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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:07:17 PM   
Lucylastic


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quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

oh and lucy, just for you:

http://www.jhunewsletter.com/2017/10/05/conservative-views-are-being-unfairly-silenced-on-campus/

http://www.foxnews.com/transcript/2017/04/26/conservatives-silenced-on-campus.html

https://www.northcountrypublicradio.org/news/story/34952/20171027/student-leader-says-conservatives-are-quot-silenced-quot-and-quot-unsafe-quot-on-north-country-campus

https://kylecasey.atavist.com/silenced-millennial-conservatives-on-college-campuses

http://www.mndaily.com/article/2016/10/conservatives-feel-silenced-on-campus

http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/civil-rights/318265-conservative-thought-is-silenced-on-our-nations-campuses

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/08/podcasts/the-daily/free-speech-campus-conservatives.html

http://thehill.com/homenews/media/335586-cnns-zakaria-conservative-voices-are-being-silenced-entirely-on-campus

https://www.thewhitworthian.news/news/2017/3/9/conservative-students-form-new-club-after-feeling-silenced-on-campus

http://thefederalist.com/2017/04/25/berkeley-lawsuit-shows-conservatives-wont-silenced-university-censors/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/liberal-but-not-tolerant-on-the-nations-college-campuses/2016/02/11/0f79e8e8-d101-11e5-88cd-753e80cd29ad_story.html

https://www.thecollegefix.com/post/32489/

http://collegeinsurrection.com/2013/08/the-liberal-double-standard-for-free-speech-on-campus/

and dozens into the hundreds more.

but yeah, its just "one TA"....

an appropriate place for the saying "liberals want conservatives to shut up, conservatives want liberals to keep talking."

maybe some felchgobbles or slobberblogs will make all that go away?

ooooooooh 13..
how devastating.
nearly as many links to cases as there are accusors against moore, and fewer than the incidences of trump molesting women.

I dont use felchgobbles or slobberblogs, unlike you.

13 million likely to lose medicad thru the tax bill
the one % shafting the middle class and making things worse for the poor,
closer to a nuclear war than we have KNOWN since the sixties.
And you wanna argue its more than one TA.
You are trying to shut down libs, but you fail every time.



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Profile   Post #: 21
RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:13:49 PM   
BoscoX


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Lucylastic


quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

I suppose it is not too surprising that the comrades are not supportive of the notion of a "marketplace of ideas" and aren't incensed over the whole situation.

I suppose it is not too surprising that the talibangelicals are not supportive of the notion of "accusations of child molestation" and sexual "assault" of other women and men as being a problem for their leaders and aren't incensed over the whole situation.



The rabidly partisan Washington Post coming out with accusations immediately prior to an election?

Nah, nothing suspicious about that

It's hilarious seeing Muslim-loving leftist hate nazis using words like "Talibagecals"

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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:22:24 PM   
bounty44


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apparently Lucy's as good at non sequiturs as is mnottertroll.

and lucy, since you, like so many other comrades, cannot make distinctions, an ACCUSATION, is not the equivalent of an actual OCCURENCE. there is therefore no parallel between what I said, and your attempt to be mocking with my own words for an unrelated event.

and one more thing---there are indeed plenty of conservatives, Christians and republicans who are not the least bit pleased with roy moore BECAUSE of the accusations.

on another hand---its worth reiterating to you lefties and every one else who thinks otherwise. we're innocent until proven guilty. how about that for a revelation??

sooooooooooo.....

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Profile   Post #: 23
RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:31:32 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer

quote:


Wow the issues that embroil the US mentality. You can ignore north korea, trump, the tax bill, removal of medicare for 13 million, sexual assault and molestation on a daily basis, talibangelicals thinking they run the world and corruption, death, terrorism and being shafted by the rich, to focus on a TA at a single college, in another country, to prove "PC" is crazy.


Indeed. And succinctly put. It's come to seem *so* weird to me, these days. With all that big, shocking stuff going on, there are still those for whom the most heinous things happening in the world are still those itty bitty bits of 'political correctness gone mad'. What on earth happened to people's sense of proportion?


Well, . . . yeah!

