It's popular in the Northeast and I'd assume the PNW as well.
So basically the states that you can actually play ice hockey in
The problem with Lemmy is that the demographic that uses it is too specific: nerdy, atheist, college educated (usually in computers) Gen X and early Millennial left-wing political hobbyists.
Like, there's a reason the one of the only specific media franchises that can sustain an active community here is Star Trek.
When's the last time a rock band was labeled a "science band", but you can name four or five christian bands without even listening to them?
I feel like a pedant, but I'm sorry, the notion that most Americans can name five Christan bands/artists is bullshit. Maybe most Bible Belters can. Christian music gets the designation of "Christian music" because it is segregated away from everything else, listened to by a large, but still niche demographic who are already very religious, and treated as a joke by everyone else (including most non-Evangelical Christians.)
I can name two, Skillet and Red Jumpsuit Apparatus. The former is just the band I see mentioned to make jokes about Christian music, and the latter I saw on a show about one hit wonders (the hit is about domestic violence and doesn't even have faith based undertones.) If I start making exceptions like "became Christian after the height of their fame" (Kansas and Kanye West) or "stopped being Christian before they became known" (Katy Perry) I can get to five.
And on that note, what would a "science band" be? Like, a band that writes lyrics about new scientific discoveries? Yeah that'd have more in common with Nick Jr. than most music, secular or not. Most music deals with emotions in a way Christian music can but "science music" couldn't. The closest would be philosophy, but there's already a ton of music drawing on philosophy, and nobody segregates it from normal music because it's not music that only appeals to a specific demographic.
Political ideology: depends greatly on how big a role the internet played in raising Bernie Sanders' profile. I think it did a lot, so I'd probably be less left but still too left to vote Republican.
Religion: Without Internet I'm probably a nominal Christian like my mom. As in, identifies as Christian but it doesn't affect my life like, at all.
Overall worldview: It's probably in the same ballpark, but not as developed. I don't think I've ever done a total 180 on my values, but the application of those values has changed a lot.
When I was a kid (born in 2001,) not having this shit was a point of national pride.