Georgia is poised to pass the nation’s harshest “religious freedom” law

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
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If you think I'm in the Georgia legislature, or had anything to do with this bill, you're dumber'n you think Ludlow is.


Didn't say you were, or did. You want to point out where I said anything of the sort? You stated that it was about payback, I replied. Do try and stay focused.
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
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Care to point out where I did that? The full text of my post was "Payback's a bitch." The jump from that to "this bill was motivated by a desire for payback" was completely in your head.


In the context of what you quoted, it's exactly what you said.
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
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Your inability to comprehend does not necessitate ignorance in a statement, only a degree of ignorance ,,,which is willful, on your developmentally disabled butt.

Perhaps you should seek help in a nutritional way say,,,fish oil maybe?


Oh I "comprehended" what you stated no problem. I still stick with my assessment of said statement.
 

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
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wherever i sit down my ars
No, you're not able to. It's okay. Hang in there. Sooner or later the rectum muscles will give you the freedom to see things more clearly.

Just pray for a contraction.

I'm reminded of a line from the movie " The Flight of the Phoenix with the great Jimmy Stewart". When the character played by the German actor Hardy Krugar was addressing the character played by mister Stewart. One of my favorite lines. "You behave as if stupidity were a virtue". I love that line.:).
 

Cliffy

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Nov 19, 2008
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Nakusp, BC
When ‘Religious Liberty’ Was Used To Justify Racism Instead Of Homophobia
“Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, malay and red, and he placed them on separate continents. And but for the interference with his arrangement there would be no cause for such marriages. The fact that he separated the races shows that he did not intend for the races to mix.”
Judge Leon M. Bazile, January 6, 1959


Yet, while LGBT Americans are the current target of this effort to repackage prejudice as “religious liberty,” they are hardly the first. To the contrary, as Wake Forest law Professor Michael Kent Curtis explained in a 2012 law review article, many segregationists justified racial bigotry on the very same grounds that religious conservatives now hope to justify anti-gay animus. In the words of one professor at a prominent Mississippi Baptist institution, “our Southern segregation way is the Christian way . . . . [God] was the original segregationist.”

http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2014/02/26/3333161/religious-liberty-racist-anti-gay/