Category: Religious Panics

  • The Technocracy Calendar

    This theory claimed that the Technocracy movement’s proposed calendar reform was not merely an efficiency measure but a direct assault on Sunday and, by extension, on Christian authority. Critics argued that by subordinating the week to a continuous day-and-year count, Technocracy would disrupt the familiar religious rhythm of worship, weaken the social force of churches, and detach timekeeping from inherited sacred structure. The documentary record shows that Technocracy did propose a radically revised calendar and explicitly treated week and month as lacking fundamental astronomical significance, but the stronger claim that abolishing Sunday was a covert anti-church objective came primarily from hostile interpretation rather than from Technocracy’s own formal language.

  • The Dust Bowl as God’s Wrath for FDR

    This theory framed the Dust Bowl not primarily as a climate-and-soil catastrophe but as divine punishment falling on the United States during Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency. Among conservative religious and anti-New Deal circles, drought, dust storms, federal crop controls, and agricultural slaughter programs were woven into a moral narrative: the land itself was testifying against national sin, political arrogance, and Roosevelt’s reforms. The theory did not always accuse the administration of causing the weather directly; often it argued that the disasters were heaven’s judgment on the era Roosevelt represented.