But you have to admire (OK, you actually aren't required to admire) the great effort expended by some to dig deep and far and wide to find something that, however inconsequential to any real concern or anything of consequence at all, evokes response of "this REALLY pisses me off! I am ANGRY! now!" (you were angry! to begin with, quit your screaming, brat.)

It's what we live for; opportunistic contrived/fabricated 'righteous indignation!'.

That's just breakfast, wait till we get to dinner.





< Message edited by Edwird -- 11/21/2017 1:16:09 PM >

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Profile   Post #: 24
RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:32:43 PM   
Lucylastic


Posts: 40310
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really??? theres only one person from the religious right that has addressed them on this board.
Thing is, accusations of wrongdoing like moore, trump, o reilly, ailes, halperin, weinstein, bubba, franken, etc etc etc are being judged in the court of opinion, not the court of law.
A bit like hillarys emails
Again, this particular thread has nothing to do with the court of US law, but the Canadian charter of rights.
Non sequitur?? LMAO oh dear oh dear. How hypocritical of you.

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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:35:00 PM   
Wayward5oul


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quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty

and one more thing---there are indeed plenty of conservatives, Christians and republicans who are not the least bit pleased with roy moore BECAUSE of the accusations.

Well I wish to hell they find their way down here, because I'm having trouble finding any here in Alabama.

(in reply to bounty44)
Profile   Post #: 26
RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:35:25 PM   
Lucylastic


Posts: 40310
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quote:

ORIGINAL: BoscoX


quote:

ORIGINAL: Lucylastic


quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

I suppose it is not too surprising that the comrades are not supportive of the notion of a "marketplace of ideas" and aren't incensed over the whole situation.

I suppose it is not too surprising that the talibangelicals are not supportive of the notion of "accusations of child molestation" and sexual "assault" of other women and men as being a problem for their leaders and aren't incensed over the whole situation.



The rabidly partisan Washington Post coming out with accusations immediately prior to an election?

Nah, nothing suspicious about that

It's hilarious seeing Muslim-loving leftist hate nazis using words like "Talibagecals"

I wonder why they didnt come to light before the Strange/ Moore vote.
You keep bringing up bubba, so Im not sure where you are getting your righteousness from seeing as trump paraded bubbas accusers at the debates last year.

If you cant spell talibangelicals, you shouldnt use it.
Sean the sheep.
SA lover.


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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:40:41 PM   
Lucylastic


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Wayward5oul


quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty

and one more thing---there are indeed plenty of conservatives, Christians and republicans who are not the least bit pleased with roy moore BECAUSE of the accusations.

Well I wish to hell they find their way down here, because I'm having trouble finding any here in Alabama.

I heard KAC talking about the Moore thing yesterday, basically saying hes still on the ticket because they*whitehouse* need his vote on the tax bill.
There are repubs coming out against him, but moore is blaming everyone on both sides.
Pastors on the right for him, and against him.Some of them have disgusted me beyond belief, even for me.
sick bastards



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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:44:05 PM   
Wayward5oul


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Lucylastic


quote:

ORIGINAL: Wayward5oul


quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty

and one more thing---there are indeed plenty of conservatives, Christians and republicans who are not the least bit pleased with roy moore BECAUSE of the accusations.

Well I wish to hell they find their way down here, because I'm having trouble finding any here in Alabama.

I heard KAC talking about the Moore thing yesterday, basically saying hes still on the ticket because they*whitehouse* need his vote on the tax bill.
There are repubs coming out against him, but moore is blaming everyone on both sides.
Pastors on the right for him, and against him.Some of them have disgusted me beyond belief, even for me.
sick bastards



The Alabama Republican committee is still supporting him, even though the national one dropped him. The governor, Kay Ivey, is still supporting him, and lots of pastors throughout the state. Some of the comments state legislators have made make me sick.

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Profile   Post #: 29
RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 12:58:20 PM   
Lucylastic


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trump speaks, its ok, because they dont need a lib dem in that seat....


