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Buchanan quotes the Dallas Morning News as projecting that “fewer than half of Texans will be white” by 2005, and the implication is obvious. In fact Texas is over 70 percent white according to the 2010 census.
Michael Malice • The New Right: A Journey to the Fringe of American Politics

First, as we discussed already, Americans continue to disaffiliate from the Christian tradition and Protestantism more specifically. Americans who are not connected to a Christian tradition will be much less likely to be exposed to Christian nationalism. Furthermore, their social networks will offer much lower levels of social support for those
... See moreSamuel L. Perry • Taking America Back for God: Christian Nationalism in the United States

exvangelicals have the lowest income and education of all the groups we surveyed.
Collin Hansen • The Great Dechurching
“In 2018–19, the median congregation had only 70 regular participants, counting both adults and children, and an annual budget of $100,000. At the same time, the average attendee worshipped in a congregation with 360 regular participants and a budget of $450,000.”
Bob Smietana • Reorganized Religion

I have heard numbers as high as 75 percent of Americans have made some kind of decision to accept Christ, but statistics also show that only about 25 percent of Americans go to church regularly.





