greatesttama.blogg.se

Deus vult white supremacy
Deus vult white supremacy









deus vult white supremacy

In 2019, the Christchurch mosque shooter labelled his gun with medieval European names and dates, including that of Charles Martel, who allegedly defeated a Muslim army at Tours in 732. A white supremacist at the 2017 Charlottesville rally was known for making racist statements in medieval history classes at the University of Reno, while other Charlottesville marchers “held symbols of the medieval Holy Roman Empire and of the Knights Templar.” Former white nationalist Derek Black purposefully studied medieval European history in college. In May 2017, a white supremacist attacked train passengers with a knife in Portland, claiming to do so on behalf of Vinland (the 10 th-century Viking name for North America). Follow her on Twitter and learn more about her research at. Her dissertation, “Portable Altars, Devotion, and Memory in Lower Saxony, 1050-1190 CE,” examines the patronage and use of medieval portable altars in German lands.

deus vult white supremacy

Understanding O’Sullivan’s political theology helps explain elements of American political speech and behavior in the twenty-first century, especially in the international arena.Sarah Luginbill is a doctoral candidate in medieval history at the University of Colorado Boulder. His vision of America as specially obligated and authorized to intervene in the affairs of other nations remains influential on American political speech and self-understanding today. O’Sullivan’s millenarian thought identifies democracy with American power, framing politics as a conflict between democratic good and despotic evil. This essay analyzes his political writing, which characterizes America as a sinless agent of God’s will, possessing a messianic destiny to initiate a global democratic transfiguration and redeem the world from tyranny. O’Sullivan, editor of the United States Democratic Review and the christener of Manifest Destiny.

deus vult white supremacy

That trope partly stems from the political thought of John L. Within the rhetorical tradition of American civil religion, the United States is often depicted as divinely obligated to spread and defend democratic government throughout the world.











Deus vult white supremacy