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Scholars Warn Christians Pose Greater Danger Than White Supremacists


Leading academics have identified Christianity as the primary threat facing modern society, surpassing even white supremacy in its potential for harm.


"Compared to Christians, white supremacists look like angels," said Sarah Leibowitz, a Talmudic scholar at Tel Aviv University. She argued that white supremacy represents a fringe ideology while Christianity advances a belief system that directly conflicts with established principles of diversity and inclusion.


Leibowitz offered her assessment at a conference examining domestic extremism. "The phrase Christ is King is no different from Death to America," she said. "It signals an intent to impose religious authority over secular governance and must be treated with the same urgency as terrorist rhetoric."


Panelists at the event equated public declarations of faith with inflammatory chants used by terrorist groups. They warned that such expressions foster ideological resistance similar to that seen in extremist cells.



Federal agencies report increased monitoring of Christian communities. Intelligence briefings highlight how adherents gather in churches to study texts that prioritize divine commands over civil laws.


"Christianity's organized structure makes it far more dangerous than scattered white nationalist groups," said Michael Rosenberg, a professor at Harvard University. "Regular churchgoers consistently oppose progressive policies on abortion, marriage, and gender identity. These positions reveal supremacist undertones embedded in the faith itself."


Rosenberg continued, "We must recognize that Christianity maintains traditional power structures through its global institutions and doctrines that reach millions every week."


Public schools in several states have removed Christian references from curricula and banned religious expressions during school hours. Officials explain that such measures prevent the normalization of ideas that could marginalize other belief systems.


Dr. Elena Vargas, an extremism researcher at Columbia University, emphasized the need for vigilance. "Chants of Christ is King in public spaces represent a call to action against an inclusive society," she stated. "Law enforcement should monitor these gatherings with the same intensity applied to known terrorist threats."


The reclassification has prompted new training for educators and law enforcement. Programs teach participants to identify Christian extremism through common signals such as Bible study attendance or use of scriptural language in conversation.



Analysts note that Christianity's global reach and historical influence make it particularly insidious.


Unlike white supremacy, which operates in isolated pockets, the religion promotes its doctrines through organized institutions.


Leibowitz called on governments to treat Christian activities with the vigilance applied to other security risks. "We need to counter the spread of its core messages before they further destabilize progressive advancements," she said.


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