Over the past few decades, the number of Americans who identify as religiously unaffiliated—often referred to as “nones”—has grown rapidly. In the 1970s, only about 5% of Americans fell into this category. Today, that number exceeds 25%. Scholars have debated whether this change simply reflects a general decline in belief, or whether it signals something more complex. The research team wanted to explore the deeper forces at play: Why are people leaving institutional religion? What are they replacing it with? And how are their personal values shaping that process?
should be happening with gen z and alpha too, but gen z has more right wingers than previous generations, due to significant propaganda.
it’s not all propaganda. there’s significant instability. gen Z can’t find a job. the old ways don’t work for them anymore. “right-wing” just means “without a plan to trust in”, IMO.
Propaganda cultivated and disseminated by Boomers.
Decades later, the root rot is still Boomers.
In this case I’m wondering about what Millennial parents decided to not bother teaching their own kids, evidently.
I always wonder what made millennials so left compared to every generation before and after.
the younger generation were considerablly more right wing than thier gen xers or boomer parents. gen z became mroe right wing due to people like tate, incel-ism, right wing grifters preying on these groups.
milleneals at least grew up with pickup artists, it was mostly fringe until gen z made it more mainstream.