Let’s be honest about something. There’s a nasty sentiment brewing in America, and it’s aimed squarely at people of faith. For a long time, it was just a condescending whisper from the cocktail party circuit, a quiet disdain for the citizens who cling to their faith, their families, and their patriotism. But the whispers are now shouts, and the sneers have become open declarations of war.
This animosity no longer hides in the shadows; it now seeks to dehumanize. It paints a target on the backs of Americans who go to church, who believe in the sanctity of life, and who had the audacity to elect a president who puts this nation first. The message from the elite is clear: your beliefs are not just mistaken, they are a malignancy, and your concerns are nothing more than pathetic whining.
This exact mindset was put on full display by far-left podcaster Jennifer Welch, who offered an astonishingly vile take on a massive slice of the American population.
From ‘The Post Millennial’:
Far-left podcaster Jennifer Welch has said that “white Evangelical Christianity” is a cancer. While making the comments, she named people such as Erika Kirk and cited the Christian’s tendency to vote for Trump as a reason to oppose them and claimed Christians are not getting persecuted…
“These are the worst people in our country because they use their religion in two ways, as a weapon and as a shield. They weaponize it whenever they want to, and say, ‘We’re on the moral high ground… And then when you call them out on it, ‘Oh, my God, they’re after the Christians. How dare they, how dare they. We’re so oppressed,'” Welch added, mocking those who are Christian.
You almost have to admire the audacity. In the same breath, she unleashes that venom, she mocks Christians for feeling persecuted. For Welch, this isn’t just hypocrisy; it’s a sport.
A Pattern of Hateful Rhetoric
Of course, this isn’t Welch’s first rodeo when it comes to spewing contempt for conservatives. This is the same commentator who once demanded that Trump voters be barred from eating at Mexican, Chinese, and Indian restaurants. Her thinking is transparent: if you don’t submit to the far-left’s open-border orthodoxy, you should be a social pariah.
Her latest tirade, however, dives into much darker territory. When you declare that “white evangelical Christianity is a cancer,” you’re using the language of extermination. That isn’t political talk. That’s the language you use when you want to get rid of something you see as a disease. She is giving her audience permission to see their neighbors not as fellow citizens, but as a sickness.
The Persecution Paradox
Let’s break down the sheer absurdity here. Welch looks into a camera, calls a group of Americans a “cancer,” and then plays dumb when they say they feel targeted. She is the living embodiment of the persecution she claims doesn’t exist. She proves the very point she’s trying to deny with every hateful word that comes out of her mouth.
This is the Left’s playbook in action. Preach tolerance, but only for those who agree with you. Demand inclusivity, unless you’re a person of faith. Her mention that 80 percent of this group “voted triple Trumped” gives the game away. This isn’t about theology; it’s about political retribution against a voting bloc that refuses to bend the knee.
From Vicious Words to Violent Actions
This kind of dangerous rhetoric doesn’t just evaporate into thin air. While Welch preaches her gospel of hate from a comfortable studio, unhinged radicals listen and take notes. We saw it in St. Paul, when anti-ICE agitators stormed a church mid-service, terrifying a congregation because one of its members worked for the federal government.
When media figures spend years telling their followers that half the country is evil, someone eventually decides to do something about it. We saw the most tragic outcome of this campaign of demonization last year with the assassination of the great patriot Charlie Kirk. Words have consequences, and the Left’s endless stream of vitriol is creating a climate where political violence is becoming the norm.
The unhinged attacks from people like Welch are not a sign of strength; they are a symptom of profound moral and intellectual decay. They have lost the argument, so all they have left is slander. For the patriots she attacks, this isn’t a reason to back down. It’s a reason to stand taller. Your faith, your values, and your love for this country are the very things they are so desperate—and failing—to destroy.
Key Takeaways
- The Left’s anti-Christian rhetoric is escalating from mockery to dehumanization.
- Progressive “tolerance” is a weapon used to attack and silence conservatives.
- Hateful language from media elites fuels real-world hostility and violence.
- Standing firm in faith and principle is the ultimate defense against these attacks.
Sources: The Post Millennial