J. Dylan Sandifer is now a sociology professor at the University of the District of Columbia, but Sandifer didn’t grow up in the U.S. capitol. Sandier was raised in East Texas and had a strict evangelical fundamentalist upbringing — and now rejects that ideology.In a biting think piece published by The New Republic on January 13, Sandifer emphasizes that one of most troubling characteristics of far-right evangelical Christian fundamentalists is their disdain for “critical thinking.” And that disdain, Sandifer warns, poses a threat to democracy itself.”Growing up in the evangelical church in the piney woods of East Texas, the world felt circumscribed by an ever-present fear — not just of sin but of ideas that might challenge the worldview handed down to those of us in the pews,” Sandifer explains. “Everything outside the Christian framework — including secular music, television, and books — was discouraged. Just as I signed multiple purity pledges throughout my preteen and teen years, promising to avoid not just sex, but even impure thoughts, we were taught to practice absolute abstinence from dangerous ideas.”READ MORE: ‘Utterly inadequate’: Conservative warns Trump ‘major war’ is looming — and he’s not readyThe “evangelical distrust of intellectual inquiry,” Sandifer observes, “has found a powerful ally in American right-wing politics” — going back to the late Rev. Jerry Falwell Sr.’s alliance with President Ronald Reagan in the early 1980s.”The rise of Jerry Falwell Sr.’s Moral Majority and its embrace by the Reagan campaign provided organizational structure to these fears, helping translate religious anxieties about intellectual corruption into political action,” the sociology professor observes. “Building on the foundation laid during the Reagan Administration, figures like Pat Robertson continued to leverage this partnership in the 1990s through organizations like the Christian Coalition of America.”Sandifer adds, “They capitalized on fears of moral decline to mobilize voters and influence policy, solidifying evangelical influence within the Republican Party.”With President-elect Donald Trump’s encouragement, Sandifer warns, the “alliance between evangelical Christianity and conservative politics” has “fostered a cultural paranoia that seeks to limit the range of acceptable ideas.”READ MORE: Revealed: Allies are grilling career intel staff to ensure total loyalty to Trump”In an era of rising authoritarianism and deepening social division,” the sociology profess writes, “our capacity to think critically about ideas rather than fear them may well determine whether democracy survives. The question isn’t whether we can protect ourselves from ideas, but whether we can develop the intellectual resources to evaluate ideas thoughtfully.”READ MORE: ‘It is tremendous’: Kremlin insiders explain how Trump is already helping advance Putin’s goalsJ. Dylan Sandifer’s full article for The New Republic is available at this link.