tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33855769.post1122254872316054512..comments2024-03-27T17:40:18.022-07:00Comments on Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters: 'Federal judge sues using anti-lgbt 'religious liberty' card' & other Wed midday news briefsBlackTsunamihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02349560427762283170noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33855769.post-9874442832259505452017-02-22T15:53:19.564-08:002017-02-22T15:53:19.564-08:00This first thing we need to do is stop calling the...This first thing we need to do is stop calling these things religious liberty laws. We validate their argument when we use their language. These are Christian supremacy laws. They are not intended to protect my religion, or my sister's religion, or the beliefs of Buddhists. It is to give preferential treatment to Christian ideology over other religions. The benefits it might give other faiths is incidental, and unintended. Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12468344973499553581noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33855769.post-67575880995346513832017-02-22T09:50:35.393-08:002017-02-22T09:50:35.393-08:00Christianists became comfortable with loss of trut...Christianists became comfortable with loss of truth decades ago. With the rise of the "moral majority" under Reagan and his use of the morally suspect "family values" epithet most American Christianists began to love lying for Jesus in earnest. By pretending they are more superior, elite and privileged than any other Americans they began to push through their agenda to impose their religion on everyone regardless if they shared the same beliefs or not. The groups like AFA, FRC, ADF are just the latest incarnations of a hate that's been festering really for centuries. I remember as a young child attending church and listening to the pastor urge everyone that voting Repub was imperative (this was decades before Reagan even). As I grew older I realized that imposing beliefs was more important to my church than actually practicing the tenets of what Jesus taught. I would say the majority of Christians today fall into the Christianist cult mentality. What's sad is that real, loving Christians have allowed these extremists to speak for them and hijack the discussion to the point they represent what most of the public now thinks all Christians believe. The ironic thing is, I think they're causing their followers to turn away in huge numbers. When I was a child, everyone attended one church, synagogue or another. Now, most people don't attend and fewer and fewer are professing any strong belief in divinity at all. I think we're witnessing the last, dying, convulsive gasps of the religious right. In a decade or so, they will be a very minor fringe group that nobody cares about. However, they'll do a lot of damage on their way out.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com