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“God put us in the desert,” she said. “We are in the desert right now.”

Actually, she’s in a white-flight suburb of Nashville (which voted for Obama, like many Southern cities).

Everybody in the South knows somebody like Beth Cox, a perfectly decent, intelligent woman whose spiritual home is the Southern Baptist mega-church of which her husband is pastor — one of those sprawling, edge-of-town affairs with 7,000 members, auditorium seating, volleyball courts, a children’s center and a “techno-lit recreation room for teenagers.”

Essentially theological WalMarts, such churches have grown up across the region to replace the small towns Southern suburbanites grew up in. Alas, most are turning out to be even more class- and ethnically-stratified.

Unless she makes an effort, a woman like Cox never has to deal with anybody she doesn’t agree with on most personal and political issues. The women’s prayer group she leads sounds like a meeting of sorority sisters striving to win a Best Mother/Most Happily Married competition whose existence is never acknowledged.

Mirror, mirror on the wall / Who’s the holiest Mommy of all?

But if Cox won’t let her girls read “Harry Potter” for fear of witchcraft, politically she’s no fool. She thinks the GOP has gotten “way too white,” and should field more minority candidates. She believes tea party extremists alienated voters and that “crazy immigration talk and legitimate rape” comments did Romney’s campaign irreparable harm.

It was also brave of Cox to speak so frankly to a Washington Post reporter. Over time, it may gradually dawn on her that the Obama-as-Antichrist theme Fox News and Glenn Beck have sold her is every bit as phony as their election predictions.

Meanwhile, out in Cheyenne, Wyo., New York Times reporter Jack Healy finds that “a blanket of baffled worry has descended on conservatives ... like early snow across the plains.” Although Wyoming receives more federal funds per capita than any other state, manly self-reliance was all disappointed Republicans wanted to talk about.

“The parasites now outnumber the producers,” one Bradley Harrington explained. “That’s why Romney lost, and I think it’s going to get worse.”

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