Socialists Don't Sleep: Christians Must Rise or America Will Fall

Socialists Don't Sleep: Christians Must Rise or America Will Fall

by Cheryl K. Chumley
Socialists Don't Sleep: Christians Must Rise or America Will Fall

Socialists Don't Sleep: Christians Must Rise or America Will Fall

by Cheryl K. Chumley

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Overview

"Socialists Don't Sleep is one of those timely books that just points out the roots of what's gone wrong in America, how we can get our country back on track to what founders envisioned and the Judeo-Christian community that holds the key to America's long-term successes." — Gov. Mike Huckabee, New York Times Bestselling author & Host of Huckabee

Socialists Don't Sleep: Christians Must Rise or America Will Fall is about all the sneaky ways the secular left has pressed Socialism into American politics and life – AND WHY CHRISTIANS ARE THE ONLY ONES WHO CAN STOP IT!

Socialists Don't Sleep tells how America has gone from a country of rights coming from God – NOT government – to a country that embraces Socialism – where the US government is now expected to pretty much provide from cradle to the grave. Cheryl K. Chumley, an award-winning journalist and contributing editor to The Washington Times, explains how to return the country to its glory days of God-given, and why Christians, more than any other group, are best equipped to lead the way.

“Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez — when it comes to socialism in America, these two aren't the problem. Per se. They're simply symptoms of the real problems that usher in Socialism: a dysfunctional entitlement-minded society, a propaganda-pushing school system, a decayed culture, a sieve-like border. As Cheryl Chumley points out in Socialists Don't Sleep, we can't root out socialism unless we first address the real problems.” — Michael Savage, New York Times Bestselling author & host of The Savage Nation


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781630061470
Publisher: Humanix Books
Publication date: 09/22/2020
Pages: 256
Sales rank: 1,063,662
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Cheryl K. Chumley (Stafford, VA) is an author, commentary writer, podcast host and the online opinion editor for The Washington Times. She is the host of the twice-weekly podcast Bold and Blunt and the "EYE ON A.I." columnist for the good, bad, ugly and underreported of artificial intelligence for The Washington Times. She is an award-winning journalist, columnist and public speaker with more than 15 years of experience covering Capitol Hill, state and local politics, courts, the Constitution, the United Nations, the environment, technology and artificial intelligence, and private property rights. Her publication credits include The Blaze, The Washington Times, The Washington Examiner, The Heritage Foundation, The Heartland Institute, Lifezette, PamelaGeller.com and more.

Chumley is a skilled public speaker and media guest, and has made hundreds of appearances on national and local television and radio, including: Fox News, C-SPAN, CBN and Michael Savage, and in person at various forums and events, to discuss politics and culture, the role of Christianity in government, media bias and limited government principles. Chumley is the author of four books, including: LOCKDOWN: The Socialist Plan to Take Away Your Freedom, The Devil in DC: Winning Back the Country From the Beast in Washington with a foreword by Mike Huckabee and Police State USA: How Orwell’s Nightmare Is Becoming Our Reality with a foreword from Rep. Louie Gohmert. And she is a US Army veteran and a licensed private investigator.

The author lives & works in the Washington, D.C. metro area.

https://www.cherylchumley.com/

https://www.washingtontimes.com/staff/cheryl-k-chumley/

Read an Excerpt

Socialists Don't Sleep: Christians Must Rise or America Will Fall

Chapter One

Why America is GREAT In the First Place

The year was 1775.

Just a few months earlier, American delegates meeting at the first Continental Congress in Philadelphia had been arguing and weighing and mulling the merits of striking a bargain with Britain’s King George III – versus the dangers of declaring themselves a free people, separated from the crown.

All in attendance had agreed on the principle of colonists’ rights and on the premise that the king, via his “Intolerable Acts,” had overstepped his authority and unduly burdened the people. But not all saw separation from England as a viable solution.

Not all thought crown-colonists’ relations were irreparably severed – even though the king, in a speech to Parliament delivered shortly before the start of the Continental Congress, had openly condemned them for a collective “daring spirit of resistance and disobedience to the law.” The king’s views of the colonists would seem clear.

One example of that spirit of resistance?

It’s the stuff of elementary school textbooks, the stuff of American History 101, the Boston Tea Party of 1773.

That’s when a band of colonists, angry at unfair and excessive taxation from Britain and organized under the umbrella of the Sons of Liberty, dumped an entire shipment of East India Company tea into Boston Harbor. That’s when the British Parliament responded with a punishment, via the Boston Port Act, that sent the Royal Navy to blockade the city harbor and the British Army to patrol the city streets.

And that’s when the good citizens of Boston really began to suffer oppression to the point of strangulation. Imagine being tossed to the side in your own home and ordered to give food and board to the very soldiers who were oppressing you.

The gall of it all.

