Christian supremacist worship leader Sean Feucht is heading back to Seattle for Revive in 25, and anyone paying attention should recognize this isn't just another stop on his revival tour. It's a calculated return to a “spiritual battlefield" that's already proven fertile ground for the right’s brand of manufactured controversy.
Just months ago, the Mayday USA’s confrontational event at Cal Anderson Park generated exactly the kind of heated opposition and 23 arrests that Christian nationalists feast on. And now, Feucht is doubling down on a strategy that transforms local community defense and opposition into national political capital.
What happened at Cal Anderson in May wasn’t a spontaneous combustion. It was a carefully orchestrated provocation designed to create the very confrontatio