Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/news/state-tells-employees-report-one-162428741.html
We are at slippery slope time. If someone is pro-choice, does that make them anti-Christian? If someone calls out the crimes in the Administration, does that make them anti-Christian? If anyone is Jewish, Hindu, Muslim or any other religion, does that make them anti-Christian?
If/when I witness ill will cast towards anyone in my network that is based on bigotry of any kind, I will work towards thwarting that threat with every resource I have. Do the same.
Anonymous wrote:I am the OP of this thread. I wonder if Christians understand how much backlash something like this might cause.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People love to guffaw about this, but there is a total double standard here: ant-Christian bias is real and widespread. I am a practicing Christian in an environment with very few of them. In virtually every setting I have been in, people have made unambiguously hostile comments about the tenants of the religion and the people who practice it. I have found it virtually impossible to take off work on holidays that are important to practicing Christians but lack the lay resonance of Christmas (think Good Friday, Palm Sunday).
This response will undoubtedly provoke a torrent of meanspirited remarks from people who disagree with my premise but lack the self awareness to understand that they substantiate it.
This is my post. I won't engage further except to note that the posts between this response and my original post provide at least some support for my point.
They support the point that you are a hypocrite, if you only want your days off and don't support the rights of others to take their days off.
And I don't see people of other religions foisting policy down your throat the way "pro-life" is foisted on everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People love to guffaw about this, but there is a total double standard here: ant-Christian bias is real and widespread. I am a practicing Christian in an environment with very few of them. In virtually every setting I have been in, people have made unambiguously hostile comments about the tenants of the religion and the people who practice it. I have found it virtually impossible to take off work on holidays that are important to practicing Christians but lack the lay resonance of Christmas (think Good Friday, Palm Sunday).
This response will undoubtedly provoke a torrent of meanspirited remarks from people who disagree with my premise but lack the self awareness to understand that they substantiate it.
This is my post. I won't engage further except to note that the posts between this response and my original post provide at least some support for my point.
Anonymous wrote:People love to guffaw about this, but there is a total double standard here: ant-Christian bias is real and widespread. I am a practicing Christian in an environment with very few of them. In virtually every setting I have been in, people have made unambiguously hostile comments about the tenants of the religion and the people who practice it. I have found it virtually impossible to take off work on holidays that are important to practicing Christians but lack the lay resonance of Christmas (think Good Friday, Palm Sunday).
This response will undoubtedly provoke a torrent of meanspirited remarks from people who disagree with my premise but lack the self awareness to understand that they substantiate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People love to guffaw about this, but there is a total double standard here: ant-Christian bias is real and widespread. I am a practicing Christian in an environment with very few of them. In virtually every setting I have been in, people have made unambiguously hostile comments about the tenants of the religion and the people who practice it. I have found it virtually impossible to take off work on holidays that are important to practicing Christians but lack the lay resonance of Christmas (think Good Friday, Palm Sunday).
This response will undoubtedly provoke a torrent of meanspirited remarks from people who disagree with my premise but lack the self awareness to understand that they substantiate it.
This is my post. I won't engage further except to note that the posts between this response and my original post provide at least some support for my point.
Anonymous wrote:People love to guffaw about this, but there is a total double standard here: ant-Christian bias is real and widespread. I am a practicing Christian in an environment with very few of them. In virtually every setting I have been in, people have made unambiguously hostile comments about the tenants of the religion and the people who practice it. I have found it virtually impossible to take off work on holidays that are important to practicing Christians but lack the lay resonance of Christmas (think Good Friday, Palm Sunday).
This response will undoubtedly provoke a torrent of meanspirited remarks from people who disagree with my premise but lack the self awareness to understand that they substantiate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People love to guffaw about this, but there is a total double standard here: ant-Christian bias is real and widespread. I am a practicing Christian in an environment with very few of them. In virtually every setting I have been in, people have made unambiguously hostile comments about the tenants of the religion and the people who practice it. I have found it virtually impossible to take off work on holidays that are important to practicing Christians but lack the lay resonance of Christmas (think Good Friday, Palm Sunday).
This response will undoubtedly provoke a torrent of meanspirited remarks from people who disagree with my premise but lack the self awareness to understand that they substantiate it.
Are they making hostile comments about the "tenants of Christianity" or are they just criticizing right-wing politics?
Starting in the 1970s, evangelical Christianity has become less of a religion and more of a right-wing political movement.
Anonymous wrote:People love to guffaw about this, but there is a total double standard here: ant-Christian bias is real and widespread. I am a practicing Christian in an environment with very few of them. In virtually every setting I have been in, people have made unambiguously hostile comments about the tenants of the religion and the people who practice it. I have found it virtually impossible to take off work on holidays that are important to practicing Christians but lack the lay resonance of Christmas (think Good Friday, Palm Sunday).
This response will undoubtedly provoke a torrent of meanspirited remarks from people who disagree with my premise but lack the self awareness to understand that they substantiate it.
Anonymous wrote:People love to guffaw about this, but there is a total double standard here: ant-Christian bias is real and widespread. I am a practicing Christian in an environment with very few of them. In virtually every setting I have been in, people have made unambiguously hostile comments about the tenants of the religion and the people who practice it. I have found it virtually impossible to take off work on holidays that are important to practicing Christians but lack the lay resonance of Christmas (think Good Friday, Palm Sunday).
This response will undoubtedly provoke a torrent of meanspirited remarks from people who disagree with my premise but lack the self awareness to understand that they substantiate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the OP of this thread. I wonder if Christians understand how much backlash something like this might cause.
People who identify as Christian are not some monolithic group.
Then it is time to speak up and show it, then.
Anonymous wrote:It's just more DEI for biological Satanists who identify as Christian. You aren't Christian just because you woke up one day and decided that you feel Christian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder what will be the long term effect of Evangelical Christianity's worship of a man who is the opposite of everything they claim to stand for?
They come to the same conclusion high IQ people of every culture and religion eventually come to- religion is a bunch of hogwash created in a time when spiritual beliefs were necessary to police society.
Anonymous wrote:People love to guffaw about this, but there is a total double standard here: ant-Christian bias is real and widespread. I am a practicing Christian in an environment with very few of them. In virtually every setting I have been in, people have made unambiguously hostile comments about the tenants of the religion and the people who practice it. I have found it virtually impossible to take off work on holidays that are important to practicing Christians but lack the lay resonance of Christmas (think Good Friday, Palm Sunday).
This response will undoubtedly provoke a torrent of meanspirited remarks from people who disagree with my premise but lack the self awareness to understand that they substantiate it.