theamericanboy.net — It?s hard to believe how or why, but there really exists a subculture in America that is militaristic, hateful, vengeful, irrational and ambitious. These extremists are cancerous to progressive society and similar groups have had similar effect throughout the history of civilization.
Oct 12, 2008 View in Crawl 4
netantOct 13, 2008
@else7en A woman has the right to preserve her own life, and her own physical heath. She has the RIGHT to an abortion in those instances. (She also has the RIGHT to terminate the spawn of a rapist, but since you're fundie, I'm not going to waste my time arguing with you.) When you jerkoffs stop blowing up abortion clinics, murdering doctors, and pass laws to kill women to preserve a fetus to satisfy your mumbo-jumbo beliefs perhaps then I'll start regarding you people more than hypocritical, rabid animals.
ivanvivianOct 13, 2008
Oh so typical of a liberal democrat: the specialists at regurgitating, but then accusing others of the same!
ricegfOct 14, 2008
@williamgauciwilliamgauci: "The oddest thing I find is that you know everyones religous affiliation. I've worked for 25 years and never known anyones religous persuasion nor cared."I suspect it's cultural. People in your area are probably as hostile to people of faith as... well, most of the posts to this thread. :-) It's not like that in East Texas where I live and work.We have a Protestant church on virtually every corner. I drove by the Buddhist Meditation Center on my way to Bible study tonight (their gardens are simply stunning). The Catholic church is about 5 blocks west; over a thousand families met there last year to organize for negotiations with a gas drilling company (our properties are on the Barnett Shale), and we signed the lease at the Bible church down the street over a busy 4 days. My neighbor next door is Catholic; the day we met was Ash Wednesday, and their foreheads were marked. The homeless shelter is staffed by 30 Christian churches and a synagogue; the Jews cover Christmas Eve for the Christians, and we cover Jewish holidays for the synagogue. The mosque is just south of the university, just a block or so from the Korean Christian bi-lingual church. No one hides their religious affiliation or lack thereof around here that I can tell; there's simply no reason.As far as knowing my co-workers' beliefs, it takes little effort. My close friend is a Mormon; I can tell because the tenets of the LDS church are posted on his office wall, and a Book of Mormon is always on his desk (his wife helped my wife get started with mystery shopping). The young Hindu lady is a vegetarian; we had a rather long discussion about it (I love hamburger too much to give up meat yet, though I can't avoid that I've never met an obese vegetarian ;-). My atheist friend has a small plaque on his desk - "An atheist is someone with no invisible means of support" - which I find rather amusing if a bit sad. Another co-worker is a Muslim; he took his son (my son's classmate) on a pilgrimage to Mecca a few years back (right after 9/11, my wife offered to fetch groceries for his wife if she felt unsafe, though she insisted on doing her own shopping as a matter of principle, without incident). And so it goes.Again, tolerance is about *tolerating* the religious views of others. I'm not at war with Hindus or Muslims or Jews or Mormons or Catholics or atheists; what would be the point? God forbid we should ever devolve to that kind of barbarity in America.
Closed AccountOct 18, 2008
hahahahahahahahahahahaaaaaaaaaaa
ivanvivianOct 20, 2008
I'm in agreement with all your response. however, your original one-liner, was too broad, as I'll admit my own response to you was.My meaning was that the modern Christianity has come to almost accept it as a shame to publicly acknowledge Jesus Christ. Hence, most Christians have compartmentalized their lives to being Christian on Sunday, businessman Monday to Friday, cussing sportsman on Saturday, back to a worshiping Christian on Sunday. Christ has to be part of our every day moments. If a politician your words ought to be guided by those chosen by Christ, and not merely what the system is expecting you to say.The America founding forefathers all understood that the Constitution of America could only be upheld by religion and high moral standards. AND when the used the word religion, they only accepted faith in Jesus Christ. The only thing they were against was a single denomination controlling our everyday lives. They knew of the horrors of Catholicism in Rome, France and Germany, and Anglicanism in England. They did not want those abuses repeated in America. They certainly did not want the promotion of any one [denominational] religion, but they also did not want the prohibition of religion [that was dedicated to the Lord Jesus Christ] either.Hence, we might be closer to one another than initially portrayed.So you felt insulted at my initial communication, just as I might have felt you were a closet christian by your initial response. It's only in the fellowship do we learn more of one another. Go trucking for Jesus!
omglol1222Nov 11, 2008
Yay, finally someone agrees with meThese western dogs ar horrible... They're worse than the Talibanfrom my homeland, afghanistanAnyone american in the US is awful, imoral and hated by my communityOneday, WE WILL SEEK REVENGEcompared to us, the Americans are backward, they have no cluewhat they're doing and they're all dumb and we laugh about them when their backs are turnedThey're are big joke to rest of the world