Now fast-forward a bit.

Circle on back to 1775. It’s March. The hot topic of debate: What to do about these oppressors.

It was with all that hostility in the backdrop that the well-respected lawyer from Hanover County in Virginia, Patrick Henry, took center stage at his state’s Second Convention in Richmond in St. John’s Church, and unleashed a hurl of rhetoric that still, to this day, sets patriotic hearts to pounding.

“Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? Shall we acquire the means of effectual resistance by lying supinely on our backs, and hugging the delusive phantom of hope, until our enemies shall have bound us hand and foot? … There is no retreat, but in submission and slavery! … Gentlemen may cry, peace, peace – but there is no peace. The war is actually begun! The next gale that sweeps from the north will bring to our ears the clash of resounding arms. Our brethren are already in the field. Why stand we here idle? What is it that gentlemen wish? What would they have? Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty, or give me death!”

What a call to arms.

What a breathless moment.

What a proud moment to be an American that must have been.

Truth be told, some historical texts suggest that Henry may not have uttered those words exactly as reported. Unlike other founders, Henry didn’t leave behind a long trail of written papers and copies of his speeches. So the main recording of this famous “Liberty or Death” speech came by way of a biography written by a young lawyer named William Wirt who gathered his information from local newspaper accounts of the event, and through interviews with St. George Tucker, a great legal mind who had been physically present at St. John’s the day Henry spoke.

As such, historical nitpickers like to suggest there’s really no surefire way to know, word-for-word, what Henry said that fateful day.

But let the nitpickers nitpick.

The case that Henry spoke either those exact words or something pretty darn close to those exact words is overwhelming.

Not only was Tucker – who in his life served as an attorney, a judge, a scholar and writer – a highly esteemed source. But also, shortly after Henry’s speech, the delegates indeed passed a resolution to prepare for military defense against the British. Shortly after Henry’s speech, a group of Virginians who volunteered for militia service wrote “Liberty or Death” on their shirts. And again, shortly after Henry’s speech, a man named Colonel Edward Carrington who had listened to the remarks from a window of St. John’s was so impressed, he actually said, “Let me be buried on this spot.” His widow, years later, actually honored that request.

Nitpick away. Henry, without a doubt, with his words, lit a fire.

And it’s a fire that still burns today. “Give me liberty or give me death” – if there’s one phrase that can encapsulate all that’s great about America it’s that one. If there’s one phrase that can capture what’s best about the American people, it’s that one.

America’s great because Americans are irrepressibly free.

You just can’t keep a good American down. Breathe that in and reflect on that for a moment. Throughout our nation’s history, that pull-up-from-the-bootstrap attitude and determination, our striving for rugged individualism and self-reliance, our commitment to sovereignty and self-governance, have led to some of our country’s greatest accomplishments, to some our greatest wins, to some of our greatest causes. Beating the British in the American Revolution was just the start. From forming our new government to forging the West, to passing civil rights protections and ratifying women’s rights to vote, to soaring to new heights in space and technology and the application of modern day science, the hunger for freedom, the drive to keep this country the leader of the free world, have been the basic motivations for creation and accomplishment.

But it’s not just the call of freedom that makes America great.

America is great, too, because America is principled.

On December 26, 1738, Thomas Nelson Jr., one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence was born. He was part of Virginia’s aristocratic society – groomed for leadership, educated in England; connected at the hip by birth and marriage to money and property.

Yet service-to-colony, service-to-country were his primary goals.

Nelson was elected to the House of Burgesses in 1774 and became a member of Virginia’s provincial convention in 1775, where he helped form, and then command, the Virginia militia. Subsequently, and through various health trials, he served on the Second Continental Congress and in various leadership roles of the military, and finally as Virginia’s governor, in 1781, succeeding Thomas Jefferson. But it was his character that shined brightest.

From The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence comes this account:

“In the spring of 1781, [when] Nelson was elected Governor … [t]he Virginia Legislature was on the run at the time, pursued by the British cavalry commander Banastre Tarleton into Albemarle County. By early September the American and French armies were closing in on [Lord Charles] Cornwallis who had decided to await evacuation of his army at Yorktown. When the French fleet arrive his fate was sealed. During the siege and battle Nelson led the Virginia Militia whom he had personally organized and supplied with his own funds. Legend had it that Nelson ordered his artillery to direct their fire on his own house which was occupied by Cornwallis, offering five guineas to the first man who hit the house. Either the cannoneers were inaccurate or the event never happened, but there are three cannon balls still lodged on the outer wall of the house.”

The National Park Serve reports similarly – that “evidence of the damage” to Nelson’s own home “exists to this day.”

