Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Trump: Evangelical Federal Workers can now Harass Coworkers to Convert

Imagine you're in an office with a dozen or two employees working side by side. One of your co-workers starts telling you that his religion is more correct than yours. You may have a nice conversation about it, once, maybe twice, but if it persists it is generally considered harassment. Not anymore. Trump wants to give federal workers the right to inflict their religious bullshit on fellow employees who can no longer complain about it.

The second insidious aspect of this is that those employees whose proselytism in the workplace becomes protected can ONLY be Evangelical Christians. I cannot imagine Trump allowing Jehovah's witnesses, or Mormons, or Jews, or Muslims, or Catholics, or Hindus or others to badger their fellow co-workers about every other garbage religion that exists.

But let's say that the Moron-in-Cheat does not restrict this missionary activity to his favorite imbeciles, the Evangelical adulterers, pedophiles, child abusers, etc. Let's say that he is so keen on equality before the law that anyone can harass their co-workers about which religion is better than the other. The net outcome of this is that ther workplace will turn into an orgy of garbage beliefs - I personally consider all religions to be garbage - fighting it out in the office, causing heartache and bad feelings, wasting time and productivity....

The slipper slope is here too: Will Trump next issue a memo allowing male co-workers to make their sexual mating case before their female co-workers? Or their political opinions?

Trump seems to be listening to his Evangelical criminal hoodlums breathing down his neck before the next elections. He is not a religious person by any means. He pretends to be. But he needs the Evangelicals to prevent a looming disaster in the next congressional elections in the fall of 2026.

The fact that the Evangelicals continue to support Trump despite his crimes, his greed, his messy sexual life of abuse, harassment, assault, prostitutes and underage girls, means that they too don't give a damn about their own declared values and morals. They too have a political agenda that they prioritize over their religion, which is therefore fake, contrived, hypocritical, and unconvincing to most reasonable decent people. Only criminals are attracted to the Evangelical cult who then brainwash credulous uneducated simpleton ignorant people. 

Just like his criminal Zionist friends who aim for the fucked-up idea of a "Democracy-for-Jews-only" Israel, Donald Dumb wants the US to become a "Republic-for Evangelicals-only". In a way, both Israel and the US are regressing into a Jewish and Christian versions, respectively, of the Iranian Mullahs and the Afghan Taliban.

The US federal workplace is going to become a very interesting battleground. Keep watching.
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Trump memo allows federal workers to persuade coworkers their religion is ‘correct’

Alex Gangitano
Mon, July 28, 2025

Trump memo allows federal workers to persuade coworkers their religion is ‘correct’

The Trump administration released a memo Monday that aims to protect religious expression among federal workers, outlining that employees can attempt to persuade co-workers about why their religious beliefs are “correct.”

The memo outlined conduct that should not result in disciplinary or corrective action, including displaying in the office bibles, religious artwork, jewelry, posters displaying religious messages and other indicia of religion such as crosses, crucifixes, crescents, aums, swastikas, stars of David, mezuzahs, darmashakrah, shandas, korans, bibles, yin&yangs, etc.” If I were in a federal office, I will choose the "pole" of Festivus.

The memo also said one or more employees should be allowed to engage in individual or communal religious expressions and that employees can engage in conversations on religious topics “including attempting to persuade others of the correctness of their own religious views, provided that such efforts are not harassing in nature.”

Federal workers can also “encourage their coworkers to participate in religious expressions of faith, such as prayer, to the same extent that they would be permitted to encourage coworkers participate in other personal activities,” the memo said.

Office of Personnel Management (OPM) Director Scott Kupor sent the memo to heads of departments and agencies with guidance on how to allow personal religious expression by federal employees “to the greatest extent possible unless such expression would impose an undue hardship on business operations.”

The OPM worked with the White House Faith Office to produce the memo, a spokesperson told The Hill. President Trump established the office in February.

The memo included details about how federal workers can engage with others about why they think their personal faith is “correct” and why others should “re-think” their own beliefs.

“During a break, an employee may engage another in polite discussion of why his faith is correct and why the non-adherent should re-think his religious beliefs. However, if the nonadherent requests such attempts to stop, the employee should honor the request,” the memo added. “An employee may invite another to worship at her church despite being belonging to a different faith.”

The memo outlined specific examples of permissible religious expression in the workplace, like having a Bible on a desk or a Star of David and forming a prayer group with employees while not on duty hours. It also gave the example of a park ranger joining her tour group in prayer or a doctor at a Veterans Affairs hospital praying over a patient.

“The Federal workforce should be a welcoming place for Federal employees who practice a religious faith. Allowing religious discrimination in the Federal workplace violates the law. It also threatens to adversely impact recruitment and retention of highly-qualified employees of faith,” the memo said.

The memo, first reported on by Fox News Digital, follows Trump’s executive order on anti-Christian bias, which aims to protect Christians from religious discrimination.

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