Rick Reuben wrote:SecondEdition wrote:And anyone - anyone - who thinks Obama is the Antichrist is a racist, pure and simple, full stop.
Huh? That's a little hard to follow.
If someone believes in the concept of an antichrist, then why are they prohibited from believing that a half-black man could be the antichrist? Many people think that Christ could have been as dark as Obama. Are they racist for imagining that Christ was coffee- colored? If not, then why is anyone who imagines a coffee-colored man as a false savior automatically a racist?
Seems to me that saying 'only a white man could be the antichrist and if you believe otherwise, you're a racist'
is a racist statement, against whites.
I don't believe that the concept of an Antichrist is racially exclusive. If that was implied, sorry. What I meant was that I believe that many people are threatened by Obama's political rise solely because of the fact that he is a black candidate, who has gotten closer to the presidency than any other black candidate in U.S. history. However, the guy is just a politician and a human being. So are John McCain, Ron Paul, Hillary Clinton, and whichever other candidate you want to name. My point was that calling any politician an Antichrist is irresponsible, foolish and potentially dangerous, and especially dangerous to a seemingly "foreign" candidate such as Obama. Basically, it seems to me that prejudice against Obama would play a role in designating him, rather than John McCain, an Antichrist. How many people honestly and seriously believe that John McCain is an Antichrist? I think most people would laugh at the idea. The fact that some people take the idea of Obama as an Antichrist seriously seems a little suspect - it doesn't seem as if it could only be because of his politics and persona.
Rick Reuben wrote:I find it interesting to see how the rules change depending on who we are talking about.
Second Edition can say, "I do begrudge the evangelicals exerting disproportionate amounts of influence on national politics", and what is a common response here? 'Yeah, fuck those crazy Christian nuts and their disproportionate influence on politics'.
Now try this statement out:
"I do begrudge the Jews for their disproportionate amount of political influence, which far exceeds that of any other group that only represents 2.2% of the U.S. population."
How well does that statement go over?
If you're calling me out for preaching to the converted, go ahead - it's nothing new and I totally admit it, and besides, I already called myself out for it when I stated that "my biases are completely coming into play here, too."
Life...life...I know it's got its ups and downs.
Groucho Marx wrote:Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it, misdiagnosing it and then misapplying the wrong remedies.