Moreover, Nelson gave all, willingly, for the cause of the colonies. The $2 million he loaned of his own money to finance the costs of Virginia’s battle against the British, and to fund the French fleet, was never repaid. He died a poor man – by worldly standards, anyway. But by spiritual standards? He was married with 11 children, beloved by his comrades, respected by the likes of George Washington – who publicly thanked Nelson for “bravery” in his general orders of October, 1781 – and further esteemed as “illustrious,” “heroic,” “splendid,” “refined” and the like in a written tribute from his friend, Colonel James Innes.

But perhaps the best summation of Nelson’s principled character comes from the National Park Service, which wrote:

“The war had ruined his business. … Living on the edge of poverty, [Nelson] died of asthma eight years after the 1781 siege and was buried in an unmarked grave at Yorktown’s Grace Church so that his creditors could not hold his body as collateral. When asked if he felt embittered about his treatment, Nelson stated, ‘I would do it all over again.’”

He’d do it all over again.

How many of us, reared with the finest of educations, accustomed to the finer things in life, padded with wealth and secure in property, would not only sacrifice all for a principled cause – but then, when faced with the realities of broken promises and poverty-stricken ways, maintain an attitude of “so be it?”

Nelson was certainly a patriot, more than profiteer. And his life exemplifies a facet of America’s greatness. The best our country has to offer comes by way of those who willingly give the most, for a higher good, for a higher cause, expecting the least in return.

It’s one thing to claim a spirit of “give me liberty or give me death.”

It’s another thing entirely – a perhaps much harder road to take – to lay claim to a spirit of “give me liberty in exchange for poverty.” And then, when that poverty indeed comes, to shrug and say, “I’ll do it all over again.”

That’s the measure of greatness. That’s a measure of recognized greatness in America.

But it’s still not America’s biggest source of greatness.

What is?

In a few words, this: In America, individual rights come from God, not government.

If you had to summarize in a single sentence what makes America great – what separates the United States from any other nation in the world, what sets us apart and on high, exceptional to the core – it’s that remarkable notion. Our government doesn’t determine our rights. Our God does. Our rights are natural, instilled at birth. And what’s so remarkable and even revolutionary about that idea is that it means, by logical extension, that our government is not just subservient, in some sort of floaty pie-in-the-sky theory, to God, but also, in pragmatic policy and politicking, the day-to-day servant to the people who derive their rights at birth, from God.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident,” the Declaration of Independence reads. “[T]hat they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. – That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed …”

Yes, indeed. It’s the mark of American birthright – the unequivocal, bold, uncompromising view that politicians are our employees. That they work for us. That when they stop working for us, they can be fired.

It’s our national DNA, the preservation of which upon all else, from liberty to principled living, depends.

Legend has it that Isaac Potts, a Quaker famer who lived near Valley Forge, happened upon George Washington praying, on bended knee, in the snow, asking God to watch over his men and protect his troops from British annihilation. The story goes on that Potts later recounted the scene to his wife, assuring that “all will be well” because he saw “General Washington on his knees” and therefore, “our independence is certain.” It’s that image of Washington that’s been captured in paintings and pictures for decades.

Of course, the Potts legend is likely just that – a story absent historical proof.

But it serves its purpose just the same. The reason why that story stands the passage of years and the painting, the test of time, is because it shows America’s most beloved founding figure in one of American’s most natural of states – in humble appeal to the true source of greatness: God.

It demonstrates, in a few short words, in a few seconds’ glance, just why America is so exceptional – because we Americans put our trust in God, pin our hopes on God, and commit our futures to God. We don’t look to government for all the answers. We look to God.

America is great because America was built on a foundation of God, on a rock of Judeo-Christian principles, on a belief in the might of the individual first, the collective, second.

Consider that.

Now read this, from 2018 – a headline from Scientific American: “The Number of Americans With No Religious Affiliation Is Rising.”

And then this, around the same time, another headline, from Business Insider: “A large percentage of millennials are embracing socialism.”

These two trends are not unrelated.

Remove God from society, and government grows. And this is where we’re at in modern day America. The rising secularized society is bringing with it a larger and more burdensome government, which in turn is training the coming generations in the Big Government mindsets and ways they should go – which in turn is paving the path toward an America that’s completely adrift from its founding, small government principles.

It’s incumbent on those of the faith to stop this secularization.

It’s incumbent on those who can read the writing on the wall to put a halt to the socialism that’s seeping into our American being.

We’ve been asleep and derelict in duty for far too long.

Table of Contents

Socialists Don't Sleep: Christians Must Rise or America Will Fall

Table of Contents

1. Why America is GREAT in the first place

America was founded on a principle that rights come from God, not government. And this, simply put, is what makes us great. Atheists, secularists, humanists, progressives, the far left, socialists and the like would have it believed otherwise; they scoff at any notion that framers and founders would want any mention or influence of God at all in the public arena. But fact is: Take God out of America’s society, and first the culture, then the politics, fall. The concept that “we are endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights” isn’t just a guarantee – it’s a responsibility. If we want America the free to stay free, then we have to make sure government doesn’t grow so big as to supplant God and squelch our individual rights. This chapter looks at some of the key principles that make America great in the first place, including the bedrock idea of individual rights coming from God, not government, and makes the case that without this core idea, without preserving the principle of the God-given, not the government granted, the country will crumble from within – America the Free, America the Great, will exist no more.

