First off, the Catholic Church is based out of the Vatican, not Italy.
Secondly, for most Catholics, this is at best equivalent to a pilgrimage site, not a “homeland promised to them by god” - It is far more similar to the relationship a Muslim has to Mecca, though even then, it’s far more watered down, as Catholics aren’t expected to visit per se, unlike Muslims, who are expressly told to do so as a core tenet of their religion (hajj), so your comparison is weak/incorrect on two fronts.
Finally, Muslims, Protestants, Methodist’s, Hindus etc don’t have automatic optional citizenship of their respective countries of interest - so the relationship is quite different.
I don’t begrudge anyone to engage in whatever religion or fantasy they please, but to say you are “Jew first, American second” will likely, for the aforementioned reasons, lead people to the “dual-and-rivaling interests” line of thought.
It's a pretty recent lesson that things can get bad in a country for a group. We see that in a lot of countries against whites. I would expect if things got bad enough here for either group, they'd get the hell out.
First off, the Catholic Church is based out of the Vatican, not Italy.
Secondly, for most Catholics, this is at best equivalent to a pilgrimage site, not a “homeland promised to them by god” - It is far more similar to the relationship a Muslim has to Mecca, though even then, it’s far more watered down, as Catholics aren’t expected to visit per se, unlike Muslims, who are expressly told to do so as a core tenet of their religion (hajj), so your comparison is weak/incorrect on two fronts.
Finally, Muslims, Protestants, Methodist’s, Hindus etc don’t have automatic optional citizenship of their respective countries of interest - so the relationship is quite different.
I don’t begrudge anyone to engage in whatever religion or fantasy they please, but to say you are “Jew first, American second” will likely, for the aforementioned reasons, lead people to the “dual-and-rivaling interests” line of thought.
I see your argument. I also see that there was a time when being a German citizen was irrelevant if one was a Jew.
I can see that messing up loyalty to country in some.
It was irrelevant if you were disabled, sympathized with communists or were otherwise considered untermensch as well, yes.
I’m not sure what that has to do with people in the United States 75 years later though.
It's a pretty recent lesson that things can get bad in a country for a group. We see that in a lot of countries against whites. I would expect if things got bad enough here for either group, they'd get the hell out.
Yes, and I’d hope wherever they went and found salvation they wouldn’t hold “second” to anything.