Trump's Final Solution: "I'm NOT a Christian" and "You won't have to vote anymore"
Evangelicals have been put on notice
President Donald Trump has been flying high since the fake assassination attempt boosted his polling numbers. Perhaps that’s why he’s begun saying the quiet parts out loud in his speeches. I’ll let the New York Times summarize what was said in the closing moments of his speech at The Believers’ Summit today:
“Christians, get out and vote. Just this time,” he said at The Believers’ Summit, an event hosted by the conservative advocacy group Turning Point Action, in West Palm Beach, Fla. “You won’t have to do it anymore, you know what? Four more years, it’ll be fixed, it’ll be fine, you won’t have to vote anymore, my beautiful Christians.”
Mr. Trump, who never made a particular display of religious observance before entering politics, continued: “I love you, Christians. I’m a Christian. I love you, you got to get out and vote. In four years, you don’t have to vote again. We’ll have it fixed so good, you’re not going to have to vote.”
But there’s a clear mistake in this transcript. Can you spot it? Watch the clip below and see if you notice what’s wrong:
He never said, “I’m a Christian”, but rather clearly says “I’m NOT Christian.” He even shook his head, indicating a negatory. It’s odd that the New York Times would miss this. I’ve listened to it twenty times trying to make sure, and I’m not mistaken. He’s clearly is talking about Christians as a separate group that he’s not a part of. “My beautiful Christians” he calls them condescendingly.
Of course, Trump did claim that “God” saved his life during the fake assassination attempt, but now he wants to distance himself from Christians while begging for their votes. So what’s really going on here?
Tired of us
I’ve said it a million times: populists secretly despise Christians. We are a major obstacle to their plans because although we are often duped in the short term, we still put tremendous pressure on leaders to act like they care about biblical principles. They sneer, cringe, and smirk at us, biting their tongues as they plot to get rid of us. As I wrote in my article Theosophical Kabbalah as mediator of the tribulation:
For as long as newspapers have existed, populist views have been defined by white, evangelical, Christian conservatives, which drives the establishment crazy. Alex Jones, Joe Rogan, Donald Trump, and other cult of personality figures who have tried to insult Christians and distance themselves from this evangelical base (to appease their establishment handlers) can’t seem to shake off this demographic, no matter how often they slap them in the face and spit on their beliefs. I’ve seen the same with alternative figures like comedian Owen Benjamin, who tried to promote Islam, Flat Earth, and all sorts of other rabbit holes in order to offend his Christian followers into leaving his community alone. Evangelicals have a way of taking over a populist figure’s audience and leading them toward the Bible.
Trump says we won’t have to worry about voting anymore after he’s re-(s)elected. What he means only God knows, but based on my analysis, it’s his way of saying that the Collapse will take place, the Constitution will be abolished, Christianity will be wiped out, and there will be neither voting nor churches by 2028.
Donald "Lockdown" Trump is begging the Deep State to let him finish the job
Good for you, getting ahead of the deception.
We’re heading into the Collapse, and Trump is apparently supposed to lead the world through it. He’s supposed to be the charismatic populist leader who can drag humanity through the “Great Reset/Awakening” without too much struggle. This is what I wrote in April 2022 for Geopolitics & Empire:
Donald Trump plays the role of the populist savior. Whistleblowers and government watchdogs serve as John the Baptist, preparing his way. The corrupt elite overreacts to his mild reforms and common sense policies, which usually don’t end up manifesting anyway. The already-distrusted media stoops to new lows to ensure that he will be embraced by many. He seems to overcome them all and emerge spotless, creating an irrational hope. Nevertheless, he ends up betrayed by his own people and loses to the ultimate decrepit globalist pawn. Today, with Easter fresh on our minds, the analogy should be obvious: we’re living in the proverbial days of Trump in the tomb, cheated out of a second term, waiting for his divine resurrection and glorification.
His phony persecution has only gotten more comical since then. But now that he’s distancing himself from Christianity and promising that we’ll never need to vote again, the clues are piling up that he wants a “Final Solution” to the Christian problem.
When he says we won’t have to vote anymore, what he really means is that he won’t need our votes anymore.
“I’m NOT a Christian.”
I listen to it and hear “I’m not Christian”.
Do you think Trump could be the Antichrist? He brokered the Abraham Accords. Could he be the one to get a peace deal signed between Israel and the Arab countries? I have lots of Christian friends who think of him as a "savior" of America. This concerns me.