sandorski
No Lifer
- Oct 10, 1999
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They can't take away our corn liquor; how are they going to take away our vinegar?Give them time
They can't take away our corn liquor; how are they going to take away our vinegar?
john I have to agree I wilf vote for a tea party candidate, but no sarah palin.
I cant get behind her.
I shall support no theocrat for president....I would rather have huckabee. I am glad he did not run against obama last term. Jesus himself would have had to run to beat him with all the hype.
Huckabee could have a real chance this time around.
I shall support no theocrat for president.
I have opponents in this race who do not want to change the Constitution. But I believe its a lot easier to change the Constitution than it would be to change the word of the living god. And thats what we need to do is to amend the Constitution so its in Gods standards rather than try to change Gods standards so it lines up with some contemporary view of how we treat each other and how we treat the family. Mike Huckabee, Jan 14, 2008
That quote made me vomit in mouth a little bit.![]()
I congratulated the South Carolina Tea Party Faithful earlier in this thread for refusing to be co-opted by the state's Republican Party through the vetting of "Tea Party Republican" candidates. As it turns out, the rift was quite short lived. There was a press conference in Greenville Tuesday wherein the two groups announced that they shall cooperate in the selection of appropriately "Conservative" candidates.
The Republicans may soon regret this pact. This morning, one of the loudest voices of the Tea Party in this region (Russ Cassell, WORD morning talk host) announced his displeasure with the Republicans. It seems that one of the Republican Party officials (I missed it if he named the offender) dared to say that if the Tea Party's favored candidate lost the primary to another candidate (Bob Inglis and Lindsey Graham were Mr. Cassell's examples), the Republicans would have the nerve to support their own candidate.
Let me repeat: our local Tea Party radio host and his callers are outraged that if they cannot muster enough votes to win the Republican primary, the Republicans will not commit political suicide by withholding support from the candidate their party's primary voters selected.
For they sow the wind and they shall reap the whirlwind...
Sounds to me like the South Carolina Tea Party Faithful didn't get co-opted by the state's Republican Party, rather the state Repub party capitulated...
Fern
look you can make this a religious argument if you want. huckabee used to be a minister. Everyone knows that. But what I think he means in that quote ,that is horrific, I agree taken out of context, is that America has lost its moral basis which was based on christian principles.
I threw up even more in my mouth.
Don't even go there. Not wanting to get this into a religious debate, as there are plenty of those, but stop saying that! It's not true! Majority of the founding fathers were not Christian at all. Many followed Deism, and if any sect provided "founding morales" as guide lines it was free masons. Again, it was not Christians. Also to point out, there really isn't many "morales" in the Christian bible at all except maybe to love thy neighbor. Remember, Christian Bible = new testament.
That quote made me vomit in mouth a little bit.![]()
drbrock,
Now all the Founding Fathers were religious. All of them had good standing and favorable views by Christians and the Church. None of the were non-theist or aethiest at all. However, the overwhelming percentage were Secularists that believed firmly in the separation of Church and State, including perceived morale values. This is why we don't have the morale value in any government document dating from the time to "Fear God" which is a Christian, as well as other religions, morale is it not? Again, none of the founding fathers were professors or religion either.
I take issue with this. Paine wrote the Age of Reason which pretty much attacked the Church and Christianity at the time. He was strongly disliked by the Church and devout followers.
Okay, one exception. Always an exceptionOkay, almost all the founding fathers, except pain, still had religious ties to the Church even if that was having a friend they knew going to one. I knew I was forgetting something and stand corrected. Thanks Big.
Edit, while Paine wasn't Christian at all, Age of Reason was a Deist based book though, so you could still call him religious in that he believed the higher power and reason were one and the same. So part of my previous statement stands true.
the Signal of arousing men to burst the chains, under which monkish ignorance and superstition had persuaded them to bind themselves, and to assume the blessings & security of self-government. that form which we have substituted, restores the free right to the unbounded exercise of reason and freedom of opinion. all eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. the general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view. the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately, by the grace of god. these are grounds of hope for others. for ourselves, let the annual return of this day forever refresh our recollections of these rights, and an undiminished devotion to them.
I think that is why the Tea Party is starting to get a serious following. I can't stand listening to Glenn Beck but he is the number one show for a reason. People in America are starting to get fed up with many of the policies.