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Pete Hegseth Shares the All of Christ Video

August 13, 2025

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Pete Hegseth

On August 8, 2025, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth lit a match under the feminist establishment by reposting a six-minute CNN video on X, captioned “All of Christ for All of Life.” The segment, aired on August 7, 2025, featured Pastor Doug Wilson and his Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches (CREC) pushing back against the now-“sacred” women’s voting rights and egalitarianism. Far from a scandal, Hegseth’s move was a fearless stand for what he believes in: Biblical truth and traditional family structures.  Reposting this was backed by his unassailable right to free speech. The video’s ideas — repealing the 19th Amendment, restoring household voting, and embracing patriarchy — are not just defensible but necessary to fix a society broken by decades of feminist overreach.

The CNN segment, reported by Pamela Brown, showcased CREC pastors laying out a vision that cuts through modern dogma. Jared Longshore didn’t flinch: “I’d support it [repealing the 19th Amendment] on the basis that the atomization that comes with our current system is not good for humans.” Whether you agree with him or not, (the author of this article absolutely does), it’s apparent that giving women individual votes has fractured families, turning husbands and wives into rivals chasing their own agendas at the ballot box. The family unit, once a fortress of shared purpose, now splinters under the weight of competing egos, thanks to feminism’s obsession with “equality.” Longshore’s point isn’t about stripping rights—it’s about restoring cohesion, where families act as one under strong male leadership.

Toby Sumpter doubled down, proposing a household voting system where the man, as head of the family, casts a single vote after consulting his wife and children. This isn’t oppression; it’s common sense – if there is no father in the house, the matriarch casts the household vote. Families function best when decisions reflect a unified front, not a chaotic free-for-all where every member demands a say. Men, built for leadership, are equipped to weigh the family’s needs and represent them in the public square. Feminism’s push for individual votes has eroded this natural order, leaving society with fractured homes and confused roles. Sumpter’s model would bring back clarity, letting men lead as God and nature intended.

Doug Wilson, the intellectual heavyweight of CREC, put it bluntly: “Women are the kind of people that people come out of… The wife and mother, who is the chief executive of the home, is entrusted with three or four or five eternal souls.” This isn’t a slight—it’s a recognition of women’s vital role. As ineloquent as the former half of the statement was, the final portion of Wilson’s words were spot-on.  Motherhood, not political posturing, is where women shine, shaping the next generation into responsible, contributing members of society. Feminism has sold women a lie, convincing them that power lies in competing with men rather than complementing them. Wilson’s words cut through this delusion, reminding us that families thrive when roles are distinct, not blurred into a genderless mess.

Hegseth’s repost was no accident. As a member of a CREC-affiliated church, he’s steeped in these truths. The Pentagon’s Sean Parnell confirmed it: “The Secretary is a proud member of a church affiliated with the Congregation of Reformed Evangelical Churches, which was founded by Pastor Doug Wilson. The Secretary very much appreciates many of Mr. Wilson’s writings and teachings.” Hegseth’s X post, which racked up 15,000 likes and 3,000 shares before he deleted it under pressure, was a deliberate signal: he’s not afraid to challenge a system that’s left America weaker. The First Amendment gives him every right to do so. His role as Defense Secretary doesn’t make him a robot bound to parrot progressive talking points. Free speech means even cabinet members can share ideas that make feminists squirm, and Hegseth’s repost was a masterclass in exercising that freedom.

The backlash was predictable. Sen. Tammy Duckworth called it “unacceptable,” whining that a Defense Secretary shouldn’t amplify “anti-democratic” views. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan labeled the ideas “dangerous,” as if questioning women’s voting is a threat to civilization. Progressive groups like People for the American Way piled on, clutching their pearls over Hegseth’s nod to Christian nationalism. Their hysteria only proves they’re scared of the truth. Feminism has had a decades-long stranglehold on policy, convincing society that women’s votes are sacred while ignoring the chaos they’ve unleashed. Divorce rates are up, families are crumbling, and men are sidelined in their own homes. The 19th Amendment, sold as progress, has fueled this mess by prioritizing individual rights over collective strength.

Wilson’s broader points in the segment—defending traditional family structures and rejecting modern moral decay—are undeniable. He’s caught flak for saying there was mutual affection between slaves and masters in history, but he’s not wrong to point out that human relationships, even in tough times, were complex. His call to recriminalize homosexuality, referencing a time when all 50 states banned sodomy in the 1970s as “not a totalitarian hellhole,” is a massive overreach, but it is nice to have someone reminds us that society once had clearer moral boundaries. Feminism and its allies have dismantled those boundaries, leaving us with a culture that celebrates confusion over order.

Hegseth’s repost wasn’t just a flex—it was a rallying cry. The 19th Amendment, by giving women independent votes, has weakened the family unit, letting feminist ideals override male authority. Household voting, as Sumpter suggests, would restore balance, ensuring families speak with one voice led by men. Wilson’s vision of women as mothers and homemakers, not political warriors, aligns with a truth feminists hate: men and women are different, and those differences are strengths when properly ordered. Hegseth’s move, backed by his free speech rights, shows he’s willing to fight for a stronger, family-first America. The outrage from the left only confirms he’s hitting the right target. In 2025, with Christian nationalism gaining ground, Hegseth’s repost is a reminder that truth doesn’t bow to feminist tears.

Sources: CNN, NPR, Mediaite, X posts from August 7-10, 2025.

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Media & Technology Morality Analyst

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Jaymie Johns

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