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08-07-2005, 09:05 PM | #1 |
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This country
Does anybody else feel that the majority of the population of the United States is completely retarded?? I feel that the majority of this comes from the media, the music industry in particular. The first thing that I will bring up is the war in Iraq. I just got done watching music videos on Fuse. I like alot of the music, but feel what they are saying is really screwed up. System of a Down's song BYOB uses the saying, "why do they always send the poor." I dont understand how they feel that anybody is "sending" the poor to Iraq. This is not like Vietnam with the draft, everybody going over there enlisted voluntarily. Even if the armed forces were comprised 100% of people who lived in poverty, how could you blame that on the government? The next thing that I cant understand is how people blame the government for them losing their jobs or getting their pay cut. I bet that the majority of the problems comes from ourselves. People complain that they cant find jobs or decent paying jobs because they all get sent over to China. Why do they always get sent over to China? Because we are constantly demanding cheaper products. Price is the number one factor in peoples decision on which product to buy. The largest expense for companies is labor. We are constantly demanding larger pay checks yet cheaper products. Now I know that it seems like I am pro-government/business, but I dont consider myself that way. I definately agree that the govt and business screw up, but still feel that we always try to blame them other than actually look at ourselves.
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08-08-2005, 11:56 AM | #2 |
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Re: This country
Okay, just gonna play devil's advocate here for a second: System of a Down is made of Armenians, who are, classically, oppressed people. They do a lot of advocation for their people's cause, which I'm venturing is freedom & humanitarian pursuits. "Sending the poor" might be their native government's methos of getting things done where they're from. "You depend on our protection" sounds like communism, really.
Take it with a grain of salt. While I'm with you on most of Hollywood and the coasts "losing it" when it comes to knowing what's right and wrong, these guys are still just entertainers. If they happen to arise an interest in what's happening in their own country through their music, more power to 'em. I think most people here are intelligent enough to realize, once they know about System of a Down's origins, that they're not preaching against the War on Terror. At least that's how I'm looking at it. I realize though, that a lot of their fans are left-wing types (shudders as to why they are allowed to exist) who'd rather protest than do an honest day of work in the real world. Take heart. There are many who think that a lot of America is falling apart. However, I can assure you that as long as my party has control of the White House, Senate, and House of Representatives, we'll continue to fight the good fight. Rock on.
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08-08-2005, 01:09 PM | #3 |
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Re: This country
Definitely a good reply, I like trying to see things from the other side. I didnt know that System of a Down was from Armenia, and that they could be talking about their native government. I was also just trying to use system of a down as an example of alot of the stuff that is out there. (it was the last video i saw) Like I said, I like their music, and the music of alot of other bands that are anti-government. (Im into punk and whatnot) I always get angered when I actually listen to the words, and the message they are portraying to all the people that are listening, which is normally an extremely one-sided view. I think my fault, and maybe other people like me, is that we automatically assume that they are talking about the US, when they could be talking about a totally different country!!! I feel quite ashamed that I didnt even think that they could be talking about a totally different country. Im not ready to say that the Republican party is the answer to everything, as the democrats are important, and do have what i feel are good points on some issues. I think its just that the radicals are getting more press time than the average democrat, giving off a disproportional view of that party.
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08-08-2005, 01:53 PM | #4 |
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Re: This country
Trust me, it's just as mysterious to me why the punk groups have a 'thing' against the US government when there are numerous other governments around the world who only hold a candle second to Hitler and Stalin. Think Indonesia, Iran, Sudan, etc., which are usually run by Muslim extremists. Do you see any of them singing against all the hundreds of thousands of Christians being killed by Muslim governments in Africa? NO! Hypocrites, all of them!
