I see there was no shortage of hate-filled Christians out there in Iowa yesterday. I particularly loved the county i which someone handed in a petition requesting the County Recorder's refuse to give same-sex couples the form to get a license. There were 8 signatures on it. All good God-fearing Christians I'm certain of it
Gotta be sure to keep everyone else from getting what you already have. Gotta be sure to prevent the notion that civil rights are for everyone from growing into a national movement. Gotta get out there and make sure others are hating too!
I doubt I'll ever understand it. The very people who represent these organizations that preach love and forgiveness are at the forefront of almost all the hate in this world.
When, do you suppose, will we wake up and realize that the problem isn't with people, it's with their God!
Wasn't it Lura Nyro who sang the song, "I'm not afraid of your Yahweh, I'm afraid of what you do in the name of your God."
Update: I just had to come back and add this little tidbit. I was reading storied about people in Iowa submitting their signatures on petitions protesting gay marriage, and one of them was Chris Wolfe...whose sister was one of the first in the state to marry under the new law yesterday. The following is a quote from the loving and Christian (I'm certain) Chris.
"As for his relationship with his sister going forward, Wolfe said, “I love her, but she’s dragging her name, her family’s name and the state of Iowa through the sewer.”
Ain't he a wonderful brother to have?
How can you be allowed to raise children and teach them to hate? How can you be allowed to...well...run the world and spew as much hate as you do?
It begs the question; How do you sleep at night?
I can only keep on keepin' on, and hope that something will happen to make you all come to your senses.
And precluding that, that you're the heterosexual General Motors.
Even God knows their day has come.
But in the meantime I'll appease with a morsel:
Upupdate: I just found this on Salon.com. The universe was listening today:
April 28, 2009 | Here is how British literary critic Terry Eagleton begins his brisk, funny and challenging new book: "Religion has wrought untold misery in human affairs. For the most part, it has been a squalid tale of bigotry, superstition, wishful thinking, and oppressive ideology." That's quite a start, especially when you consider that the point of Eagleton's "Reason, Faith, and Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate" -- adapted from a series of lectures he delivered at Yale in April 2008 -- is to defend the theory and practice of religion against its most ardent contemporary critics.
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