own lives to reduce their carbon footprints. And little to actually help their fellow man.
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