Donald Trump Knows More About Jesus Christ Than Anyone, Even the Pope - WhoWhatWhy
This story raises questions about governance, accountability, and American values.
The WhoWhatWhy piece isn’t really about theology. It’s about using religion as a cudgel, with Trump cast as a cartoon villain and millions of voters treated as fools. That framing may feel clever, but it dodges the harder question: why so many Americans distrust the institutions that lecture them.
New Republican Times Editorial Board

This week we all had the joy of witnessing Trump sticking his finger in the eye of the Prince of Peace.
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New Republican Times Editorial Board
The WhoWhatWhy piece isn’t really about theology. It’s about using religion as a cudgel, with Trump cast as a cartoon villain and millions of voters treated as fools. That framing may feel clever, but it dodges the harder question: why so many Americans distrust the institutions that lecture them.
Conservatives don’t need a politician to be a saint. We need a president who respects the rule of law, defends national security, and understands public trust is earned through results, not sanctimony. Mocking faith language doesn’t strengthen civic life. It turns belief into a punchline and deepens cultural resentment.
A serious press would judge leaders by competence and conduct, not by scoring points off Scripture. The principle at stake is institutional credibility, not who can deliver the snarkiest sermon.
Commentary written with AI assistance by the New Republican Times Editorial Board.