2. What’s Happened to the Democrats?

Once upon a time, Democrats used to stand for the little guy, the oppressed woman, the blue-collar worker, the union member – or did they? This chapter looks at the morphing of the Democrat Party through the years, from one of an “ask not what you your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country” kind of attitude, to one of becoming the protector of the illegal immigrant, the voice of the abortion-on-demand crowd. This chapter also separates the truths from fiction, and shows how some misconceptions over the years about what this party has actually represented have hardened into rather ridiculous beliefs. (Democrats, for instance, have been able to lay claim to being the party of minorities despite the fact that in 1964, a greater percentage of Republicans than Democrats voted for the Civil Rights Act – despite the fact the Democrat Sen. Robert Byrd, a former Ku Klux Klan leader, filibustered the measure for more than 14 hours). Regardless, the lurch left of the Democrat Party in the most recent years has not only divided the party and set the stage for in-fighting for years to come, but also ushered in a brash brand of “democrat” politics that is nothing like the Democrats of John F. Kennedy days. The overall effect to the nation has been dramatic as its portrayed conservativism as radicals, shifted moderate Democrats to the side and seemingly embraced the most socialistic of ideas as practical. As the country moves ever farther left, another question looms: Can today’s Democrats simultaneously serve both party and God? This is a grave matter of importance that goes to the ability of our nation to keep its republic – to preserve this form of government that demands a virtuous and principled people. This chapter challenges the reader to take a hard look at the party, its platforms and politics, its rhetoric and leanings – and decide.

3. Republicans Have Some Explaining to Do, Too

It’s not as if an Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez sprung into socialist being in the House overnight. Or, a self-declared Democratic-Socialist like Sen. Bernie Sanders, for that matter. For decades, a committed, well-funded, organized and determined left has been pressing forward an agenda that, as President Donald Trump might say, puts America second, not first. But while Democrats have walked rather rapidly in recent years down the path toward socialism, Republicans haven’t exactly been keepers of the freedom flame. Plenty of Republicans protecting their big business interests and payrolls and profits have gone silent when it comes to clamping the borders, or arresting illegals at work, or fining companies that hire illegals. Too many Republicans have turned blind eyes and deaf ears on the encroaching Big Government designs, and put personal finances or private interests before those of the people. One way to look at it: If Democrats have become the party of the give-away to illegals and minorities, Republicans have become the party of the give-away to big business – and either way, it’s the individual whose rights are being trounced. It’s the notion of God-given rights that’s being crushed, in favor of government-granted. Republicans have also bent backwards, post-September 11, especially, to make sure police and law enforcement have all the tools they need to keep communities safe – even when those tools come with questionable civil rights and privacy dings, and give negligible results. This chapter looks at the damage Republicans have done to America’s sovereignty in recent years, all in the name of “for the people,” “for the children,” or “for the safety and security of the nation,” and provides the reader with an understanding of how the socialist mindset can travel just as quickly on wings of fear, which Republicans often float, as on wings of entitlement.

4. Education or Propaganda? Selling Socialism Through the Schools

For the longest of time, America’s public school systems were routinely tops in world rankings. Now? The most recent Pew Research Center findings from 2018 show that the United States places 38th of 70 countries when it comes to math scores, and 24th on science. Curiously, this fall has taken place most dramatically in the last few years. In 1990, for example, America was ranked in this same Pew poll as sixth in the world for education and for health care. What’s going on? Schools have forgotten their primary jobs: to educate. Today’s schools are now more interested in making sure diversity and tolerance are their priorities for teaching; math, English, science, social studies, the second-tier concerns. America’s public schools have become less places of reading, writing and arithmetic and more places for filling the minds of youth with propaganda, where the likes of Founding Fathers are presented as racist white men who, by logical extension, created for America some racist governing documents – and therefore, that means America is inherently racist. The propaganda persists at the places of higher learning. America’s colleges and universities, many of which were founded on the principles of advancing Christian evangelism and Judeo-Christian virtues – think Harvard, Yale, Princeton – have become breeding grounds for leftist professors and administrators, who bring forth the next generation of leaders and movers and shakers in this country. So what to do? How to deal? Radical solutions are necessary. Parents who can afford to take their children from public schools and teach them at home, or place them in private schools, ought to do so. Immediately. Public schools receive funding in part based on head-counts of students; one surefire way of grabbing administrators’ attention to talk about necessary reforms is to hit them in the pocketbooks. Another way to push the schools in the direction of teaching actual core course, not just social justice? Have more Christian conservatives and constitutionally-minded, limited government types run for School Board. Their voices will help balance the board discussions. These are but a couple of solutions this chapter explores.

