Yeah, some of the people involved might call themselves Christians, but I think they're lying or deluded. They don't represent any version of Christianity that makes any sense to me. Same in Northern Ireland: nominally Catholics versus Protestants, both Christian sects, and they euphemize it nicely by calling themselves republicans or reformers or something like that. But whatever those people are, Christians they are not. Any person who truly understands and has internalized Christ's message would not behave that way. Even an unrepentant old atheist like me can recognize that much. Jesus may or may not have been divine (I vote not) and the Son of God (again I vote not), but he spoke good sense according to all the reports we have of him. Mostly. Care for each other, love one another, help each other, seems like pretty elementary morality to me. People who can't or won't do that, people who will draw an artificial line between themselves and certain others who are trivially different, cannot legitimately call themselves Christian. The essence of Christianity, according to everything I've read about it, is that it's inclusive, accepting, and forgiving. Can you ask for better than that? I don't think so.