Even the Saudis are guilty of oppression, yet we buy most all our oil from them. Why can't we drill for oil here? Because the left has made oil drilling taboo here in the States. These are the first two items that popped into my head, but there are several other examples of how "f-ed up the world is." Sad to say, but it's always been this way. People think we're in a really messed-up time right now, but I ask them, when were things really "right" or "normal"? Not in my lifetime! |
08-08-2005, 02:11 PM | #5 | ||||
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Re: This country
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The old wheeze that governments always send 'the poor' to war is an ancient anti-war cliché and it does not apply to the current 'war' in Iraq, by any means. You know that and I suspect the guys in System of a Down' know that - or they should. But it makes a neat little populist anti-war statement for them that the liberals who abound in the music business will approve of. The facts are apparently not something the group care about when a good lyric can be constructed of anti-war canards. Quote:
The government can affect some fringes of the economy here and there - but not much, unless they make some really bonehead laws...which happens. Right now, the economy is booming with very low inflation and unemployment and high income levels all around. The Bush tax cuts helped that to happen but beyond that long-range governmental act of a few years ago (lowering the tax rates) most of the rise in our economic well-being is due to the decisions of individuals and business owners and CEO's, not the government. We live in a capitalist society, not a socialist or communist society and the government does not control the economy or 'give' people jobs. Quote:
As for cheaper prices: yes, we all want those. That's why Wal-Mart is so successful. Price/value. When Americans have more money to spend, whether due to the government taking less out of your paycheck in taxes or because you saved money on needed products by shopping at Wal-mart, that extra cash is put back into the U.S. economy. Whether you put that saved money in a bank, which can then lend money for folks to buy homes, or buy a new TV, car, whatever, it expands the economy - which is not a zero-sum entity - and that is good for everyone, rich, poor and all of us in-between. That's why capitalism works so well and why it is the engine that drives this nation. That some folks don't understand that or just grumble because they get fired is hardly proof of anything except that most people will be out of work now and then in their working life. It happens. We eventually move on to something else. Blaming 'the government' is hardly the correct response to a pink slip and that kind of misdirected whining gets you nowhere.
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08-08-2005, 10:57 PM | #6 |
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Re: This country
Yeah, I shouldnt have said that I feel that most americans are stupid. Most arent stupid, just that they want to blame their problems on the easiest thing; the government. I dont like to automatically blame liberals, thats why i use "they" hahaha. More or less what I see as the general mindset of america, or at least what is portrayed by the media.
The reason for using music as an indicator is because its such a large part of peoples lives, and like it or not many people are influenced by it. I just dont like that the message of a few is going out to so many.
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08-09-2005, 02:42 PM | #7 | |||
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What in a song? Not much
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I agree that the 'wrong' message is sent by most pop music singers and groups today - especially gangsta rap - but while they may influence some gullible minds, most of us grow up and realize that some multi-millionaire singer/songwriter pretending to be a 'regular' guy in scruffy clothes while onstage who then leaves the stadium protected by bodyguards, climbs into his chauffeur-driven limo, is driven to the airport where he boards his chartered jet and arrives at his 5-million-dollar Beverly Hills mansion where he is waited on hand and foot, doesn't really know squat about politics. He is even less qualified to tell other people what to think. Having a hit CD doesn't bestow special wisdom on anyone, liberal or conservative. For those who take song lyrics to heart and believe that they are gaining some kind of wisdom from them, well, what can you do? Not much, really. Just trust that common sense and maturity will allow those folks - most of them, anyway, to eventually grow up and learn to seek information from sources other than a song, newspaper or TV newscast, and then make independent judgements on serious issues instead of following some metaphorical herd that tells you what they believe you should think rather than you deciding for yourself. I have very 'conservative' political views, formed from my experiences and study over some time, but that doesn't mean that conservative politics are a panacea for all of the worlds problems or that I am always right (even if I may think that I am). I always urge folks to look at the facts, history, etc and make an informed opinion on the big issues of the day. Naturally, I will usually promote the conservative point of view but in the final analysis, each individual must make up his or her own mind on how to approach the significant concerns that confront the thinking person each day. I like pop music as much as anyone (well, some of it) but I didn't get my opinions from anything I may have heard in a song. I doubt many people really do, truth be told. However, those who do take their political cues or form their worldviews from songs and/or videos deserve what they get: ignorance.
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08-09-2005, 03:31 PM | #8 | |
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Re: This country
Although not a card carrying conserative or liberal, I do agree with the bulk of 5.0's comments.
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08-10-2005, 12:39 AM | #9 |
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Re: This country
From what i can tell we are both pretty much seeing eye to eye. I believe the deal with liberals is that they have pretty much ran out of things to complain about. They have done alot of good in the past, with things like work conditions and whatnot. Im not saying that we dont have problems anymore, but the major ones have been greatly reduced, and that would lead to fewer people choosing the left side. Somethings they have gone greatly overboard with, most ovbiously environmentalist. I started this thread just to get some things I have been thinking about for quite awhile off my chest, and explore some other views. Im glad all you guys have been responding, I really like seeing how others think, it can be so different at times.
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08-10-2005, 03:17 PM | #10 |
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Don't get me started
Don't get me started on liberals and liberal politics.