5. Jesus the Socialist, Jesus the Capitalist

Progressives in the 1920s insisted their giveaways of government entitlements were rooted clearly in Christian teachings, backed by biblical verses. Today’s Christian conservative camp would say otherwise – that the Bible unequivocally states that only those who work should eat, and that government handouts are hardly the way of Jesus. So who’s right? Who’s wrong? Fact is, there has been a movement of late in certain church circles and in some spiritual denominations to cite Bible verses as justification for opening America’s borders wide; for sheltering illegals from the deportation storm; for providing free – that is, tax payer funded – healthcare to all, including those in-country illegally; for providing all with free college, low-cost housing, free prescription pills, and more. And while some in this church-based movement might very well believe America’s government must do all it can to help the less fortunate, even if it means losing borders, or prosperity, or security, fact is, many in these denominations are false teachers of biblical principles of convenience. They’re leaders of LGBTQ rights’ movements, for instance, or gay pastors pushing same-sex marriage onto the next generation of believers, or simply open border zealots and social justice warriors masquerading as clerical servants of the faith. Whatever their calling, it’s not so much one for Jesus as for personal ambition or political gain. This chapter looks at some of these church-tied organizations and at the backgrounds of the leaders and members, to show how they’re pressing into society a socialist vision that tears down traditional norms and subs in radicalized notions of identity, family and even faith. The message is simple: Before joining these ranks, at least know their true intents. At root, the question becomes: Is the Bible a living breathing document – or not? This chapter challenges the reader to decide. The larger point, as it pertains to American politics, is this: If the Bible is living and breathing, open to interpretation, subject to whims of mankind, then a nation that’s built on Judeo-Christian principles is certainly changeable. If the Bible can mean what we want, certainly the Constitution, the framers’ limited government views, the founders’ free market ideals, can just as easily be shifted and tossed.

6. Children and Guns and Chaos in the Streets

Twenty-five million children are being raised in homes without fathers, according to statistics from the Center for Children and Families. Meanwhile, other stats show 90 percent of welfare recipients are single mothers; 70 percent of gang members, teen suicides, teen pregnancies and teen drug and alcohol abusers come from home without fathers. And statistically speaking, children raised in single-parent households are more likely to live in poverty, drop out of school, commit crimes, and land in jail. No wonder our nation’s youth are fighting in the streets. No wonder the media world is filled with stories of mass shootings and horrific murders in our schools. No wonder we have Black Lives Matter and antifa violence, rebelling against everything from police to Confederate monuments with violence. These are the natural consequences of removing God from all-things-public – from taking a secular path and walking a godless road. Not only individuals and families, but communities and societies – culture and politics – become poisoned in an atmosphere that doesn’t teach rights versus wrongs, and therefore disdains morals and absolutes, and ultimately, loses all sense of proper humanity. But it’s into this chaos that big government and socialism step. After all, if there’s chaos in the streets, who better to come in to control it, than government? And when government fails to control – as it will, because problems of drugs and crime and murder cannot be solved by regulation and law, but only by changes of heart, only by God – well then, the call from the political world is to bring in even bigger government, even more rules and regulations and laws. Even more socialist-style solutions, like higher taxes and more entitlement spending and larger social justice outreach using larger pots of tax dollars. This is futile fighting. The solution is not more government, bigger government, socialist “spread the wealth” government. The solution is the private sector and the Christian heart. Joe Gibbs, former Washington Redskins football coach, had a heart for troubled youth and a spirit of Christian love – so he started Youth for Tomorrow, a non-profit that takes in children from broken homes and teaches them the godly principles they need to lead lives of fulfilment and purpose. That’s just one guy, one organization. Think of the lives that can be redirected if more money was directed to groups like Big Brothers and Big Sisters and YMCAs and any number of other organizations with similar life-changing missions. Now add the church missions to the mix. With direction, organization and motivation, much can be done through the private sector, through the church sector, to help America’s struggling youth – and it can all be accomplished without expanding government and adding to the socialist entitlement mindsets that only serve to destroy our great nation.

