Let's be clear about something else: what you call "Christian nationalism" is, in Britain, nothing more than ordinary citizens asserting that their own history, faith, and culture should not be erased. That is not extremism. It is survival.
You smear fathers, mothers, pensioners and preachers on a stage in Whitehall as if they were plotting some theocratic coup. They weren't. They were saying out loud what millions feel in private – that Britain is a Christian country in heritage and law, and that this heritage should not be sneered at or dismantled by cultural engineers. To brand that conviction as "a threat to us all" tells us more about your own bias than it does about them.
The truth is this: Britain's freedom, its law, its democracy, its very sense of human dignity were all born from the Christian tradition you so casually pathologise. Habeas corpus. Trial by jury. Equality before the law. The idea that every individual has worth. None of these came from "secular humanism." They came from centuries of Christian thought, hammered into institutions by men and women of faith. To denounce that inheritance as dangerous while indulging ideologies that openly call for jihad on our streets is intellectual dishonesty of the highest order.
You talk of "outside influence" from America. Where is your outrage when Gulf states pour money into our universities, funding Islamist networks that demonise Jews and women? Where is your alarm when foreign-funded NGOs stage pro-Hamas rallies in London under the guise of "human rights"? That silence is telling. Imported grievance is tolerated. Imported radical Islam is excused. But imported Christian money or rhetoric? That you brand an existential "threat."
And let's talk about threats. Is it Christians who have run grooming gangs across our towns? Is it Christians who chant for jihad outside synagogues? Is it Christians who terrorise teachers for showing cartoons, or who knife women in the street for "dishonour"? No. Yet we are told that the menace comes not from radical Islamism or the progressive Left's culture war, but from a handful of Christians who dare to say Britain should stay Christian in character.
What you really fear isn't extremism – it's resistance. Resistance to your project of turning Britain into a deracinated, post-national, post-religious experiment where every identity is celebrated except the one that built the nation. You fear that ordinary people, rooted in their faith and traditions, will refuse to be passengers on your managed decline.
You can brand it "Christian nationalism" if it helps you sleep. But the reality is far simpler. This is Britain's majority culture asserting that it has a right to exist. And if you think that is a "threat to us all," then the problem isn't with the people – it's with the elites who despise them.
Christianity in Britain is not a threat. It is the faith that shaped our freedoms, our laws, and our culture.
Source: @JChimirie66677 on Twitter/X.



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