In a stunning display of anti-Christian bias, Minnesota's Muslim Attorney General Keith Ellison has essentially told Christian worshippers that violent disruptions and intimidation tactics targeting their churches are simply "something you've gotta live with" in his state.
The outrageous comments come as radical leftist groups have increasingly targeted Christian congregations across Minnesota with what can only be described as coordinated ambush tactics designed to intimidate believers and disrupt worship services.
Rather than condemning these attacks on religious freedom or promising to prosecute those responsible, Ellison's office has instead provided cover for the radical elements terrorizing Minnesota's Christian community. This is the same AG who bent over backwards to coddle Antifa rioters during the 2020 Minneapolis riots that burned down entire neighborhoods.
"The message is clear: if you're a Christian in Minnesota, you're on your own. But if you're a radical leftist looking to disrupt church services, you've got friends in high places."
This represents everything wrong with the two-tiered justice system that Patriots have been fighting against. While Christians are told to accept intimidation as normal, you can bet Ellison would move heaven and earth if similar tactics were used against mosques or synagogues.
It's exactly the kind of Saul Alinsky-style radical playbook that Democrats have perfected: use government power to protect your allies while leaving your political enemies defenseless. Minnesota's Christians are learning the hard way what happens when radical ideologues capture the levers of power.
President Trump's return to the White House couldn't come at a better time. While state-level radicals like Ellison continue their assault on religious liberty, at least we now have a federal administration that will stand with Christians instead of abandoning them to the mob.
The question Minnesota Christians must ask themselves: how much longer will they tolerate an Attorney General who treats their constitutional rights as expendable? Religious freedom isn't negotiable, and neither is equal protection under the law.