7. Pressures Within, Pressures Without: Global Go-Gooders Who Actually Do No Good

Americans have been bombarded with pleas from the global communities, particularly from the United Nations, to contribute more to overseas’ aid to help eradicate poverty, feed children, educate women and girls, bring about world peace. But there’s a warning in the Bible that aptly applies – the one where Jesus tells his disciples, “Children, be not deceived – I send you out as sheep among wolves.” And before committing any more dollars to the global parties, Americans should be aware of what these non-governmental groups, led in large part by the United Nations, actually advance both around the world, and in the United States. It’s not as it seems. These groups speak a good game; they promote their missions as charitable and focused on the regions with most need. But there are stark differences between programs run by the United Nations and, say, the International Committee of the Red Cross. This chapter looks at the politics behind many of these supposed charitably minded global nonprofits, many operating under the umbrella of the United Nations, and reveals to the reader where the money actually goes, how contributions from the U.S. taxpayer are actually spent — and how most of these groups actually further big government, corruption, socialist principles an reliance on hand-outs rather than foster independence, sovereignty and self-rule. What’s worse, many of the socialist principles furthered by the global groups actually wind their way into America’s political world, beginning at the federal level and seeping, eventually, into local governments. (Think the U.N.’s sustainable development program, for example, which uses U.S. tax dollars to control human development around the world – and in America’s own back yards). This is top-down socialism being pressed into America’s supposed sovereign system of governance. There are much better ways to help eradicate poverty around the world that won’t involve socialist – even anti-American – U.N. and global-minded non-governmental groups’ missions. This chapter exposes the socialist-advancing dangers of seeing the United Nations and other NGOs in positive lights, as well as provides the charitable minded in America numerous other ways of helping the needy around the world via the private sector, the business world and the churches. America, land of the free, land of the limited government, should not be playing into that socialist lie that only government can provide for the needy. Christians, in particular, know better – and Christians, in particular, are well-positioned to show how to provide for the less fortunate without turning to government.

8. The Politics of Pagans, The Socialism of Secularists

One of socialism’s favored ways of advancing a spread the wealth vision is via environmental regulation, the kind pushed by the United Nations (sustainable development), the kind favored by hard-left Green groups in America (Smart Growth), the kind that basically controls any human activity at all on lands, in oceans and other bodies of water, and in the air space above the lands and bodies of water. Not all environmentalism is socialist; not all environmentalists are socialists. But the overall environmental mindset that’s been pushed these past few years has been one of elevating nature to the level of God – and making it seem as if those who oppose the radical agenda are evil capitalists, bent of razing the earth for personal, greedy profit. Big Green is just one indirect way socialism has stolen into the policies of America’s government, though. Just look at some of the programs and systems we have in place that are largely unquestioned, largely embraced and accepted – yet just as largely socialist. The Department of Education? That’s simply the government’s way of taking over the education of youth. The whole Social Security system – the whole Medicare for All conversation that creeps into political talk now and again? Socialist; nothing in the Constitution, nothing in the Bible, nothing in America’s limited government system allows for any sort of rightful use of tax dollars to pay for retirement, or health care, or prescription pills for citizens. There are more, many more. This is what you get when secularists dominate government – a government that treads where it really doesn’t belong and expands where it really shouldn’t be. But let’s start by calling out these programs for what they are – socialist. Then, we can decide whether they’re worthy of keeping, of reforming or of outright abolishing. Putting the government in charge of the education of our youth, for example, has proven alarmingly disastrous; Christians and conservatives could make a solid case for getting rid of the Education Department entirely, and reeling in the teachers’ unions that advance so much of the propaganda training of our youth. But perhaps Social Security could be salvaged, at least until a phase-out plan that doesn’t unfairly punish the contributors is devised – or, perhaps it could be kept untouched, as a tradeoff for doing away with some of the government’s entitlement spending. The point of this chapter is mostly to raise awareness of how Americans have come to accept programs that are inherently socialists – which only opens the door to creating the mindset of the next generation that socialism, in some forms, is not so bad after all. But Christians, instead of advocating for more government, more socialist programs, more entitlement spending, ought to take a stand and show how churches, through tithes, and local charities, through heartfelt donations, can provide many of the socialist services currently offered by our own government.

9. The War on Words – A Very Socialist Battle

Control the press, control the messaging, and you control the people. That’s been a guiding principle of tyrants since the dawn of time. Mainstream media bias in favor of Democrats and social media censorship of conservative and Christian views – such as has been happening in recent years — aren’t just annoying offenses. They’re targeted attacks by the left aimed at shuttering and stifling any views that counter and reject Big Government and oppose socialist principles. This chapter takes a look at the polls and surveys that show the decided left-leaning slants of those in the press – the decided anti-Christian slants, as well — and then reveals how these leftist viewpoints seep into coverage, regardless of claims to the contrary. This chapter also takes a particularly hard look at social media, and chronicles the rising censorship of specifically conservative and Christian viewpoints. Lila Rose, for example, was recently booted from one social media site because her pro-life views on abortion were deemed hate speech. The Christian Post, for another example, which is a newspaper with a religious worldview, was just blacklisted by Google for its supposed hateful reporting, according to one tech world whistleblower. It was bad enough when conservatives and Christians just had to fight, say, The New York Times for fair and balanced coverage. But now, it’s social media and search engines – a whole online force. So how can conservatives and Christians fight this censorship? First off, by recognizing the extent of the bias and realizing that while some journalists aren’t purposely attacking the ideological right, or purposely using the media to tear down traditional and Christian views, there are enough high-placed, high-ranking editors and executives with influence who are purposely doing just that – and they’re able to sway the coverage on a wide scale. And second off? Conservatives and Christians must use their voices and counter leftist media punch with media punches of their own. Writing letters to the editors; visiting online news sites and adding comments to the comments’ sections; calling broadcast stations and supporting or opposing the editorial direction and content of news stories; starting blogs and even newspapers or newsletters that counter the liberal/socialist lines and offer a conservative, even Christian, view – these are all viable ways of making it clear: the Christian conservative voice will not be stifled. If the left-leaning, largely secular media is allowed to control the messaging and dominate the online social media world, the only voices allowed to exist will be those that advance the far left, socialist, Big Government ideas.

