The U.S. does not blindly follow religious prophecy—it follows money, geopolitical strategy, and elite interests.
The notion that American support for Israel is purely driven by dispensationalist Protestant theology is an oversimplification that ignores historical facts, political strategy, and elite influence. While it's true that Evangelical Protestants form a strong pro-Israel bloc, they are not the architects of U.S. foreign policy—the real power lies elsewhere.
Elite Capture, Not Theology
America was not founded on Biblical prophecy but on a Constitution that explicitly separates church and state. Nowhere in the U.S. Constitution does it mention “chosen people” or “divine land grants.” The Founding Fathers rejected old-world religious dogma in favor of Enlightenment principles. The idea that U.S. policy is shaped solely by grassroots Evangelical fervor is a carefully crafted illusion—in reality, it is elite capture by powerful lobbying groups and financial networks that steer the country’s direction.
Weaponized Theology for Political Control
This chosen people narrative is not an organic belief among ordinary Americans; rather, it is aggressively propagated by think tanks, media conglomerates, and billionaire donors who control political discourse. Ordinary immigrants and working-class Americans are either brainwashed into supporting it or threatened with ostracization and even deportation if they dare to question it.
The Real Agenda
The U.S. does not blindly follow religious prophecy—it follows money, geopolitical strategy, and elite interests. If Evangelical support were truly driving policy, why does U.S. foreign policy also favor Saudi Arabia, a country that suppresses Christianity? Clearly, this is about power, not prophecy.
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