That's funny. I don't feel persecuted at all. I haven't received a single threatening letter from the "Prayer Police", or had them bust in my door for fear that I was practicing an unlawful belief system. I became an ordained minister a couple years ago, which, if Christians were in fact being persecuted, could have resulted in my incarceration and/or murder. In fact, it's hard for me to imagine feeling less inhibited from practicing freedom of thought, worship, and conscience.
I've never been accused of terrorism (by anyone other than Janet Napolitano), and nobody has ever told me that, because of the heinous acts of others who claimed to believe in my God, I shouldn't be allowed to establish a Christian service anywhere in the country. Now that would be persecution. If some bureaucrat or city planner came up to me and said, "your kind killed George Tiller, so you can't build a church within five-hundred yards of an abortion clinic", I think I'd be pretty PO'ed. But miraculously, that's never come up.
If you want to talk persecution, I urge you to consider the plight of Muslims in this country, who are regularly profiled, scrutinized, and vilified in the media for a terrorist attack they had nothing to do with. Revoltingly, it is even assumed by many that the government can use the September 11th tragedy as a pretext for stripping Muslims of their freedom of association and of private property. The average Muslim deals with more misdirected hatred and irrational fear in one week than I have in an entire lifetime.