https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/religious-landscape-study/religious-family/atheist/party-affiliation/
In context of other religious groups
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2016/02/23/u-s-religious-groups-and-their-political-leanings/
I think Perd has a point about it being easier to accept temporal injustice if one believes in an eternal reckoning. A pragmatic government or politician might even see that as beneficial regardless of their actual belief.
I wasn't arguing Perd's point that it's easier to accept temporal injustice if one believes in an eternal reckoning. I was objecting to the statement that "I think it's true (could be wrong) that most people on the far left do not believe in hell. Certainly communism discourages such. Left-wing religion tends to disbelieve."
Atheists and some Agnostics certainly fall into that category, but are a pretty small percentage of the population. (Wiki says 6ish %) but most everyone else has an afterlife and some kinda of incentive to be good, It's kinda a defining point of religion writ large. I think your links, cordex, bear that out:
Everyone of those, even the blue leaning ones have an afterlife with a reckoning. Hinduism and Buddhism with continual reincarnation are the least explicit, but still there, and the rest of those pretty much explicitly believe in the Christian Judgment and Hell, or a very close analouge.
Full on Communists aside (and they are another conversation, despite their small numbers) Faith in God{s} and an afterlife does not seem to correlate to any particular ploitics or moral stance in the US. In Perd's defense he said he was just musing and could be wrong.
I'll now brace myself for the "No True
Scotsman Christian" arguments.