From: AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.trump,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: Remember, FAGAts
Date: Thu, 23 Oct 2025 20:16:32 -0500
Organization: AlleyCat Computing, Inc.
No matter how many low-intellect religious Black Democrats and Muslims agree
with you, you are still trash.
LOL... more than half your voter base are believers, Christian and
Protestant... Black and White.
THEN, there are the religious fanatics, the Muslims, who vote Democrat too.
WHY do you love Muslims so much, Democrats?
STILL can't understand why liberal Democrats are so in love with Muslims.
Muslims are FOR killing homosexuals. Muslims are FOR their old men raping
little boys. Muslims are against abortion. Muslims are against contraception.
Muslims are against pre-marital sex. Muslims are FOR treating women as slaves
and chattel.
So, if Muslims hold these ideals, why do you Democrats LOVE Muslims, but hate
Christians? See [1]. Muslims HATE you. Am I leaving anything else out that you
just LOVE about Muslims? [1] Oh yeah... Obama is a Muslim, so all is forgiven?
http://i.imgur.com/uWvhO3t.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/khtGp9x.jpg
LOL
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Black Americans Are More Likely Than Overall Public To Believe In God
Unlike Americans of European descent, most black Americans trace their
ancestry to areas of Africa that, centuries ago, were not primarily part of
the Christian world.
Yet, today, a larger share of African Americans than whites say they are
Christian. And, of all major U.S. racial and ethnic groups, blacks are the
most likely to identify as believers.
Nearly eight-in-ten black Americans (79%) identify as Christian, according to
Pew Research Center's 2014 Religious Landscape Study. By comparison, seven-in-
ten Americans overall (71%) say they are Christian, including 70% of whites,
77% of Latinos and just 34% of Asian Americans. Meanwhile, about seven-in-ten
blacks are Protestant, compared with less than half of the public overall
(47%), including 48% of whites, roughly a quarter of Latinos and 17% of Asian
Americans.
More than half of all black adults in the United States (53%) are classified
as members of the historically black Protestant tradition. This includes those
who tell us they belong to specific denominations such as the African
Methodist Episcopal Church or the Church of God in Christ. The category also
includes black Americans who do not identify with a specific denomination but
instead say they associate with a broader Protestant group (e.g., "just
Baptist" or "just Methodist" or "just Pentecostal") that has a sizable number
of historically black denominations.
Blacks who identify with denominations in the evangelical (e.g. Southern
Baptist Convention) or mainline (e.g. United Church of Christ) traditions are
counted in the Religious Landscape Study as evangelical Protestants and
mainline Protestants, respectively, not as members of the historically black
Protestant tradition.
While Muslims make up a relatively small proportion of both the U.S. general
public and the black population, they (like Protestants) are more numerous
among blacks (2%) than among the overall public (1%). Black men are
significantly more likely than women to say they are Muslim (4% vs. 1%).
While blacks are more likely than whites to be Protestant or Muslim, they are
significantly less likely to be Catholic. Only 5% of blacks say they are
Catholic, compared with 21% of the public overall, including 19% of whites,
48% of Hispanics and 17% of Asian Americans.
Blacks also are less likely than the U.S. public as a whole to identify as
religiously unaffiliated - that is, as atheist, agnostic or "nothing in
particular." While 23% of the public identifies as unaffiliated, the share
among blacks is 18%. This number, however, has risen among blacks and among
the overall public. The share of African Americans who identify as religious
"nones" grew by 6 percentage points between 2007 and 2014 (from 12% to 18%),
similar to the increase among those in the general population (from 16% to
23%).
Generational differences have been a key factor in the growth of religious
"nones" as a share of the general population, and the same appears to be true
in the black community. About three-in-ten black Millennials (29%) are
religiously unaffiliated. By comparison, far fewer black Gen Xers (16%), Baby
Boomers (10%) and members of the Silent and Greatest generations (7%) are
unaffiliated.
The survey also shows that black men are more likely to be religiously
unaffiliated than women (22% vs. 14%). Again, this mirrors a trend among
Americans in general.