10. Artificial intelligence, and How Emerging Technology Feeds the Socialist Beast

According to various polls and surveys, most scientists are not only liberals in their politics, but secular in their beliefs. Yet these are the same people who are leading the technological charge in America, across the world? No wonder, then, social media’s artificial intelligence systems lean left and label conservative and Christian views as hateful or discriminatory; the programs, the models, the software are all designed by those with either far leftist or globalist views. But that’s only part of what makes today’s emerging technologies a real threat to freedom-loving Americans in general, and Christian, conservative voices in particular. Some of A.I.’s applications outright flip the Constitution on its head by tossing presumption of innocence standards to the side and treating innocent Americans as if they’re guilty; by giving police the technological power to arrest “criminals” who’ve not yet committed crimes; by allowing government to place surveillance and identification technology in all places public; and more. As if that’s not bad enough, there’s this, from Feng Xiang, a professor of law at Tsinghua University: “More than anything else, the inevitability of mass unemployment [from emerging technologies] and the demand for universal welfare will drive the idea of socializing or nationalizing A.I.,” he said, back in May of 2018. His idea? To use A.I. to reallocate resources – or, as socialists might put it, to spread the wealth. He’s not alone in looking to use A.I. to create social justice on a global scale. Others in this vein of socialist thinking see the need to establish a universal basic income standard for workers who are displaced by technology. The Socialist Party itself sees A.I. as death knell for capitalism. Meanwhile, there’s that whole A.I. movement dedicated to creating its own god – or, at the least, a better breed of humans with godlike technological powers. This is one of the biggest fights Christians and constitutionalists face in the coming years – and it’s going to be the most challenging one to win. In the long-term, Christians need to encourage more of the faithful to enter the fields of science and technology, so that tomorrow’s A.I. experts will be schooled in Bible truths. In the short-term? Christians and conservatives need to first educate themselves on the A.I. threats to faith, individual freedoms and American sovereignty. And second, Christians and conservatives need to stop letting technology take over their own lives – to stop trading the convenience of certain cell phone apps, say, for personal privacies that track geographical movements. With technology, Christians have become just as secular as the world they’re supposed to live in but not of, and if we want to put a stop to runaway technologies that threaten to steal freedoms and bring about a more socialist existence, then it’s the Christian community that has to raise up and raise questions (because the secular world isn’t going to do it).

11. If Malachi Were Here, What Would He Say?

In 2016, one Morning Consult poll found that 60 percent of Americans believed America was great and 68 percent said they were proud to be an American. In July 2019, a Gallup poll found that American pride had hit an all-time low – that only 45 percent said they were proud to be American, versus 47 percent in Gallup’s poll of the previous year. And in April 2019, Rasmussen found that Americans, by and large, were feeling better about the future than they had in the previous 12 years of asking that same survey question. The point it: Ask Americans what they feel about America, and the answers will be as different as the polling companies. The only “survey” that really matters is the one from above – the one that rates how a nation and how a nation’s people stand with God. And on that score, maybe it’s arguable: America’s lost its Judeo-Christian way because God has removed His blessings from the country. It’s possible. Surely, this socialism that’s taken root in a nation that was supposed to be dedicated to individual rights first, collectivism second – if at all – hasn’t come by way of chance, or absent God’s knowledge. Or, perhaps, absent God’s influence. Look to Malachi for mulling. Consider these biblical passages: “If you will not lay it to heart to give glory to my name, says the Lord of hosts, then I will send the curse upon you and I will curse your blessings; indeed I have already cursed them.” Or this: “You have wearied the Lord with your words. Yet you say, ‘How have we wearied him?’ By saying ‘Everyone who does evil is good in the sight of the Lord, and he delights in them.’ Or by asking, ‘Where is the God of justice?’” Isn’t this what just what we do when things don’t go our way – pretend as if our intents were good and that God, in His injustice, is ignoring our plights or imposing an unfair outcome? Perhaps it’s as Malachi suggests – the curse has already come upon our nation. That would certainly explain how we could move from a nation built by Judeo-Christian principles, fast-tracked to great heights of globally ranked exceptionalism, to a country torn by political and cultural fighting, being pulled ever farther from God, ever closer to Big Government. This chapter looks at the cultural decay we embrace, and the political corruption we accept – from abortion to rated-R sexualized entertainment – from the perspective of biblical teachings, and raises the all-important question: Are we now experiencing, with all this loss of freedom and expansion of socialist governance, the removal of God’s blessings on America? It seems a crucial point to consider, given the obvious solution would lie in its answer. As the Bible also teaches: “If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will hear their land.” What better way for God to heal a country founded on principles of limited government – than to return the government to a system of limited reach and authority?

