So you jump on Tallpine/Grumpy for extrapolating, then you follow up with a statistic that almost certainly had to come out of thin air. Where has there ever been any sort of legitimate study or poll showing that "close to %100 of everyone in America" wants the government to redistribute their alleged "wealth"?
My guess is that it's a lot closer to 0% than it is to 100%.
1. I pointed out how silly it is to smear a group composed of many millions of people based on claims of personal experience, when that personal experience consists of what is probably a few dozen people.
2. If one defines "theocracy" as loosely as charby/tallpine et al seem to be, then I get to define what counts as desire to redistribute wealth just as loosely. let's start with "anything outside of the most strict duties defined in the Constitution ie common defense, regulating inter-state trade, and a justice system.
3. So why do I say almost everyone wants to redistribute wealth in one way or the other? First, let's assume that "almost %100" is roughly synonymous with "around %99" which allows roughly %1 opposition or over 3 million people. So, between all the people who support some shape or form of welfare, corporate bailouts, farm subsidies, energy subsidies, public schools, public libraries, any level of public support for anything to do with health insurance or healthcare, keeping useless .mil bases open because of their positive effect on the local economy, buying sub-standard or unneeded products because they're "made in America!", tariffs, student loans, SBA loans, FDIC guarantees, promoting research, foreign aid, and a million more then yes almost everyone supports at least one program that takes wealth from one group and gives it to another. Principled anarchists are basically the only ones who don't, and there are significant schisms in the anarchist community over that point.
It's really easy to say "I don't want the .gov to redistribute wealth" as a general principle, but if you drill down into everything .gov does there's generally at least one area that even the most libertarian person supports.
ETA Which is why no candidate has ever been elected (at least above the local level) on a principled, detailed, "let's cut off all .gov spending that is not explicitly needed for the limited roles described in the CotUS.