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Booker Turns Faith into Political Theater, Ignoring Divine Authority

Senator Cory Booker took the stage at a Michigan Democratic Women’s Caucus event and capped a sermon-like performance with the chilling line, “What we need is not from on high,” pointing skyward as if to dismiss the Almighty and replace faith with partisan mobilization. That quote, delivered in a revival cadence and captured on video, handed conservative Americans a blunt reminder: some on the left are openly jettisoning the faith and moral language that built this country for raw political organizing instead.

Booker didn’t stop at theology; he shouted for “foot soldiers of our democracy,” a phrase that sounds less like civic engagement and more like militarized activism dressed up as virtue. The tone — frenzied, theatrical, and unmistakably combative — turned what should have been a sober call to vote into a recruitment sermon for a movement that now presents itself as a moral crusade.

Unsurprisingly, conservative media and grassroots patriots erupted in outrage when the clip circulated, rightly pointing out the hypocrisy of a senator who talks about love and unity while whipping crowds into a mob-ready frenzy. Outlets across the right called out both the substance and the style, and Americans who still believe in God, order, and peaceful civic persuasion saw this as yet another signal that Democrats are drifting into a theology of power rather than a politics of persuasion.

This performance fits a pattern for Booker: the man who once staged a marathon Senate speech and cultivated a Spartacus persona now trades on theatrics rather than humility or reasoned leadership. Conservatives should not be surprised that a politician who prefers spectacle to statesmanship would also flirt with language that minimizes divine authority while elevating party agitation.

Americans of faith must ask themselves whether they want a country where politicians cheerlead mobs and treat citizenship like enlistment in a partisan army. Our republic was founded on reverence for a higher law and for ordered liberty, not on fevered calls for “foot soldiers” who obey the latest partisan command.

If Republicans and independents who love this country want to save it, now is the time to push back with conviction, show up at the ballot box, and defend the idea that faith, family, and law are nonnegotiable. This moment is a wake-up call: stop tolerating theatrical moral relativism from the left and start building a movement that honors God, the Constitution, and the hardworking Americans who keep this nation running.

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