12. The Answer is Christianity, and ONLY Christianity

There’s a temptation in First Amendment-friendly America for some to embrace religious freedom to the point where Christianity is Islam is Hinduism is Wiccan – where one religion is just as good as another, and that praying to the Christian God is the same as praying to any other god. But here in America, the foundation has always been Judeo-Christian beliefs, as illustrated in the Bible. Treating Christianity as if it’s just another religion, on par with any other is the type of thinking that brings about Satanic Temple statues on government properties, or Satanist “prayers’ to open City Council meetings – or, strict Islamic and sharia principles pushed into our culture and politics. America wasn’t built to be a Christian nation, with a state-run church that dictated Christian principles through the government. But America was indeed built from the bottom up by Europeans fleeing their homes for the pursuit of religious freedom – for the pursuit of Christian religious freedom. America was indeed built by framers who may not have worshipped similarly, or at all, but who nonetheless forged a government based on biblical moral truths, including the idea that humans are fallible (born in Original Sin) – not only Muslim beliefs, or Hindu teachings. The 1993 book, “One Nation Under God: Religion in Contemporary American Society,” reports that in 1776, an estimated 98 percent of colonists were Protestants; the other 2 percent claimed Roman Catholicism as their faith. To the extent that religion influenced our framers, it was Christianity, not any other faith, held in the highest regard. Why it matters is simple: When we speak of America’s greatness coming from the notion that individual rights come from God, not government, it’s important to understand we’re not talking about God, in a general and generic any-religion-goes sense, or the god of Muslims, Allah. We’re talking about the God of the Bible. If this is the God who gave us a country of rights coming from God, not government – this is the only God who can keep our moral compass and political world in the proper places. The solution for a country that’s stretched into socialism and lost its concept of God-given rights is to reel back government and return God – the proper God – to the helm. Only Christianity can win this war against socialism in America; only Christians can effectively fight to return the nation to its moral, virtuous, principled society of limited governance and individual freedom.

13. Inspiring Acts of Courage, Both Big and Small

This chapter looks at real life examples of people who’ve stood strong for America, for God, for Judeo-Christian principles, for the Constitution and limited government and capitalism – and in so doing, have won. The fight to control America’s moral compass and reel in an ever-expanding and corrupt government has been long and wearying, often futile and overwhelming. And no matter who wins the White House, regardless of which political party takes control of the House and Senate – or of which political party holds the leadership positions in state and local governments – fact is, the fight is far from finished. The sneaky socialist seepage into America’s culture and politics will continue far into the future. So, as motivation for the long haul, this chapter looks at instances where Christians and conservatives and other patriotic Americans with love of the Constitution and limits on government have stood against strong secular, socialist, Big Government forces in recent times – and won. An example? When far-left anti-gun politicians in Washington passed sweeping new restrictions on semi-automatic rifles – despite clear court guidance that called such restrictions unconstitutional – sheriffs in a dozen counties around the state rose up and said: We’re not enforcing that. As Grant County Sheriff Tom Jones explained: “I swore an oath to defend our citizens and their constitutionally protected rights. I do not believe the popular vote overrules that.” Another example? When a Satanic Temple member won the court right to open a Kenai Peninsula Borough meeting in Alaska with a “Hail, Satan” invocation, a dozen of the region’s governing officials walked out, while dozens in the community rallied outside the building, holding signs that said, “reject Satan and his works” and “know Jesus and his love” – showing in the process that court rulings cannot compel hearts to obey. Sometimes, even the smallest of gestures, the tiniest of principled stands, can nevertheless pack big punches. As Ecclesiastes teaches, the race is not to the swift nor the battle to the strong. This chapter wraps on a positive note, giving readers the sense that yes, America may be in the throes of determining its government of the future, and debating the idea of more socialism versus a return to democratic-republicanism – but that if Christians in particular and patriots in general keep plugging away and fighting effectively, the country can and will see a widespread return to the God-given.

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