Yogi Bear said:
calbear93 said:
lAgree with all this, but at the same time, there is really no alternative as far as choosing a party (while we are still free to vote against candidates who are clearly disqualified). We have on the one hand the other party that is violently opposed to our faith. We have the Republican party that, while more suited for the prosperity gospel crowd, at least understands certain core elements of our belief. As much as I hate where the GOP is right now, I can't choose a party that is violently opposed to my faith and would gladly suppress and mock my exercise of faith.
I know you won't read this, but Obama is the same faith as you and he manages to be a Democrat just fine. I'm not sure why you think the Democratic Party is violently opposed to your faith. Of course, the first question would be if they are violently opposed, what violence has been committed against your faith? And as usual, there wouldn't be any examples.
Putting that aside, I just don't see the Democrats being opposed to Christianity. Where some Republicans see opposition is when it comes to things like LGBT rights and other things that they have a moral opposition to that they think supercedes the rights of all Americans to be free and to live life as they choose as long as they are not compromising another American's freedom to live his life as he chooses. And Christians have as many rights as LGBT people do in the minds of your typical Democrat. I'm sure there are some that hate Christians, but they're not advocating for any laws to deny you your right to worship or your freedom to live life as you choose.
I was about to attempt to correct 93 on Dems being "opposed to his faith". It's true much of the left, particularly the regressives and cultural marxists, denigrate religion and would prefer to discard it if they could, but you more or less have to at least feign loyalty to some form and brand of Christianity to get elected into office. Obama was one of them. No way does he believe the son of god revealed himself (which is fine by me) and feigns loyalty for political access into the system. Lots do it, you have to do it to play the political game.
What I reject in your post and the general assertion that not agreeing with the LGBT political and social agenda is bigoted towards gays as people, and essentially "anti-gay". It's not inherently anti-gay to oppose unisex bathrooms, a concept that everyone agreed was unacceptable until trans demanded that, in order to accommodate and affirm their own subjective interpretation of their own gender, bathrooms must be unisex as a moral axiom, which is such an absurd declaration it's hard not to be amused by the irony and double standard. It's not enough that they have the freedom to identify for themselves what they "are", but the privilege demanded by the agenda that everyone in society must accept that and accommodate that (e.g. by being forcibly subjected to unisex bathrooms) is the demanding of privilege not an advocating of "rights". Rejecting this, many of who have gay/trans family, friends, co workers who they care about, is not inherently "anti-gay" in any shape or form.
It is, however, the rejection of aspects of the LGBT social and political project. Just like it's not inherently "anti-rich" or "anti-poor" to advocate for tax increases on the wealthy or a cut to public programs. The LGBT agenda, much like many other movements that proclaim advocacy of equality like feminism and BLM, have little affinity for equality, they are advocacy groups advocating for privileges and 'rights' for their members. They want to swing the pendulum of arbitrary preferences to correct for history. Honest regressives don't hide from this agenda of reversing discrimination and bringing back the era of determining people's worth and value based on immutable characteristics not on the value of character and skill, citing it as "the price of progress".