I seem to recall having had similar arguments with you in the past (though it's possible I'm mixing you up with a different post who hasn't been around in a while). You didn't grow up fundamentalist. You didn't live in an illiberal religious environment. I did. And these folks are way more numerous and way more crazy than you think. Until recently, they weren't making a lot of headlines, but they're starting to now that these folks have essentially taken over the Republican party. It's similar to various online subcultures, where if you're not in them, you're unlikely to ever hear about them. How many people knew what qanon was before the pizzagate shooting? How many had ever heard the term "groyper" prior to Charlie Kirk's murder?
I grew up in a Southern Baptist household.
My mom's family was Southern Baptist, and my dad's side was Irish Catholic.
Heck, how many conservative states have tried to make it easier to run over protestors? Last I recall, it was several. Greg Abbot couldn't wait to pardon that guy in Austin who blew a red light, drove into a crowd, and essentially instigated his own "self-defense" encounter. A current, active staff member of this board has argued to me that James Alex Fields was defending himself when he ran down Heather Heyer in Charlottesville. How far down the slippery slope is it from turning a blind eye towards political violence to executing people you believe are committing abominations against God? It doesn't look that far from where I sit.
And how does:
"If a protestor is blocking you in, and you feel unsafe, you won't be punished if you hit the gas" compare to protesting rights in, say, Afghanistan or Iran or Saudi Arabia?
We're still comparing a mouse and an elephant here.
Because I don't think the cultures you're putting at the top are as virtuous as you think they are. They're just as power-hungry and hypocritical as anybody else. Put them in a failed state with a bunch of guns and in a couple decades, they'll turn out just as bad.
I didn't say I thought they were a supreme symbol of virtue, if I thought that, I would be a member of their religion instead of being religiously unaffiliated.
The reality is, the religious fundamentalists in our country have lived in pockets of lacking educational funding, "food deserts", poverty, elevated unemployment, have been consistently electing likeminded people for local/state levels and for congress...
And they've already had most of the guns in this country for the last 60 years (with an ever increasing stockpile)
Now, one can say they think things have been trending in the wrong direction for a while with regards to attempts to consolidate religious and political power here in the US, but given that the culmination of that is Trump (a guy who's not particularly religious, appoints women and gays to his cabinet, and called the pro-life position "a loser of an issue"), it's not a particularly compelling.
I would go out on a limb and suggest that any perceptions of that situation getting worse is likely only using a 5-10 year lens instead of looking at the overall trajectory, long-term.
The reality is, most of the Christian denominations are far more progressive now (on a variety of issues) than their 1950-1960 counterpart. (and that's with their religion being giving "special social status" for a good portion of that time)