um, how about hurricanes delaying 2 republican conventions...and a republican governor who asks for federal money while his party rails against it? I mean, come on, if you're gonna use weather as a sign from above... |
Hmm, but the hurricane never did hit Tampa after all, did it? ![]() ![]() |
no, it just hit a state with a republican governor...and reminded us of the mess that was Katrina. |
Have a sense of humor. That was a good one. |
Aww, don't be a spoilsport here! ![]() |
Thanks! ![]() |
Funny, It hit a city full of Democrats that have never worked a day in their life and live off the government. Obama voters ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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The Republican reaction to human suffering. |
I find it very interesting that the Delegates at the Democratic Convention voted not 1, not 2, but 3 times to remove God from the party platform.
Luke 22:34 Jesus answered, "I tell you, Peter, before the rooster crows today, you will deny three times that you know me." Matthew 10:33 Jesus said, “But whosoever shall deny me before men, him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven”. |
Wow, that is kind of cool. |
well, the goal of government isn't heaven. I say again, we do NOT live in a theocracy. I know plenty of atheists, humanists and agnostics who love this country. It doesn't make them any less of an American, does it? |
Very few atheists in America. But go ahead and alienate a huge portion of the country to please less than 1% of the country. PC gone wild. A 2004 BBC poll showed the number of people in the US who don't believe in a god to be about 9%.[11] A 2008 Gallup poll showed that a smaller 6% of the US population believed that no god or universal spirit exists.[36] The most recent ARIS report, released March 9, 2009, found in 2008, 34.2 million Americans (15.0%) claim no religion, of which 1.6% explicitly describes itself as atheist (0.7%) or agnostic (0.9%), nearly double the previous 2001 ARIS survey figure of 0.9%.[37] The highest occurrence of "nones", according to the 2008 ARIS report, reside in Vermont, with 34% surveyed.[38] According to a study conducted by Gallup in May 2010, 16% of Americans declared they have no religious affiliation. [39] The latest statistics show that a lack of religious identity increased in every US state between 1990 and 2008.[40] However less than 2% of the U.S. population describes itself as atheist.[41] |
the march toward secularism. . . . |
wow, way to miss the point. |