Kinism is the belief that Christians have a duty to prefer the members of one's family – and by extension, one's ethnic group – and should preserve racial differences in "racially homogeneous families, congregations, and in distinctive social and perhaps even national spheres." The term is often used to refer to a "movement of anti-immigrant, 'Southern heritage' separatists who splintered off from Christian Reconstructionism to advocate that God's intended order is 'loving one's own kind' by separating people along 'tribal and ethnic' lines to live in large, extended-family groups."
Kinism is the belief that Christians have a duty to prefer the members of one's family – and by extension, one's ethnic group – and should preserve racial differences in "racially homogeneous families, congregations, and in distinctive social and perhaps even national spheres." The term is often used to refer to a "movement of anti-immigrant, 'Southern heritage' separatists who splintered off from Christian Reconstructionism to advocate that God's intended order is 'loving one's own kind' by separating people along 'tribal and ethnic' lines to live in large, extended-family groups."
==History and ideology== The Kinist ideology emerged in either the 1990s or the early 2000s.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).