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Everyone voting? The horror!

Kenny

Face to face with my Father
Premium Member
Yes, but where most of the people are is in blue. It's not like the red areas are wall-to-wall people. It's mostly open land.

Of course, as I mentioned, it is hypothetical. The context is if all voted. 15 million Christians aren't registered and not all voted who are registered.
 

Nakosis

Non-Binary Physicalist
Premium Member
I know that in the US voting is not mandatory so you have to do so on your own volition. I also know that there’s gerrymandering? Or voter suppression tactics, which I won’t pretend to understand
But if every single US citizen voted, what do you think would be the outcome in congress? Would one party win or would it be a tie?
What do you think as Mericans?
I’m merely curious

Perhaps more conservative/centrist democrats.
An idea being proposed in Calif, since there is little chance of electing republicans in Calif, republican leaders are suggesting conservatives register as democrats hoping to move the democratic party more to the center.
 

pearl

Well-Known Member
How large a population?

This demographic juggernaut will in turn reshape the future of Christianity in North America – and the tone it sets will be socially moderate, fiscally progressive. The emerging generation of Hispanic American evangelicals looks more like a hybrid of Billy Graham and Martin Luther King Jr. than the Falwells, Robertsons, and Bauers of the previous era.

The Latino Transformation of American Evangelicalism | Reflections (yale.edu)
 

Sand Dancer

Currently catless
Of course, as I mentioned, it is hypothetical. The context is if all voted. 15 million Christians aren't registered and not all voted who are registered.

I'd say that at least the conservative half of Christianity tend to turn out to vote in high numbers. Those that don't are probably mostly Jehovah's Witnesses.
 

Sand Dancer

Currently catless
This demographic juggernaut will in turn reshape the future of Christianity in North America – and the tone it sets will be socially moderate, fiscally progressive. The emerging generation of Hispanic American evangelicals looks more like a hybrid of Billy Graham and Martin Luther King Jr. than the Falwells, Robertsons, and Bauers of the previous era.

The Latino Transformation of American Evangelicalism | Reflections (yale.edu)

That is comforting to know. Religion tends to be shaped by culture, and I should have remembered that when I responded.
 
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