Re - GTO
posted on
Nov 19, 2008 07:44AM
All those examples equate charitable giving with religion so my conclusion is it's a religious factor not a political factor.
Religion may be, and probably is a factor. Conservatives by nature are, generally speaking, much more involved in religion than liberals. Many conservatives have Christian/Judeo values. But having good values does not make you less political. Caring for ones friend, neighbor, and family are good things and common values among christians and conservatives, generally speaking.
Nice try though :0)
I believe in the seperation of church and state, like our forefathers have professed.
As do I. Our forefathers did not want a theocratic govt., nor one "official" relegion in the U.S. But that isn't to say that our forefathers were not religous/Christians themselves, and did not have good Christian values. The history books are rife with christianity and christian values incorporated into our laws and values from day one.
If you're a true conservative you must hate the GW.
I feel dissapointed in some ways by GW. But I don't "hate" him. I don't hate anyone. I may be opposed to things or people. But hate is to strong of a term for me.
Also McCain, he was always considered a liberal republican.
I gree with you on that. McCain was my least favorite choice for a GOP candidate.
Palin is a conservative, she also believes in creationism, how out of touch is that? Like the earth is 6,000 years old? LOL
You laugh at every Christian in the world who believes in creation according to the word of God? Are you smarter and better than all those people? How arrogent of you. Believing in God and the bible is just that, a belief. A very profound one; but a belief non the less. Until the return of Jesus, God will never be proven a scientific fact. God is not a hard science. But do you say he is not so?
She back moose hunting...where she belongs.....
- 67GTO