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Liberty Politics Discussion

4.2k members • Free

7 contributions to Liberty Politics Discussion
Thank you!!!
I'd like to thank @Armin Navabi for facilitating this friendship and bond 💕 Yes @B T and I exchanged knives and saws 🔪🪚
Thank you!!!
2 likes • 15d
Real lifelong friendships are being developed in this place which is amazing.
Bushra posted this on X
"Just heard that the Iranian government is going to denaturalize and strip citizenship from any diaspora Iranian found to have supported the U.S and Israeli war on Iran. All those dancing Pahlavi whores and clowns getting the FAFO treatment now" This is very concerning, I am genuinely worried about Diaspora Iranians not being able to return home. Bushra says a lot of bullshit and I take her with 0 seriousness however can someone please validate this information
1 like • Mar 11
Marco Rubio is leagues ahead of JD in everyway
If Islam in politics scares you, Christianity in power should too.
Across political systems, leaders have increasingly invoked religious language and symbolism to legitimize power, frame conflicts as moral or spiritual struggles, and place authority beyond democratic scrutiny. If people are worried about the growing influence of Islam in global politics, they should be equally worried about Christianity-or any religion-when it is fused with state power. In Russia, this fusion of religion and power is explicit. Vladimir Putin has portrayed Western liberalism as morally corrupt and even “satanic,” framing Russia as a civilizational defender of traditional Christian values. This rhetoric is reinforced by senior officials: Dmitry Medvedev, Deputy Chairman of Russia’s Security Council, has described the war in Ukraine as a “sacred battle” against Satan, explicitly invoking Satan, Lucifer, or Iblis. The Russian Orthodox Church, under Patriarch Kirill, has openly blessed the invasion and framed it as a moral struggle, functioning as an ideological partner of the state and sacralizing a war of aggression. This logic is not unique to Christian contexts. In Iran, senior clerical leadership—including the Ayatollah—has long framed its struggle against the West and Israel in cosmic and spiritual terms, portraying political enemies as forces of evil, corruption, or satanic influence. In this worldview, opposition is not merely political disagreement but alignment with metaphysical evil. Hungary provides a similar pattern within a formally democratic system. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán consistently frames his political project as a defense of “Christian democracy” against a morally decayed, post-Christian Europe. While less overtly theological, this framing still uses religion as a civilizational boundary to justify authoritarian governance and resistance to democratic norms. In the United States, religious symbolism has also entered political authority. Donald Trump has framed his leadership in providential terms, stating that he believes God saved his life so that he could “make America great again.” This worldview is echoed by figures in his orbit, such as Pete Hegseth, whose book American Crusade (Crusade?? Really??) explicitly casts contemporary politics as a religious struggle. More recently, official policy language from the Trump administration has characterized “anti-Christianity” as an ideological threat, embedding religious identity directly into national security framing.
2 likes • Feb 13
All religions when entrenched in day to day politics is scary, it should be a personal thing
Any Pakistani Athiest here
I just want to make some friends as i m very lonely and alone as an exmuslim in pakistan
2 likes • Feb 8
I am as well bhai! welcome to the group
1-7 of 7
Harris Durrani
2
8points to level up
@harris-durrani-1142
Canadian First of Pakistan Origin, libertarian, Atheist, Defender of the West and Free speech advocate.

Active 4h ago
Joined Nov 21, 2025
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