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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 1:03:23 PM   
bounty44


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part of the answer to your quandary is found in the concept of an accusation is not a fact, and that we're supposed to be innocent until proven guilty.

but that said, I found this an interesting read:

(with apologies to merc for hijacking the thread)

"Why evangelicals might vote for Roy Moore anyway"

quote:

(RNS) — To many onlookers, evangelical support for Roy Moore is simply a matter of politics.

The U.S. Senate candidate, accused of making unwanted sexual advances to nine women when they were teens and he was in his 30s, is seen by many evangelicals — who are overwhelmingly Republican — as one of them.

“He is nothing but a godly man trying to make this country come to its senses because of liberals and the other side of the fence trying to protect their evil ways,” an evangelical supporter of Moore recently told a reporter at Jackson, Ala.’s Walker Springs Road Baptist Church.

But political experts, historians and religion scholars say there are deeper explanations for why the former judge appears poised to become the next senator from heavily Republican Alabama during Dec. 12’s special election. Yes, politics is a big part of it, but so too is a particular way evangelicals engage with the world around them.

Conservative Christians, said Molly Worthen, a historian of American religion at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, have developed an intellectual strategy for engaging with the public called “presuppositionalism.”

It holds that evangelicals should examine other people’s underlying suppositions before debating them. If those people or groups don’t adhere to the right worldview — one that accepts the Bible as the inerrant word of God — they should not be trusted.

The argument, said Worthen, goes like this: “When secular liberals say that the public square can be this neutral space, fair to all metaphysical beliefs, that’s a lie, because folded into that it is a secular humanist worldview, a set of anti-Christian presuppositions that are now being foisted onto our public square. You, as conservative evangelicals, need to fight that, and you need to be savvy when they try to pull one over on you.”

Worthen credits Francis Schaeffer (1912-1984), the widely influential evangelical theologian, best known for his crusading opposition to abortion, as the architect of this way of thinking.

The Washington Post — which broke the story about four women who allegedly had sexual encounters with Moore while in their teens — is deeply distrusted by many evangelicals, who see it a secular media outlet with a liberal bias — one of many.

President Donald Trump, in his rush to label any news coverage unsympathetic to his administration and his performance as “fake news” has unwittingly tapped into this long tradition of evangelical intellectual resistance, she said. Evangelicals distrusted the media long before it became politically expedient to do so.

That evangelical tradition of resistance to a secular way of thinking has become part and parcel of Alabama’s culture, said Jason Roberts, a professor of political science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

“Alabamians are very prideful and very defiant about their being different from anyone else,” said Roberts, who grew up in Falkville, Ala. “They’re not ashamed of being different. They’re not ashamed of being made fun of.”

For that reason, Roberts said, blowback from Washington political leaders such as Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who said Moore should “step aside,” is unlikely to affect the campaign.

Alabama evangelicals admire Roy Moore and not only for refusing to remove a Ten Commandments monument from the Alabama Judicial Building in Montgomery, which houses the state Supreme Court. Moore has been a dogged champion of greater religious freedom for evangelicals. He is a staunch opponent of abortion and same-sex marriage and talks of privileging Christianity as the country’s preeminent religion — all positions favored by conservative evangelicals around the country.

There are many vocal critics of Moore, including Russell Moore (no relation), the chief ethicist for the Southern Baptist Convention; Ed Stetzer, executive director of the Billy Graham Center, at Wheaton College; and several prominent evangelical women such as Kay Warren, Beth Moore and Nancy French.

But in the main, evangelical voters in Alabama are expected to support Moore.

“For these evangelicals politics serves a purpose,” said John Fea, professor of American history at Messiah College. “It’s a means toward a more moral end: reclaiming American as a Christian country, end Roe vs. Wade and gay marriage, go back to a Christian golden age.”

That’s not to say Moore is invincible.

Even in Alabama, where half the residents consider themselves evangelical Christians — double the national average, according to a Pew Research study — Moore has struggled to win hearts and minds in past elections. In 2006 and 2010, he lost the Republican primary in the race for governor of Alabama.

It’s possible some evangelicals may switch their longstanding Republican allegiance and vote for Democrat Doug Jones, a prominent lawyer who has prosecuted several high-profile civil rights cases.

But given Jones’ views on abortion — he opposes any restrictions on abortion — it’s unlikely many would.

