I wish I was a reporter again. God! I used to love to ask important people, “What the Hell do you think you’re doing?” although I didn’t use those words. The point of the questions was the same. I loved those moments, as good reporters do. It’s what we are there for, actually.
Bloomberg News has quoted the leader of the Missouri Senate saying President Trump wants our congressional districts redrawn “to be sure Missouri’s representation matches Missouri’s Christian conservative majority.”
If I were still a reporter, I would have several questions. .
What are the values of a “Christian conservative majority” that are lacking in any of our present congressional districts—or members of Congress? Is it just a matter of Democrats serving from two of those districts? Does the election of Democrats indicate a majority of the people in a district lack Christian values, particularly “Christian conservative” values?
Given that our two Democratic controlled districts are centered in our biggest cities, is she suggesting St. Louis and Kansas City are to some degree not Christian?
Are these congressional districts that are not conservative Christian Muslim? Shintoists? Buddhists? Sikhs? Atheists? One of the Congressmen is a Methodist Minister. Is he not Christian enough? He’s the one in the crosshairs. How about Methodists generally? The denomination has split recently. Which side is most Christian?
How does the Trump administration reflect the Christian values of being our brother’s keeper, of being the Good Samaritans, of helping the poor, of healing the sick? How does President Trump fit into that description of Christianity?
How is ICE and its behaviors a reflection of “Christian conservative values?”
How does she square Paul’s letter to the Galatians that proclaims, “There is no longer Jew or Gentile, slave or free, male and female. For you are all one in Christ Jesus.”
—Or even how well the leader of our government fits the admonition from the Old Testament Prophet Micah:
He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.
And what does the Lord require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy
and to walk humbly with your God.
It seems from here that there are shortages in the justice and mercy categories. And humility is not a word in the Bible he’s peddling.
One of the joys of being a reporter is being curious about things and having access to people who can discuss answers to that curiosity.
I was away from the Capitol for about five years after I left my life in the newsroom and when I went back to the Capitol to try to convince the legislature to do things the casino industry won’t let it do, I realized how much I missed the intellectual give-and-take of the place. A reporter’s job is to question and questions by reporters should not be automatically interpreted as hostile as often as they are, especially today when some political skin seems horribly thin.
How can we understand the religious attitudes that are dividing us if we refuse to ask or refuse to answer questions that test what we believe. And how Christian is it to claim that there is no room for different interpretations whether they are personal, denominational, social, or political?
Religion is an especially touchy subject these days when it has become a political tool or weapon. I struggle to accept those who think differing views make someone less Christian.
As I have often remarked, “Nothing screws up faith more than religion.”
I’d like to know what religion has to do with congressional redistricting. I doubt that Donald Trump has made that one of his reasons for trying to gerrymander-rig the 2026 elections.
Apparently, six Christian districts and two heathen districts isn’t good enough. We’ll be watching how legislators suddenly take a heathen area and with a few strokes of their genuine Donald J. Trump Sharpie, legislators will turn a heathen part of the state into a Christian one.
I’m pretty sure that is not something James Madison and his fellow creators anticipated when they wrote the Constitution. And I’m also pretty sure the court system has never ruled that congressional districts must be drawn intentionally to reflect Christian values.
I’m just an observer now. But, man oh man, there are times when I wish I could walk up to someone who thinks they’re important and ask things like this.
One Christian to another.
When I heard the response to gerrymandering about “Christian Conservatives” I was glad to hear that I was now a confirmed Christian cause I live and vote in a Christian state…and I pity those heathens in the other congressional districts that are not of Chrisitian Values. Guess they will have to move to Kansas.