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Just caught something interesting about how differently outlets are covering the same story. CNN's Pamela Brown dropped a documentary on Christian nationalism this week, and the way Fox News responded tells you everything about selective framing in media.
Here's what happened: Brown's piece examines the political alignment between Christian nationalist movements and the Trump administration — pretty straightforward documentary work. She interviews Matthew Taylor from Georgetown, a religious scholar who actually distinguishes between mainstream Christianity and the radicalized Christian nationalist ideology. She also talks to people who identify with the movement itself, including Andrew McIlwain from Texas.
But Fox News, specifically Kayleigh McEnany, attacked it as a 'hit piece on Christianity in America.' That's where it gets messy. According to reporting on this, McEnany conveniently left out Brown's actual thesis — that Kirk's death occurred during 'unprecedented alignment between Christian nationalists and the Trump Administration.' That single sentence is basically the whole documentary's argument.
What Fox did was trim the context, isolate the discussion about radicalized elements, and reframe the entire thing as an assault on faith itself. They collapsed the distinction between Christianity as a religion and Christian nationalism as a political ideology seeking policy power. Clever editing, honestly.
The real issue isn't whether you agree with Brown's framing — it's that viewers got a caricature instead of the actual argument. They were shielded from the central question: should a movement openly tying America's future to scripture and enjoying unprecedented alignment with executive power actually face scrutiny?
This is textbook media manipulation. You pick your audience, control what they see, and they never even know there was a different version of the story. The Christian nationalism documentary became a case study in how narratives get weaponized.