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  4. Send in the clowns.

Send in the clowns.

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  • 7 Offline
    7 Offline
    73Zeppelin
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    America, I weep for you. MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (CNN) -- During the first GOP presidential debate last month in California, three Republican candidates raised eyebrows by indicating they did not subscribe to Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, a widely accepted scientific concept about the origins of life. CNN article[^]. This is sad for the U.S. Only post WWII were you the world's leader in science and scientific discovery. The amazing things you brought the world were fantastic - leading scientists flocked to your shores. And now? Now you are but a shadow of your former self.

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    • 7 73Zeppelin

      America, I weep for you. MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (CNN) -- During the first GOP presidential debate last month in California, three Republican candidates raised eyebrows by indicating they did not subscribe to Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, a widely accepted scientific concept about the origins of life. CNN article[^]. This is sad for the U.S. Only post WWII were you the world's leader in science and scientific discovery. The amazing things you brought the world were fantastic - leading scientists flocked to your shores. And now? Now you are but a shadow of your former self.

      1 Offline
      1 Offline
      123 0
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      [Message Deleted]

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        [Message Deleted]

        7 Offline
        7 Offline
        73Zeppelin
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        I missed that. Sounds like they're biased in the favour of the creationists! Even the caption on the photo is telling!! Mike Huckabee provided an eloquent explanation of his belief in creationism.

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          [Message Deleted]

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          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          Let there be light[^]

          - F "You are really weird." - Kyle, age 16

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          • 7 73Zeppelin

            America, I weep for you. MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (CNN) -- During the first GOP presidential debate last month in California, three Republican candidates raised eyebrows by indicating they did not subscribe to Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, a widely accepted scientific concept about the origins of life. CNN article[^]. This is sad for the U.S. Only post WWII were you the world's leader in science and scientific discovery. The amazing things you brought the world were fantastic - leading scientists flocked to your shores. And now? Now you are but a shadow of your former self.

            R Offline
            R Offline
            R Giskard Reventlov
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            Presumably this is sound-byte politics designed to attract the religious vote. Nonetheless it is worrying: the US appears to be lurching toward Christian fundamentalism. The US no longer looks like a country (from the outside) that upholds the clear division between church and state. You've seen what happens in countries run as religious states: is that really how you want the US to go; run by preachers whose first loyalty is not to the people and whose vision and direction are dictated by the bible?

            home
            tastier than delicious

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            • 7 73Zeppelin

              America, I weep for you. MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (CNN) -- During the first GOP presidential debate last month in California, three Republican candidates raised eyebrows by indicating they did not subscribe to Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, a widely accepted scientific concept about the origins of life. CNN article[^]. This is sad for the U.S. Only post WWII were you the world's leader in science and scientific discovery. The amazing things you brought the world were fantastic - leading scientists flocked to your shores. And now? Now you are but a shadow of your former self.

              M Offline
              M Offline
              Matthew Faithfull
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              It seems to me as an outside (UK) observer that the church in the US has made an incredibly serious error associating itself with neo-conservative wing of the GOP and now that the inevitable backlash is starting it will come back to them in a big way. If any are left who continue to fall for the fake christian positions of some of these politicians then perhaps they simply had it coming. I weep for the state of the US, a once great, once democratic country full of lovely people mislead by evil b*****ds, but as I say I'm just a foreigner what do I know :)

              Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

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              • M Matthew Faithfull

                It seems to me as an outside (UK) observer that the church in the US has made an incredibly serious error associating itself with neo-conservative wing of the GOP and now that the inevitable backlash is starting it will come back to them in a big way. If any are left who continue to fall for the fake christian positions of some of these politicians then perhaps they simply had it coming. I weep for the state of the US, a once great, once democratic country full of lovely people mislead by evil b*****ds, but as I say I'm just a foreigner what do I know :)

                Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

                R Offline
                R Offline
                Ryan Roberts
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                itself with neo-conservative wing of the GOP

                Guiliani is the 'neoconservative' candidate this time round. He's pro choice. Never mind the fact that the Buccananite wing of the republican party is more overtly Christian (with the addition of some rather unpleasant antisemitism). You have a very superficial view of American right wing politics, unsurprising given the lens most Europeans see it through.

                Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                once democratic country

                Oh please. 6 years of Bush has destroyed democracy. Save me the histrionics.

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                • R R Giskard Reventlov

                  Presumably this is sound-byte politics designed to attract the religious vote. Nonetheless it is worrying: the US appears to be lurching toward Christian fundamentalism. The US no longer looks like a country (from the outside) that upholds the clear division between church and state. You've seen what happens in countries run as religious states: is that really how you want the US to go; run by preachers whose first loyalty is not to the people and whose vision and direction are dictated by the bible?

                  home
                  tastier than delicious

                  7 Offline
                  7 Offline
                  73Zeppelin
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  digital man wrote:

                  Presumably this is sound-byte politics designed to attract the religious vote. Nonetheless it is worrying: the US appears to be lurching toward Christian fundamentalism. The US no longer looks like a country (from the outside) that upholds the clear division between church and state. You've seen what happens in countries run as religious states: is that really how you want the US to go; run by preachers whose first loyalty is not to the people and whose vision and direction are dictated by the bible?

                  Yes, this was kind of my entire point.


                  "The masses have never thirsted after truth. They turn aside from evidence that is not to their taste, preferring to deify error, if error seduce them. Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master; whoever attempts to destroy their illusions is always their victim." -Gustave Le Bon

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                  • M Matthew Faithfull

                    It seems to me as an outside (UK) observer that the church in the US has made an incredibly serious error associating itself with neo-conservative wing of the GOP and now that the inevitable backlash is starting it will come back to them in a big way. If any are left who continue to fall for the fake christian positions of some of these politicians then perhaps they simply had it coming. I weep for the state of the US, a once great, once democratic country full of lovely people mislead by evil b*****ds, but as I say I'm just a foreigner what do I know :)

                    Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

                    7 Offline
                    7 Offline
                    73Zeppelin
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                    fake christian positions

                    Yeah, the problem is determining whose consensus dictates the definition of Christianity. If it's anything like the "bin Laden consensus" of Islam, well, that's just frightening.


                    "The masses have never thirsted after truth. They turn aside from evidence that is not to their taste, preferring to deify error, if error seduce them. Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master; whoever attempts to destroy their illusions is always their victim." -Gustave Le Bon

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                    • R Ryan Roberts

                      Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                      itself with neo-conservative wing of the GOP

                      Guiliani is the 'neoconservative' candidate this time round. He's pro choice. Never mind the fact that the Buccananite wing of the republican party is more overtly Christian (with the addition of some rather unpleasant antisemitism). You have a very superficial view of American right wing politics, unsurprising given the lens most Europeans see it through.

                      Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                      once democratic country

                      Oh please. 6 years of Bush has destroyed democracy. Save me the histrionics.

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      Matthew Faithfull
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      You're probably right on the superficial view but it is important enough that I'm keen to understand. After all the same people run your country and ours right. I'm glad for the sake of the christians that's there's some ground between them and the group currently in office, maybe the backlash won't be as bad as some fear. I don't know Buccanan, though I've obviously heard of him. When you say antisemitism do you mean the actual irrational racial hatred stuff or simply not being a zionist? :confused: As for democracy I wasn't aware that GW Bush had ever suffered from it. I thought it was extinct well before his time, at least in regard to presidential elections ;) It certainly is in the UK where we have two dominant political parties who are wholly owned subsidiaries of the same cabal and have the same policies. The media puts on a good show of playing up the fake diffences but few people take any notice or bother to vote anymore. The last UK government got in with the support of 22% of the electorate :wtf:

                      Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

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                      • 7 73Zeppelin

                        Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                        fake christian positions

                        Yeah, the problem is determining whose consensus dictates the definition of Christianity. If it's anything like the "bin Laden consensus" of Islam, well, that's just frightening.


