Dear America: What is your fucking problem?
I'm sorry, but have we become so divorced from reality that there is any question that a private group can put up any house of worship they want on private land? This should not be an issue. I'm waiting for people to snap out of it. For the media to read the 1st Amendment very slowly to the pig people who seem to have forgotten about the religion clause. If you don't like the fact that these people can build...whatever fucking house of worship they like...you don't like the Constitution. I have no love of their retarded creed, but I can fucking read.
Seriously, 70% of Americans are bad at it.
HJ







5 comments:
Well said..FUCKING AMEN. I am sick of this insanity being pushed as mainstream...and even if most of our fellow Americans are stupid enough to think it's now okay to limit where people worship it does not make it right. I'm sure people who owned slaves or had their own water fountains did not enjoy the end of that party..and fuck them too.
These are the same kind of people who are so swayed by slippery slope arguments.
Marijuana is a gateway drug to heroin and meth, gay marriage is a gateway to underage beastiality, evolution is a gateway to eugenics, and atheism is a gateway to eugenics, underage beastiality, heroin, meth and eating babies.
But they can't see an actual slippery slope when they're practically climbing the ladder to wait their turn to slide down.
You're right, HJ. But it's not just reading. It's listening and thinking.
PW
But they are fanatically devoted to those parts of the Constitution that suit them.
Not that I'm thinking the mosque is a good idea (it's not), but damn it, they do have every right to build the thing. Trying to diplomatically persuade them to reconsider would be one thing. That's not what's happening. Even considering legal intervention, as I believe is the present state of affairs, is just hypocritical. If that succeeds, I'd be tempted (if I had time) to use that precedent to challenge the construction of Christian churches around Atlanta and let someone explain why one religious building is constitutionally protected and the other isn't.
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