"The left has literally tens of thousands of people doing this work, leftover from the Obama era, where they have all these systems in place. And so you have to get used to just doing this work and spending a little bit of time. I call it like going to church every week," Bowyer said.
"You've got to spend a few hours every week just doing the activist work as part of your lifestyle in America if you don't want the left to take over," Bowyer went on. He noted that "Church is more important," but that it's the same kind of habit that's necessary.
Andrew Kolvet said, "Not to the left it's not," and Posobiec piped up, saying that to the left, activism is the same as church.
"For the right," he said, "going to church is your theological experience of the week. That's where you get your emotion. That's where you get your connection to God, your connection to community. For the left, participating in mass protests is their way of going to church. It is their theological activity of the week.
"It is religious. They believe that by taking part in it that they are doing something for their religion, and in fact, they are. Because that is exactly what their belief system is, that this, their commitment to progressivism is beyond ideological, it is a theology and it is a religious movement and they believe it."
"It's a pagan religion," Posobiec went on to say. "It's a neo-pagan religion and it is certainly with their worship of the Earth, which goes back to Gaia worship and old pagan religion. You see it with their worship of all earthly things because they don't actually believe in eternity."
"So they will have these pagan belief systems," Posobiec said. "They also believe in crazy things that you can't see. So they'll say, like, 'Oh, you say you believe in God and Jesus, but you can't see God and Jesus and angels.' And I say, 'Okay, well, you guys say you believe in things like systemic racism and the wage gap and none of those things exist in reality either.'"