Political liberalism was quite different 100 years ago, at the turn of the 20th century, when sweatshops, the 12-hour work day, child labor and no regard for worker safety were all common. Unions, along with government regulation, were the new hope of the poorly-paid working man. Social liberals fought for minimum wages and safety conditions and other big issues of the day, including the end of racial segregation and the establishment of federal civil rights laws (which most Southern Democrats vehemently opposed). Back then, liberalism meant actually helping people in need to some extent. Now, it simply means bigger government, which means more intrusion into your life combined with ever-higher taxes. Unfortunately, liberals have generally been dangerously soft on national defense if not flat-out anti-military, looked favorably at communism and other repressive ideologies over the years and have opposed capitalism as evil and repressive when in fact, it is the lifeblood of America and a major reason for our ability to rise to superpower status since the end of World War Two. Look at who supports the liberal-dominated Democrat party today: trial lawyers, pushing up the cost of everything by attacking the manufacturers of perfectly safe products that are used irresponsibly. Militant, anti-male feminists who think having an abortion should define all women. Unions, shrinking in members every year and still supporting the Democrats even when half their membership votes Republican and minority groups with never-ending grievances (think Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and Louis Farrakhan), just to name the major players in the DNC. Liberals have been stridently against the war in Iraq and, now forgotten, were mostly against the war in Afghanistan, too. That is their right, but the barely-hidden anti-military attitudes on the political left are troubling to many folks. Liberals push enviromentalism like a religion and try to use environmental laws to stop progress and normal human activity. The insane Kyoto accord, that the U.S. passed on because it would have crippled us economically while exempting China, India and other big nations with serious pollution problems, is a good example of how the left has tried to use environmentalism as a club to stifle U.S. progress and cripple our economy, all in the name of 'clean air'. The trouble with that rationale is that our air is far cleaner than it has been for decades, as is our water. We have more trees now than we did 200 years ago. The environmental ploy the leftwing uses to advance it's anti-capitalist agenda is a hoax. Yes, we have problem areas and we can't stop working to get our air and water in even better condition but the left's cry that we are 'killing the planet' is absurd. These days, the political left uses not only 'enviromentalism' to push it's agenda but plays one race against the other, pretending that anyone who doesn't think the America of 2005 is just like the America of 1940 for black people is a 'racist'. It goes without saying that the political leftwing loaths - and never stop whining about - the Bush administration. Too bad. When you win elections- as Republicans do - you get to set the national agenda. The liberals who run the DNC today can only disrespectfully call President Bush 'a moron' while he continues to do big things that will change the course of the nation and be effective long after he is retired. The liberals running the Democrat party today fight like banshees every time a tax cut for the overburdened American taxpayer is raised by Republicans, using the old 'tax cuts for the rich' line when that is patently untrue of most tax cuts. Meanwhile, our economy is absolutely booming and the Democrats keep losing more seats in congress, along with the presidency, every election. The Democrats elect a raving leftist zealot like Howard Dean to the DNC chairmanship and wonder why more and more people are backing away from a political party that get loonier every month, making wild accusations against Republicans and acting as if we are all going to die because a Democrat elitist snob wasn't elected president last November. On and on it goes. Political liberalism, as it is practiced today, runs counter to what most Americans cherish and believe. The highly secular leftwing sneers at religion and and the concept of God, portrays believers as idiots and weak sisters. Meanwhile, over 80% of Americans believe in God and have a religious faith that sustains them to some extent. Most Americans favor a smaller tax burden...but not liberals. Most Americans want a Supreme Court that will actually follow the constitution instead of finding hitherto unknown 'rights' that don't really exist in that venerable document. Liberals want a Supreme Court that makes laws instead of interpreting them, as the constitution calls for. Most Americans, even if they are not pleased with the war in Iraq, want the U.S. to win the war and see Iraq become a full-fledged democracy. Liberals just want us to cut and run and call it 'victory', as they persuaded the government to do in VietNam, to our everlasting shame. In many ways, political liberals seem to be opposed to individual freedom, a smaller tax burden, less government intrusion into business and personal lives. They seem to favor race-baiting, environmental whacko stuff that costs taxpayers money and harrasses business and individuals trying to comply with more and more regulations, and they obviously obsess over finding more and more new rights and writing new laws just for homosexuals. They are always finding America to be the villain in the war on terror, and generally treat the twice-elected president of the United States disrespectfully, just because they, with their insufferable elitist attitudes, think they are somehow better than he is and, truth be told, better than 'the rest of us'. They are far from it and their leftist views will probably help shrink their numbers in congress in the next election and render them even less important than they are, now. One hopes, anyway. Like I said, don't get me started.
