A map about people who paid attention in history and government class vs those who didn’t.
Mildly Interesting
This is for strictly mildly interesting material. If it's too interesting, it doesn't belong. If it's not interesting, it doesn't belong.
This is obviously an objective criteria, so the mods are always right. Or maybe mildly right? Ahh.. what do we know?
Just post some stuff and don't spam.
Exactly. Grew up Christian and it convinced me to be agnostic. Even then, I still would never add religious beliefs to the teaching of children early in life, when they clearly lack intelligent decision making skills.
I think teaching about religion is fine and actually good for interacting with people outside your culture. Teaching of a specific religion is where you run into trouble.
I had a unit early on in school and another one in my early teens where we basically learned about the origins of a bunch of different religions and cultures surrounding them. Learned a lot about people that otherwise would seem unapproachable to me.
I didn't need those classes to know forcing religion onto others is the exact opposite of what Jesus wanted
I thought that the deeply religious states were more of a minority. Yikes.
They are. Those areas are thinly populated.
Unfortunately it's land that votes, not people.
I thought it was corporations...
Ohio and Florida are thinly populated? Texas has a large area but also population.
Ohio is mostly corn and "Hell is real" billboards.
Yeah but it also has the 7th highest population in the country and a higher population density than California, somehow.
California is also big.
You are forgetting about Grandpa’s Cheese Barn to. Also as another user mentioned it’s a highly populated state
To learn anything about American politics you need a county level map.
With size adjusted to account for population! It becomes useless as a map, but significantly more illustrative of the political realities.
The US 2020 Presidential Election Cartogram:
Oh, and here's 2024
Maine is the least religious state but for some reason is gray on the chart. I'm curious about how the question was asked in the study
Relative to the US average. But the US is a very deeply religious nation compared to other developed nations.
That's a lot of stupid morons who pretend to care about the constitution but don't.
That's a lot of stupid morons who pretend to care about the ~~constitution~~ bible but don't.
Pretty much.
The point of the establishment clause is that it shouldn't matter what the majority says about religion. It should mean exactly nothing. Tyranny of the majority shouldn't be allowed to make non-Christians into second class citizens.
I'm saving this for when the civil war is about to break out and I need a rough estimate of where the front lines will be.
If there's a civil war, Michigan will quickly be appropriated to Canada.
The only states id maybe be interested in as a Canadian is California, New York and Washington (also Maine because why do they even extend so far into Québec?).
For real though, with the Democrats response to Trump, I don’t really want them anywhere near Canadian politics. They’d make our Liberals look socialist
Also factor
Military, national & state guard, and LE bases project a zone of control
100 miles from any border is a zone of control
As culture wars continue to brew in schools across the United States, one unconventional group is pushing for more representation in the classroom: Satanists. This has particularly caused controversy in states like Tennessee, where an elementary school formed a program for children called the "After School Satan Club."
This program was created by an organization called the Satanic Temple, a relatively new religious movement that purports to teach "compassion and empathy toward all creatures." However, the introduction of these clubs has unsurprisingly made parents upset, while supporters of the Satanic Temple say they are working to improve the lives of children.
https://theweek.com/education/satanists-school-representation-after-school-satan-club
The Satanic Temple really is great. For those that haven't heard of them, check it out. Donate. Join. They use religious laws for the promotion of logic, reason, and empathy.
What the fuck
What the fuck Michigan
Horrifying
Interesting, places that many cultures and beliefs are coming led heavily oppose it, while states that are majority WASPs are for it.
Interesting that simply being around people of other beliefs can change your way of thinking.
If they want there is nothing stopping them from praying in school if they want, they just can't compel others to do it with them.
That's the thing. It's not enough that they're free to follow their religion, they need to force everyone else to follow it too.
Tax the church!
The United States had a good run. I hope I see the entire West Coast secede in my lifetime.
How was the research conducted? Their website talks about the sample size, but I didn't see how respondents were selected. They claim it's representative of the national population, but if they're cold-calling random people to ask the questions, I can almost guarantee there are going to be more older people responding because younger people tend not to answer unknown phone calls.
https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2025/02/26/religious-landscape-study-methodology/
A total of 205,100 sampled addresses were mailed survey invitations. Respondents were given a choice to complete the survey online, by mail, or by calling a toll-free number and completing the survey over the phone with an interviewer. Of the 36,908 U.S. adults who completed the survey, 25,250 did so online, 10,733 did so by mail, and 925 did so by phone.
It goes on to say the results were then weighted to get a representative demographic sample, e.g. if more older people answered, younger responders would count for more.
Jesus Christ.
And I say that without a hint of irony.
Why just Christian prayers? Why not prayer in general?
Use a generic "what do you think about prayer in public schools?" survey, and then where states vote YES create campaigns to make satanic and Muslim prayer programs at schools in the states that were all for prayer lol
Because most of these places have <1% non Christians in their communities. Anything else is scary
I live in Michigan, and it's anecdotal because I tend to surround myself with secular people, but I find this hard to believe.
I love maps that are basically just population density maps
Is it though? Florida is quite dense in US terms and states like Idaho and Montana are about as far from dense as you can get.
WTF RI?
That is not surprising.