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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 14, 2022

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The three hearts are an interesting model. I’m not sure I buy that it was considered by the founders. They seemed pretty sincere about the sort of deism that underpinned “endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights” ten years before. That’s a universalist heart, not a secular one, and speaks to the fundamentally Christian context of the founders—who drew up a secular Constitution anyway. The second heart was never separated from the third.

I have some nitpicks about the main argument. Denominations were not keeping kayfabe in schools, both because America was wildly Protestant and because public schooling wasn’t remotely compulsory until the 20th century. Federalism in general suggested that the Constitution wasn’t going to touch local practice. The concept of a “successor ideology” is cribbing off Nietschze’s “slave morality,” except applied to things that reactionaries don’t like, which makes for a lousy category. Tarring atheism as a tool of the enemy easily predates wokism.

But the main problem is that you fail to justify why the Constitution ought to be crumpled to defend classic religion. Given that the line has always been drawn between the first and second hearts, intentionally strengthening the second is a terrible way to fight an ideology grounded in the first. Any gains are guaranteed to come with an erosion of that barrier. Is it any wonder that conservative justices are wary?

Christians and atheists alike are perfectly allowed to stand in the public square. They are not allowed to monopolize it, nor to wield public power against their competitors. (Yes, this means science teachers should not be evangelizing atheism. It does not mean the Satanic temple needs to be reined in.) A finger on the scale for generic Christianity is not closing a loophole. It is making it easier for victories in the first heart to dominate the others.