                        "The masses have never thirsted after truth. They turn aside from evidence that is not to their taste, preferring to deify error, if error seduce them. Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master; whoever attempts to destroy their illusions is always their victim." -Gustave Le Bon

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        Matthew Faithfull
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        Yeah, I agree that's always a problem but I was thinking more of the, satanists quoting the scriptures, kind of fakeness. When the church is suckered into giving even apparant or tacit support to that kind of eveil there is bound to be big trouble on the way.:(

                        Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

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                        • M Matthew Faithfull

                          You're probably right on the superficial view but it is important enough that I'm keen to understand. After all the same people run your country and ours right. I'm glad for the sake of the christians that's there's some ground between them and the group currently in office, maybe the backlash won't be as bad as some fear. I don't know Buccanan, though I've obviously heard of him. When you say antisemitism do you mean the actual irrational racial hatred stuff or simply not being a zionist? :confused: As for democracy I wasn't aware that GW Bush had ever suffered from it. I thought it was extinct well before his time, at least in regard to presidential elections ;) It certainly is in the UK where we have two dominant political parties who are wholly owned subsidiaries of the same cabal and have the same policies. The media puts on a good show of playing up the fake diffences but few people take any notice or bother to vote anymore. The last UK government got in with the support of 22% of the electorate :wtf:

                          Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

                          R Offline
                          R Offline
                          Ryan Roberts
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #12

                          Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                          your country

                          I'm a Brit. Though being a vaguely libertarian type I am rather more comfortable in the American political spectrum than within the increasingly narrow confines of UK politics. There's really nowhere to go on the right in UK politics either; we are governed by the ability of politicians to pre-empt popular opinion and therefore deliver policy in piecemeal, without the overt ideological posturing of earlier generations. That said, the new labour government has been broadly of the left, at least in terms of steadily increasing public spending and statism. Blair's interventionist foreign policy had been successful (and inline with the patriotic socialist tradition of the labour party - see Micheal Foot's position on the Falklands) until our current mess in Iraq too.

                          Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                          hen you say antisemitism do you mean the actual irrational racial hatred stuff or simply not being a zionist?

                          Funnily enough, there's quite a bit of cross over.. In Pat's case, mainly B with a healthy dose of A by insinuation.

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                          • R R Giskard Reventlov

                            Presumably this is sound-byte politics designed to attract the religious vote. Nonetheless it is worrying: the US appears to be lurching toward Christian fundamentalism. The US no longer looks like a country (from the outside) that upholds the clear division between church and state. You've seen what happens in countries run as religious states: is that really how you want the US to go; run by preachers whose first loyalty is not to the people and whose vision and direction are dictated by the bible?

                            home
                            tastier than delicious

                            S Offline
                            S Offline
                            Stan Shannon
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #13

                            digital man wrote:

                            the US appears to be lurching toward Christian fundamentalism. The US no longer looks like a country (from the outside) that upholds the clear division between church and state.

                            :laugh:

                            Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

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                            • M Matthew Faithfull

                              It seems to me as an outside (UK) observer that the church in the US has made an incredibly serious error associating itself with neo-conservative wing of the GOP and now that the inevitable backlash is starting it will come back to them in a big way. If any are left who continue to fall for the fake christian positions of some of these politicians then perhaps they simply had it coming. I weep for the state of the US, a once great, once democratic country full of lovely people mislead by evil b*****ds, but as I say I'm just a foreigner what do I know :)

                              Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

                              S Offline
                              S Offline
                              Stan Shannon
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #14

                              Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                              the church in the US has made an incredibly serious error associating itself with neo-conservative wing of the GOP

                              That is the inevitable backlash.

