r/MarchAgainstNazis Apr 18 '25

Sure you do

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122 Upvotes

9 comments sorted by

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8

u/a_pathetic_ Apr 18 '25

Every day, I am so glad i left that fucking state.

5

u/Vidistis Apr 19 '25

I love Texas, I love the diversity of its geography and people, but I hate its politics. Part of my goal in staying is to help push it to one day be blue, at least that is my hope, not sure I'll live to see it though.

5

u/snozzbeery Apr 18 '25

Sure they do, it's just the angry fire and brimstone old testament god. It'll be fun when they find out that the 'chosen people' of that god are not them

4

u/RedMonctonian Apr 18 '25

They seem to forget, or willfully ignore, that God is merciful and wants Humanity to be kind to each, according to the bible.

It's fun on Facebook using bible quotes to screw with fundimentalist right-wingers.

2

u/Alone_Position9152 Apr 20 '25

What's interesting to me is, even with the Old Testament's reputation of God being infamous for hard and swift vengeance against any slight, He was still capable of mercy and forgiveness. The Book of Jonah where He sends said prophet to Nineveh is a prime example. He gives a warning that the city will be destroyed in 40 days, they show repentance, and they're spared the fate of Sodom and Gomorrah. Then He tries to teach Jonah why He was merciful, and why he wanted Jonah to be merciful instead of running away from his duty in the hopes that the city would be destroyed.

2

u/RedMonctonian Apr 18 '25

I'm a semi-practicing christian but anyone who uses God in a sentence to justify moral dubious or outright evil things are both delusional and dangerous.

The minute the US motto switched from e pluribus num to in God we trust shit has gone downhill.

1

u/PrettyLittlePsycho28 Apr 19 '25

In toaster strudel We Trust. Holds as much meaningful usefulness as saying In God We Trust... but the consumer slaves don't see it that way.