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08-10-2005, 04:36 PM | #11 |
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Re: This country
Hey why don't we switch to a discussion of the Supreme Court and how liberalism in an unelected arm of our government can send jobs to China and any number other things that effect us daily?
Oh yeah and how this bomber of "family care" clinics must be kept off the court. I heard he used is own cell phone to set off the bombs. Maybe we can write a song about that. Just kidding...... Just kidding...... Agree with 5.0 just have to wait for maturity but is some it never comes.
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08-11-2005, 02:30 PM | #12 |
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Judging the Judge
The attacks on Judge John Roberts from the militant feminist/pro-abortion leftists were predicted the moment President Bush nominated the man. No surprises there. This is what they do. However, Judge Roberts appears to have few ideological 'handles' the left can grab onto. This reduces the political leftwing to lying and purposely distorting his record, which will turn off most reasonable people. When all the smoke clears, Judge Roberts will be easily confirmed by the Senate and the left will have lost yet another ideological fight.
The U.S. Supreme Court has done a lot of harm to this nation over the years, including the recent decision in Kelo v New London; that gives towns, cities and states the right to extend 'Eminent Domain' to areas where the existing homes or businesses, which may be in fine condition and operating normally, can now be taken by the government (under Eminent Domain law), then sold or transferred to a private entity (think: Wal-Mart) and commercial facilities built on the property that will generate more tax revenue for the town or city or state. It's a blatant attenuation of citizen property rights and should be overturned - but this kind of absurd ruling has become much more common on this Court in recent decadess. From the dreadful Roe v Wade ruling in 1973 that rested on a judicial belief - not the constitution - to the 2003 Lawrence v Texas decision that codified sodomy (between consenting adults, in private) to a constitutional right, the Supreme Court has been making lousy decisions that have little to no constitutional basis. We need a more 'conservative', constitutionally-oriented Supreme Court. If you believe that, as I do, you hope that Judge John Roberts is confirmed and can help take the Court in a more constitutional direction. I warned you. Don't get me started.
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08-11-2005, 03:04 PM | #13 |
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Re: This country
Mr. 5.0, have you read Ann Coulter's book yet? Yeah, that one. If you have, would you suggest picking up a copy?
BTW, I don't like the fact that nine lawyers in black robes dictate the course of our nation, either. However, I thank God we still have the power to elect the men in charge of appointing them. Remember Clinton (heil Clintler! ) and the Court striking down his line-item veto? Whew!
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08-11-2005, 03:17 PM | #14 |
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Re: This country
The city that I live by, Detroit lakes Minnesota, just recently sold a large chunk of land, supposedly to Mills Fleet or Menards. Where did this land come from?? A private citizen, which the city took the land with some rediculious reason, they sold it for upwards of 1-2 million.
Liberalism I feel still has a role in America, but a much smaller role than 100 yrs ago, like I said earlier. The biggest issue that I feel they are just in fighting for is Gay Marriage. In another hundered or so years from now (or whenever it is allowed) I feel it will be looked back apon by future generations with shame, much like racism is today. I am with you on those environmentalist. I feel that They have done their role, but now need step down. Did you know that trees are actually growing faster than what we can chop them down!!! That doesnt seem to get across too much. Certain things that they fought for I believe are right, like emissions on vehicles or having to go back and plant trees where they were chopped down. Also the regulations about the use of pesticides around bodies of water is an important one, which I feel is important. (remember, I live in the land of too many lakes) They do need to learn where to draw the line, when it becomes too much of a problem for people. I can see the pesticide thing, which is simple to obey, you just have to buy the right stuff. Now if it were that you couldnt run your cars engine 1mile from any lake, alot of people would be in trouble. I also feel that god has no place in government. What I mean by this is that no decision made by the government should be based on god, only the moral beliefs of most americas, or the right decision to make everybody as free as possible. (even if it goes against what most americas feel. Monuments, to me, are fine to have on goverment property, as long as the goverment didnt pay for them or another religious monument is denied on the same property. To me this links back to gay marriage, which in the eyes of god is wrong, but otherwise doesnt affect anybody else.
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08-11-2005, 09:43 PM | #15 |
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Re: This country
Mr 5.0, I agree with everything you said!
bmxmon, you seem to have a good head on your shoulders at 18! It seems too many 18 year olders are swayed toward liberalism because it is promoted so much on MTV and by the Hollywood bigshots and on campuses. They just blindly follow what is poured into their brain. Oh, and you have a classic Mustang too
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08-11-2005, 11:03 PM | #16 |
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Re: This country
haha, thanks Orange97GTVert!!
