What they're not telling you: # DOJ Releases Report Alleging Anti-Christian Bias Under Biden A newly released 500-page Department of Justice report claims the Biden administration systematically prosecuted, regulated, and investigated Christian Americans based on their faith rather than neutral legal principles. The report, released April 30 by the DOJ's Task Force to Eradicate Anti-Christian Bias under Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, examined conduct across more than 17 federal agencies. "No American should live in fear that the federal government will punish them for their faith," Blanche stated.

Marcus Webb
The Take
Marcus Webb · Surveillance & Tech Privacy

# THE TAKE: The DOJ's Self-Flagellation Theater Let's cut through this. A government agency investigating itself for bias against Christians—the demographic holding roughly 64% of congressional seats—reads as institutional kabuki. The 500-page report's real value isn't its findings. It's what it *reveals about messaging*. This is a DOJ under new leadership signaling alignment with a specific political constituency. I've seen comparable operations at NSA: when leadership changes, investigative priorities suddenly crystallize around convenient narratives. The actual question: which cases constitute "bias"? The report's methodology matters infinitely more than its conclusions. Were standards applied retroactively? Did they compare Christian-related prosecutions against similarly-situated secular ones using identical metrics? Without accessing the underlying data architecture, we're consuming political theater dressed as jurisprudence. That's not reporting. That's stenography with footnotes. What specific prosecutions does the DOJ claim were discriminatory?

What the Documents Show

The task force was established through President Trump's February 6, 2025 executive order titled Eradicating Anti-Christian Bias. According to the report's findings, the Biden-era actions "devastated the lives of many Christian Americans"—a characterization rarely reflected in mainstream coverage of religious liberty disputes during that period. The investigation reviewed internal communications, case files, and prosecutorial decision-making patterns across agencies including the FBI, IRS, Department of Education, and Department of Health and Human Services. Approximately 200 pages document alleged religious discrimination. Among the specific findings: an FBI memo from 2023 labeled "radical traditionalist" Catholics as potential threats, citing the Southern Poverty Law Center as a source.

🔎 Mainstream angle: The corporate press either ignored this story entirely or buried it in a 3-sentence brief. The framing, when it appeared at all, focused on process rather than impact.

Follow the Money

Though later retracted, the memo's initial circulation within federal law enforcement raised questions about how religious doctrine itself—rather than criminal conduct—could trigger government scrutiny. The mainstream press largely treated this as a routine correction rather than examining the institutional pathways that produced such characterizations. The report also identifies Biden-era regulations on abortion, contraception, gender, and human sexuality as creating legal frameworks that placed religious organizations in direct conflict with federal power. Particularly significant is the DOJ's analysis of how the Biden administration applied the 2019 Supreme Court ruling in Bostock v. According to the report, this interpretation led to enforcement actions the task force characterized as "sex-based discrimination in federally funded schools and sports"—decisions that effectively required religious institutions to comply with gender ideology or face federal penalties. This regulatory approach received limited critical examination in mainstream outlets, which typically framed such policies as necessary civil rights protections.

What Else We Know

The use of multiple federal agencies to "monitor, investigate, and apply pressure" to Christian groups represents a pattern of coordinated action across government, the report argues. This raises fundamental questions about whether enforcement decisions were made on legal merit or aligned with particular ideological priorities—a distinction the mainstream narrative frequently obscures by treating such actions as isolated incidents rather than systemic patterns. For ordinary Americans, the implications extend beyond theology. If federal agencies can initiate surveillance and prosecution based on religious belief rather than demonstrable harm, the precedent affects all citizens. Religious Americans now face documented evidence that their faith traditions may have triggered federal scrutiny not despite their lawfulness, but because their doctrines conflicted with regulatory ideology. Whether these allegations withstand scrutiny, the report's existence signals that religious liberty claims once dismissed as partisan grievances are now the subject of official government investigation.

Primary Sources

What are they not saying? Who benefits from this story staying buried? Follow the regulatory filings, the court dockets, and the FOIA releases. The truth is in the paperwork — it always is.

Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.