Instead, some evangelicals will sit out the election. There’s no other consequential issue on the ballot, so it may be easier for some to stay home, said Roberts.

Those evangelicals who do go to the polls will likely vote for Moore.

“When (people) face really tough choices, the tie-breaker will be partisanship,” said John C. Green, political science professor and director of the Bliss Institute of Applied Politics at the University of Akron.

“Sometimes that’s just instinctive. It can also be cognitive. They’ll say, ‘Jones is a better candidate, but he’ll go to Washington and caucus with the liberals,’ or ‘Moore may be a flawed human being but he’ll be a Republican vote….Their religious values and their political views are strongly linked.”


http://religionnews.com/2017/11/20/why-evangelicals-might-vote-for-roy-moore-anyway/

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Profile   Post #: 31
RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 1:03:36 PM   
Edwird


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Joined: 5/2/2016
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Lucylastic
sick bastards


Ain't That America

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Profile   Post #: 32
RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 1:13:59 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
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quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44
"Why evangelicals might vote for Roy Moore anyway"
(RNS) — To many onlookers, evangelical support for Roy Moore is simply a matter of politics.

The U.S. Senate candidate, accused of making unwanted sexual advances to nine women when they were teens and he was in his 30s, is seen by many evangelicals — who are overwhelmingly Republican — as one of them.


Yeah, well, no mystery there.

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Profile   Post #: 33
RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 1:17:06 PM   
Lucylastic


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quote:

and that we're supposed to be innocent until proven guilty.

thats for a court of law, not public opinion.
Because you know, how many times have you claimed hillary innocent until proven guilty.
Its not me that has the quandary, its you.
Im sorry, your source is a joke...LOL "intellectual strategy", LMAO
Lie, deny, obfuscate and deflect. isnt intellectual strategy.
its SOP

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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 1:27:58 PM   
ThatDizzyChick


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OK guys, I am not going to claim this sort of shit is Fake News™. (after all, I am not a Yankish right winger), but I do want to make it clear that what you are talking about is NOT leftist, it is centrists doing this shit.

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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 1:29:21 PM   
ThatDizzyChick


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quote:

thats for a court of law, not public opinion.

That is true; but it should not be.

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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 1:33:05 PM   
Lucylastic


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I dont disagree.


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RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 1:41:02 PM   
Edwird


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quote:

ORIGINAL: ThatDizzyChick
OK guys, I am not going to claim this sort of shit is Fake News™. (after all, I am not a Yankish right winger), but I do want to make it clear that what you are talking about is NOT leftist, it is centrists doing this shit.


I don't think anyone was claiming that the child molester Moore was a "centrist." I mean, congrats for your perspicacity coming to that on your own and all, but . . .

It's true that anyone from any side has been capable if this, but I think the point here is the "family values" hypocrisy involved.

You can't be a Republican in the US unless you can say "fambly."

Otherwise, you're a fucking commie.





< Message edited by Edwird -- 11/21/2017 1:46:34 PM >

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Profile   Post #: 38
RE: Another college campus WTF moment - 11/21/2017 2:24:46 PM   
Wayward5oul


Posts: 3314
Joined: 11/9/2014
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

part of the answer to your quandary is found in the concept of an accusation is not a fact, and that we're supposed to be innocent until proven guilty.

but that said, I found this an interesting read:

(with apologies to merc for hijacking the thread)

"Why evangelicals might vote for Roy Moore anyway"

quote:

(RNS) — To many onlookers, evangelical support for Roy Moore is simply a matter of politics.

The U.S. Senate candidate, accused of making unwanted sexual advances to nine women when they were teens and he was in his 30s, is seen by many evangelicals — who are overwhelmingly Republican — as one of them.

“He is nothing but a godly man trying to make this country come to its senses because of liberals and the other side of the fence trying to protect their evil ways,” an evangelical supporter of Moore recently told a reporter at Jackson, Ala.’s Walker Springs Road Baptist Church.

But political experts, historians and religion scholars say there are deeper explanations for why the former judge appears poised to become the next senator from heavily Republican Alabama during Dec. 12’s special election. Yes, politics is a big part of it, but so too is a particular way evangelicals engage with the world around them.

