The saddest thing is that the children who are put into these institutions will someday age out and become chronological adults, if they live so long, who will need a lot of help adjusting to life in the real world. Some of them probably will have little kids in tow by the time they are 20, given these "Christians" obsession with child marriage in lieu of education. These so-called "Christians" aren't going to help them, so that leaves the rest of us.
You've never talked to a Christian, have you?
Are you nuts? I was raised Christian in a neighborhood that was predominantly Christian, and a good deal of my friends were and are Christian. In my hometown, the Methodist Church was opposite the Catholic Church on the town square, the Unitarians were two blocks away, the Quakers two blocks in the other direction, the Lutherans, the Episcopalians, and the Baptists three. There were actually two Presbyterian churches. We even had Dutch Reformed. We just didn't have "pastors" sniffing little girls' panties, "purity culture,"
and pigs trying to "marry" 16-year-old girls who had years of education ahead of them and get them pregnant constantly. And we didn't have bizarre overgrown boys walking around town with guns trying to find their missing "manhood," either.
BTW: In my life, I've prayed at several Christian hotspots, St. Peter's, Ephesus, Canterbury, St. Paul's, Westminster Abbey, to name a few. And little St. Stevens down from the office, where I used to spend Good Friday doing the Stations of the Cross. I've talked with a lot of Christians. In college, I had a boyfriend who did something really wrong. I went to a priest I knew and asked whether I should find a way to forgive him. We had a long talk about forgiveness, and he said that it was my choice, but if I did, never, ever tell him that I did.