College Student Sounds Alarm Over a Textbook That Connects Christians to a ‘U.S.-Based White Supremacist Group’
A student at the University of North Georgia, Kelbie Murphy, expressed outrage after discovering a passage in her $100 International Public Relations textbook that labeled Christianity as a U.S.-based white supremacist group. The controversial sentence appeared in the introduction to chapter eight, listing various identity modifiers and specifically associating “Christian” with white supremacy.Murphy,a devout Christian,criticized the passage for misrepresenting Christianity and questioned why such content had gone unchallenged since the book’s 2007 publication. She shared her reaction on TikTok, where the video gained critically important attention. The university clarified that the textbook referred to the extremist “Christian Identity Movement,” not all Christians, but Murphy remained unconvinced and called for the book to be revised or removed, emphasizing the need for careful evaluation of academic materials.
A student at a Georgia college is irate after finding a passage in a textbook that equated Christianity with white supremacy.
Kelbie Murphy of the University of North Georgia was slogging through her $100 textbook for her International Public Relations course when she hit a mind-blowing roadblock.
The introduction to chapter eight read, “An internet search produces the following modifier for identity: corporate, sexual, digital, public, racial, national, brand, and even Christian (a U.S.-based white supremacist group),” according to Fox News.
“The way it was worded, it listed several marginalized groups, but then only called Christians to be white supremacists,” Murphy said. “But the scariest thing is that the book was written in 2007.”
“This has been d for almost 20 years, and it was never questioned,” Murphy said.
“I think American academia needs a definite reevaluation, especially in our textbooks, as we can see from my prime example.”
Murphy said she is a devout Christian who was baptized in March.
“I don’t want people who don’t know who Jesus is or who don’t know what Christianity is to take this and run with this and see Christians as a U.S.-based white supremacist group,” she said.
Murphy came across the passage in September and d her outrage on TikTok, attracting more than 400,000 views, according to WDUN-FM.
#Christianity described as ‘US-based white supremacy group’ in PR textbook at Univ of North Georgia
Student Kelbie Murphy ‘MIND-BLOWN’ that textbook only describes Christianity
Adds textbook in use since 2007
And this happens in predominantly Christian state of Georgia pic.twitter.com/n3DNfIP5lb
— Michael Ashura (@MichaelAshura) October 16, 2025
“My feelings were hurt, hearing that we’re allowed to publish books in America that blatantly are saying that Christianity is related to white supremacy,” Murphy said. “After reading that passage, I propped my phone up and the first thing I did was video myself. It was a reaction to my feelings.”
The University of North Georgia tried to claim the passage was misinterpreted.
“We are aware of and understand recent concerns raised about a passage in the textbook used in a senior-level public relations course,” the college said.
“To be clear: the textbook is not describing Christians as white supremacists. The author’s reference is to the ‘Christian Identity Movement,’ a U.S.-based extremist group that misuses Christian symbols to promote hate. We recognize how this mention could be misinterpreted, and we are reviewing the matter,” the college said.
Murphy did not buy into the explanation that she read the passage incorrectly.
“I still do not think that this (passage) was blatantly explaining the Christian Identity Movement, instead, it was connected to the word Christian in the book,” she said.
She said that although college officials were kind in reaching out to address her concerns, she says she wants the book removed.
“[A]t the end of the day, I think that the book should be taken, maybe, off the shelf and re-published. Maybe just that one sentence … If they would go back and edit it and say ‘the Christian Identity Movement,’ maybe I would support that, but just the way it was written was so messed up, in my opinion,” she said.
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