Conservative Christians, said Molly Worthen, a historian of American religion at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, have developed an intellectual strategy for engaging with the public called “presuppositionalism.”

It holds that evangelicals should examine other people’s underlying suppositions before debating them. If those people or groups don’t adhere to the right worldview — one that accepts the Bible as the inerrant word of God — they should not be trusted.

The argument, said Worthen, goes like this: “When secular liberals say that the public square can be this neutral space, fair to all metaphysical beliefs, that’s a lie, because folded into that it is a secular humanist worldview, a set of anti-Christian presuppositions that are now being foisted onto our public square. You, as conservative evangelicals, need to fight that, and you need to be savvy when they try to pull one over on you.”

Worthen credits Francis Schaeffer (1912-1984), the widely influential evangelical theologian, best known for his crusading opposition to abortion, as the architect of this way of thinking.

The Washington Post — which broke the story about four women who allegedly had sexual encounters with Moore while in their teens — is deeply distrusted by many evangelicals, who see it a secular media outlet with a liberal bias — one of many.

President Donald Trump, in his rush to label any news coverage unsympathetic to his administration and his performance as “fake news” has unwittingly tapped into this long tradition of evangelical intellectual resistance, she said. Evangelicals distrusted the media long before it became politically expedient to do so.

That evangelical tradition of resistance to a secular way of thinking has become part and parcel of Alabama’s culture, said Jason Roberts, a professor of political science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

“Alabamians are very prideful and very defiant about their being different from anyone else,” said Roberts, who grew up in Falkville, Ala. “They’re not ashamed of being different. They’re not ashamed of being made fun of.”

For that reason, Roberts said, blowback from Washington political leaders such as Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who said Moore should “step aside,” is unlikely to affect the campaign.

Alabama evangelicals admire Roy Moore and not only for refusing to remove a Ten Commandments monument from the Alabama Judicial Building in Montgomery, which houses the state Supreme Court. Moore has been a dogged champion of greater religious freedom for evangelicals. He is a staunch opponent of abortion and same-sex marriage and talks of privileging Christianity as the country’s preeminent religion — all positions favored by conservative evangelicals around the country.

There are many vocal critics of Moore, including Russell Moore (no relation), the chief ethicist for the Southern Baptist Convention; Ed Stetzer, executive director of the Billy Graham Center, at Wheaton College; and several prominent evangelical women such as Kay Warren, Beth Moore and Nancy French.

But in the main, evangelical voters in Alabama are expected to support Moore.

“For these evangelicals politics serves a purpose,” said John Fea, professor of American history at Messiah College. “It’s a means toward a more moral end: reclaiming American as a Christian country, end Roe vs. Wade and gay marriage, go back to a Christian golden age.”

That’s not to say Moore is invincible.

Even in Alabama, where half the residents consider themselves evangelical Christians — double the national average, according to a Pew Research study — Moore has struggled to win hearts and minds in past elections. In 2006 and 2010, he lost the Republican primary in the race for governor of Alabama.

It’s possible some evangelicals may switch their longstanding Republican allegiance and vote for Democrat Doug Jones, a prominent lawyer who has prosecuted several high-profile civil rights cases.

But given Jones’ views on abortion — he opposes any restrictions on abortion — it’s unlikely many would.

Instead, some evangelicals will sit out the election. There’s no other consequential issue on the ballot, so it may be easier for some to stay home, said Roberts.

Those evangelicals who do go to the polls will likely vote for Moore.

“When (people) face really tough choices, the tie-breaker will be partisanship,” said John C. Green, political science professor and director of the Bliss Institute of Applied Politics at the University of Akron.

“Sometimes that’s just instinctive. It can also be cognitive. They’ll say, ‘Jones is a better candidate, but he’ll go to Washington and caucus with the liberals,’ or ‘Moore may be a flawed human being but he’ll be a Republican vote….Their religious values and their political views are strongly linked.”


http://religionnews.com/2017/11/20/why-evangelicals-might-vote-for-roy-moore-anyway/

Thank you, but I already know why they still vote for him. I am here. I see it every day. And it is still shameful.

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Profile   Post #: 39
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