Sure gross numbers will have that effect and while I haven’t run the 2008 numbers I imagine that gross population numbers meant that Protestants may have outnumbered the Catholics voting for Obama and surely have in other elections, but it ignores what makes a group favor an ideology and it is something of a childish denial, especially for conservative activists like ourselves that are interested in making American voters more conservative.
Some Catholics and homosexuals vote Republican and some Protestants vote Democrat.
What is it though that turns the majority of Christians of Catholicism into liberals and what makes the majority of Protestant Christians conservative?
What happens to a Hispanic that makes him conservative when he leaves the Catholic community and becomes a Protestant?
You wrote:
“What is it though that turns the majority of Christians of Catholicism into liberals and what makes the majority of Protestant Christians conservative?”
I don’t think that is the case. All Protestants by definition are religiously liberal. Some Catholics are politically liberal, but not all Catholic Democrats are. They might be liberal on some issues, but not others. I think you should worry about your own house since your people put Obama in the White House. Obama is a Protestant too don’t forget.
“What happens to a Hispanic that makes him conservative when he leaves the Catholic community and becomes a Protestant?”
Again, I don’t think that is the case. I know plenty of conservative Hispanic Catholics.