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Jdarg

SoWal Expert
Feb 15, 2005
18,039
1,984
Please, please, please be careful here! Let the kiddies have their extra-curricular stuff--it happens after school. Yes, they use school space, but sponsor teachers don't get paid extra to stay, and most school principals who will allow FCA will allow any other peaceful group to assemble.

The reason I BEG you to not get up in arms is because we had a problem in a neighboring county about 4 years ago. A young girl wanted to start a gay pride group. The school had no problem with it. Of COURSE it drew attention from local churches (everyone knew it would) and eventually the ACLU was brought in. While this was, once again, a problem that was inflamed by the evangelicals, the girl organizing the pride group was just as inflammatory. (I was doing a show at the high school in the middle of all of this. Several of the students--theatre students, who weren't exactly the straightest bunch of kids I've ever met--had nothing nice to say about this girl. They said she was just seeking attention that they, the gay students, would rather not have.)

The county school board finally had no choice but to remove all clubs. No Key Club, student council, Beta club, Thespians, Origami, Chess...to my knowledge, they still haven't reinstated extracurricular teacher-sponsored clubs on campus.

Let the Fellowship of Christian Athletes pray, and the gay alliance groups talk about how to be tolerant and accepting, and all the other groups use time after school to celebrate their small patches of common ground. It can be a good thing...

I agree, but there are currently no other groups, and we all remember what happened when a certain group of Christians thought that we were practicing witchcraft during Blithe Spirit.:rotfl:

I guess this all goes back to my problem with using peer pressure as an influence on faith. But that is a different topic for a different thread.
 

elgordoboy

Beach Fanatic
Feb 9, 2007
2,507
888
I no longer stay in Dune Allen
Very interesting take on things. Here is a website that I found but have not completed reading. http://www.muslimrepublicans.net/

Romney seems to be doing pretty well handling it. But you are correct. There is quite a bit of emphasis placed on Christian ideals within the party.
I am not starting stuff with you and I think you are being treated a bit unfairly as well as being deliberately misunderstood by some. But I would consider Mormonism a Christian offshoot that isn't any weirder than Catholicism, really (to me).
 

Jdarg

SoWal Expert
Feb 15, 2005
18,039
1,984
I am not starting stuff with you and I think you are being treated a bit unfairly as well as being deliberately misunderstood by some. But I would consider Mormonism a Christian offshoot that isn't any weirder than Catholicism, really (to me).

Gordy, I consider Mormonism a Christian religion too, but Romney took ALOT of heat when campaigning for the primary by Christians who thought otherwise.
 

GoodWitch58

Beach Fanatic
Oct 10, 2005
4,810
1,923
After watching the speeches...and listening to the results of a poll about the makeup of the delegates...it appears that one must not only be Christian but white and married to be Republican. Interesting.
 
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Matt J

SWGB
May 9, 2007
24,862
9,670
That is a great question you asked and I would love to hear from some Republicans here.

I can add though that I do know of some people who will vote for McCain and who are not Christian - they care about the republican values of fiscal responsibility and restraint, small government,etc... but social values and preaching NEVER enters our debates.

What is interesting to me about the question you pose is that I would like to know if there are some who do feel alienated and exasperated by the evangelical extreme right wing who have made it their mission to try impose their narrow religious views on everyone.

I'm not trying to be sarcastic or start a riot, but at what point during the last 8 years has the republican party shown any of those values?

Interesting. I forgot to consider gay people in all of this. Another group that doesn't appear to be welcome, yet there are gay Republicans.

I am going to scratch my head and go to bed now.:wave: See ya tomorrow!

Yes there are a couple. They generally don't get invited to the good parties. I've been out and proud since I was 15 :)eek: I just realized how long that's been) and I have never once met a gay republican. I can honestly say they're like unicorns. I've never seen one, but I can't say they don't exist.
 

NoHall

hmmmm......can't remember
May 28, 2007
9,032
996
Northern Hall County, GA
After watching the speeches...and listening to the results of a poll about the makeup of the delegates...it appears that one must not only be Christian but white and married to be Republican. Interesting.

Not married...(sorry, Kitty--I didn't bring it up!:D)

Yes there are a couple. They generally don't get invited to the good parties. I've been out and proud since I was 15 :)eek: I just realized how long that's been) and I have never once met a gay republican. I can honestly say they're like unicorns. I've never seen one, but I can't say they don't exist.

You're trying to run off jdarg again! :nono1:
 

Alicia Leonard

SoWal Insider
I'm not trying to be sarcastic or start a riot, but at what point during the last 8 years has the republican party shown any of those values?

Yes there are a couple. They generally don't get invited to the good parties. I've been out and proud since I was 15 :)eek: I just realized how long that's been) and I have never once met a gay republican. I can honestly say they're like unicorns. I've never seen one, but I can't say they don't exist.

I thought there were lots of them and most just have a wide stance, causing them not to be visible to the mortal eye:cool:
 
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