I've always just suspected that that whole don't judge thing is it's sort of like reeks of communism to me. There are people who take judgment to an extreme where they act as if they're St. Peter or God or somebody up on the judges seat whatever and I think there's an inferiority complex beneath it. When you exercise good judgment you are deciding not to drive into that tree you are steering the steering wheel in a careful thoughtful way but we all sin right? So within reason I think people can judge and should judge and like we all do. It's almost always someone who's covering something up in their own lives yes that's it which is again fundamentally hypocrisy.
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In a time of increasing skepticism of globalization, stemming from losses in jobs, cultural heritage, and sovereignty over ones own homeland, nationalism has re-emerged onto the political stage in protest movements and increasingly populist governments. Christian nationalism, focused on the incorporation of church doctrine into a nation and often a sovereign, is not a new concept, stemming at least from the time of the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, but recently has re-emerged as a potential solution to the social ills many societies face in the West. Tonight we are joined by Woe, co-host of the Stone Choir podcast, to make the case for how and why this might be a good way forward for many of the discontented souls of today.