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08-12-2005, 01:02 PM | #17 | ||
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Re: This country
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I only hope that President Bush can appoint two or three (Justice Stevens is now 83 years old) more Supreme Court Justices that will read the constitution as it is written and apply it to their decisions fairly and stop trying to change society according to their personal whims and then pretend to 'find' some hitherto unknown 'right' in the constitution to justify what they have already decided - not on the basis of the constitution - but their own personal preferences. That's wrong - yet it's been the pattern of the Supreme Court for 40 years or more. Let me hasten to note that I don't necessarily want all Republican/conservative ideologues as Supreme Court Justices, either. Just fair-minded men or women who read the constitution and apply it sensibly to their rulings, without any ideological bias. That was the original intent of the founders and if we could get the Supreme Court back to that line of reasoning - making the actual words of the constitution our guide instead of what we wish it said - this nation would be well served.
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08-12-2005, 01:38 PM | #18 | ||||
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Re: This country
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I believe a man has no more 'right' to marry another man than he does to marry his sister. That the marriage laws sensibly and naturally permit only a man and a woman - who were obviously meant for sexual intercourse and subsequent procreation - to marry, is hardly 'discrimination' against homosexuals. Just because a minority group who's sexual proclivity is opposite to the body they inhabit doesn't mean that not meeting their strident demands for marriage rights is automatically 'discrimination', as the gay advocacy groups keep claiming. Permitting that kind of ersatz 'marriage' between two people of the same sex weakens what is an already fragile building block of civilized society. Marriage is clearly about a man and a woman and artifically stretching it to cover homosexual relations may not appear to have any effect on hetrosexuals, personally, but it's corrosive effect on a basic societial structure would be enormous and very destructive, in time. For what? To please a tiny but vocal and powerful group who find the same sex attractive? Homosexuality is not a result of biological processes and remains a mental choice, for whatever reason. As such, not allowing homosexual relationships to be included and legally viewed as equal to hetrosexual marriage is simply common sense no matter how much the gay groups cry 'discrimination'. Any attempt to equate the former U.S. discrimination shown toward people of color is invalid as homosexuality is not genetic, race is. Quote:
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08-12-2005, 01:54 PM | #19 |
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Re: This country
Quote-Liberalism I feel still has a role in America, but a much smaller role than 100 yrs ago, like I said earlier. The biggest issue that I feel they are just in fighting for is Gay Marriage. In another hundered or so years from now (or whenever it is allowed) I feel it will be looked back apon by future generations with shame, much like racism is today. -
...I believe that may happen one day, but not because it is right. Back in some Roman (and/or Egyptian) times it was quite common to be with the same sex, but they were not of the same religion or 'value set' that most people have been under for hundreds of years now. I think it will happen because of the fall of Christianity these days. The US used to be a major Christian strong hold. Even from its birth. When I was a kid (I'm only 26 but I do live in the "Bible Belt") WalMart and everything except fast food closed on Sunday. No one mowed the law, or hunted or fished on Sunday either. These days people are becoming bored with the Bible and thanks to Television/Radio/Internet, we've seen a 120 year decline of Religion in general and are much more open to new possibilities and ideas- whether or not you think they are or are not correct. We see violence on a more localized scale such as schools and homes now. It used to be the divorced woman/man across town and now half of marraiges end in the same fate. I'd say to stick with the morals. Now, if you bring racism into this... that's the same. Slavery has unfortunately been common for all the Earth's history. Sad to think about, and almost down right depressing. As for me... I'll stick with the Bible. I like what I've read of it, though it's really hard to stick to... especially the "Turn the other cheek" part! Lol!
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08-12-2005, 05:05 PM | #20 | ||||
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Re: This country
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Religion may be less important to some people today than it once was but the evangelistic Christian churches are booming in membership and most fundamentalist Christian churches are doing very well, too. Only the old-line churches are dying out and most of that is due to their foolishly attempting to adopt liberal positions that their members see as running counter to the bible they are supposed to be based on. The Congregational Church's insistence on appointing a gay Bishop has torn that denomination apart - and they are losing members all the time. They haven't followed the bibical warning that you cannot serve two master: God and man. Their loss. Quote:
Most of the 'new possibilities' seem to include casual, serial sexual relationships and bearing multiple illegitimate children, co-habitation, drug use and other destructive lifestyles that destroy families and harm the people engaging in them, in the long run. The growing violence and continual gutter-talk we hear now all around us as well as the rejection of authority and downgrading of our collective culture is a partial result of some of those 'new possibilities'. Quote:
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