                              Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

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                              • 7 73Zeppelin

                                America, I weep for you. MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (CNN) -- During the first GOP presidential debate last month in California, three Republican candidates raised eyebrows by indicating they did not subscribe to Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, a widely accepted scientific concept about the origins of life. CNN article[^]. This is sad for the U.S. Only post WWII were you the world's leader in science and scientific discovery. The amazing things you brought the world were fantastic - leading scientists flocked to your shores. And now? Now you are but a shadow of your former self.

                                S Offline
                                S Offline
                                Stan Shannon
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #15

                                73Zeppelin wrote:

                                America, I weep for you.

                                Good. Must mean we are doing something right.

                                Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

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                                • S Stan Shannon

                                  73Zeppelin wrote:

                                  America, I weep for you.

                                  Good. Must mean we are doing something right.

                                  Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

                                  7 Offline
                                  7 Offline
                                  73Zeppelin
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #16

                                  Stan Shannon wrote:

                                  Must mean we are doing something right.

                                  Well, if you consider sliding rapidly downhill the "right thing to do", then yes, you are on the right track.


                                  S 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • R Ryan Roberts

                                    Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                                    your country

                                    I'm a Brit. Though being a vaguely libertarian type I am rather more comfortable in the American political spectrum than within the increasingly narrow confines of UK politics. There's really nowhere to go on the right in UK politics either; we are governed by the ability of politicians to pre-empt popular opinion and therefore deliver policy in piecemeal, without the overt ideological posturing of earlier generations. That said, the new labour government has been broadly of the left, at least in terms of steadily increasing public spending and statism. Blair's interventionist foreign policy had been successful (and inline with the patriotic socialist tradition of the labour party - see Micheal Foot's position on the Falklands) until our current mess in Iraq too.

                                    Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                                    hen you say antisemitism do you mean the actual irrational racial hatred stuff or simply not being a zionist?

                                    Funnily enough, there's quite a bit of cross over.. In Pat's case, mainly B with a healthy dose of A by insinuation.

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Matthew Faithfull
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #17

                                    Didn't realize you were a fellow Brit :-O You're right about the public opinion management killing genuine political debate. I wouldn't say there was nowhere to go on the right rather that left and right are out of date concepts, maintained by the media in order to create a false dichotomy. The real division is between national democracy and global corporate hegemony. Unfortunatly despite your well stated defense of Blair's government (probably the best I've read), he's remained steadfastly in the global corporate hegemony camp the Conservatives have been in for decades. The Lib Dems are no better so I joined UKIP :cool: I suppose you could consider me a prosemitic antizionist :)

                                    Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

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                                    0
                                    • 7 73Zeppelin

                                      Stan Shannon wrote:

                                      Must mean we are doing something right.

                                      Well, if you consider sliding rapidly downhill the "right thing to do", then yes, you are on the right track.


                                      S Offline
                                      S Offline
                                      Stan Shannon
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #18

                                      If the fact that we still have sufficient social freedom to sustain different world views means we are going down hill, I'll be happy to find the bottom. You can have the pointy little top.

                                      Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

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                                      • S Stan Shannon

                                        Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                                        the church in the US has made an incredibly serious error associating itself with neo-conservative wing of the GOP

                                        That is the inevitable backlash.

                                        Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

                                        M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        Matthew Faithfull
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #19

                                        :confused: Can you clarify?

                                        Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.

                                        S 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • S Stan Shannon

                                          If the fact that we still have sufficient social freedom to sustain different world views means we are going down hill, I'll be happy to find the bottom. You can have the pointy little top.

                                          Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

                                          7 Offline
                                          7 Offline
                                          73Zeppelin
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #20

                                          Stan Shannon wrote:

                                          we still have sufficient social freedom to sustain different world views

                                          Oh, which world views would be those? One Christian god to rule us all? Or perhaps spreading the concept of "freedom" as Giuliani suggests in the thread I posted above? Or the freedom to teach idiotic ideas like creationism as science in your schools? But it's your country - if you vote in favour of being a nation of idiots and the laughing stock of the world then by all means, don't let me stop you...please proceed, but allow me to make fun of you at your expense.


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