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Paul R. Ayn Jesus Rand
Author: Raine    Date: 12/09/2013 15:37:07

“I do support unemployment benefits for the 26 weeks that they’re paid for,” he said. “If you extend it beyond that, you do a disservice to these workers.”
Senator Rand Paul, on Fox News Sunday.

Senator Paul is (supposedly) a Christian:
Paul is a convert. He and his four siblings were all baptized in the Episcopal Church, but Paul has said that he became a Christian as a teenager and he converted when he moved with his wife to Bowling Green, Ky., in 1993 and started attending the Presbyterian Church, where his wife is a deacon.

Paul has spoken of the Presbyterian Church and Christianity on the whole as a safeguard for morality, saying that Christianity is the basis of American society and values, and that "it helps a society to have that religious underpinning. ... I think it helps to have a people who believe in law and order and who have a moral compass or a moral basis for their day-to-day life." He has also said, "I personally think you could probably have prayer in public school."

It's also a disservice to workers to cut food stamps. That's right, House Rep. Paul Ryan, devout Catholic, wants you to know why it's important to cut this program.



‘You Have To Get Savings In Some Of These Areas’ His church leader - also known as "The Pope" - had something to say about this approach to ending poverty.
Pope Francis on Tuesday sharply criticized growing economic inequality and unfettered markets in a wide-ranging and decidedly populist teaching that revealed how he plans to reshape the Catholic Church.

In his most authoritative writings as pontiff, Francis decried an “idolatry of money” in secular culture and warned that it would lead to “a new tyranny.” But he reserved a large part of his critique for what he sees as an excessively top-down Catholic Church hierarchy, calling for more local governance and greater inclusiveness — including “broader opportunities for a more incisive female presence in the Church.”
Could it be these two moral arbiters of the Republican party are misinterpreting the teachings of Christ?

I am not a religious person, and this is not a post to proselytize. This is a post about how much the basic tenants of morality have been rejected by the Republican party and conservative thought. Our country has a government that ideally exists for the common good of the people. It's right there in Section 8:
The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States;
This, however, seems to be willfully ignored with this particular crop of Conservatives.

When the Pope spoke out on such issues, many were shocked that the Catholic Church had finally after many many years talked about actually being Christian. People on the right who like to claim that our nation was founded as a Christian nation should be thrilled with what this Pope said.

I think we all know where this is going. They hate it. Evidently, the Pope is just like President Obama.
Not such kind words for the free market, however. In his recent apostolic exhortation he slammed unfettered capitalism, calling it ‘a new tyranny.’

Apart from the fact that there is no major nation practicing unfettered capitalism (like Obama, Francis loves attacking straw men) there is more real tyranny in socialist cesspools like Francis’ home of Argentina than in places where capitalism is predominant.

In the document he rejects the free market and calls for governments to overhaul financial systems so they attack inequality. In doing so he shows himself painfully misguided on economics, failing to see that free markets have consistently lifted the poor out of poverty, while socialism merely entrenches them in it, or kills them outright.

Like Obama, Francis is unable to see the problems that are really endangering his people. Like Obama he mistakes the faithful for the enemy, the enemy for his friend, condescension for respect, socialism for justice and capitalism for tyranny.
Not to be left out, Rush and Governor Half-Term have issues with the message as well.

It's disheartening too see something lost in all the politics of conservatism. It's a very basic and simple idea: Try to be nice. Just try to be kind. Do unto others as you would have done unto you. Sadly, our conservative friends are doing just the opposite. They are choosing to divide, choosing to take away, and choosing to be mean to those that need help. They've become the Party of Mean. I don't know when it happened, but that seems to be what being conservative nowadays is all about. It's become so extreme that some actually view the leader of the Catholic church and - by extension - the church itself as liberal. Yes, as patently absurd as what I just said is, that is exactly what is happening here. It's crazy. It's also a bad idea.
The impulse to boil everything down to a liberal vs. conservative, for-or-against sound bite is ill suited to theological discourse. Sometimes the pope sounds more like Catholic politician U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), except when Ryan is in his fiscal conservative, Ayn Rand-admiring mode. Other times, he’s more Barack Obama, except when the president is affirming abortion rights.
It should be about doing the right thing. Since the 80's, the conservative right (the GOP included) has worn their Jesus on their sleeves. It appears they don't like it when an actual Christian points out that their political ideology is morally questionable. It was the Republican party that chose to use Theology to propel it's agenda, and now it appears as tho it may be coming back to bite them.

According to our conservative friends, helping unemployed people is a disservice and giving people access to food stamps is damaging to the soul, as Paul Ryan once said:
“You cure poverty eye to eye, soul to soul,” he said last week at the Heritage forum. “Spiritual redemption: That’s what saves people.”


Interesting times. Or as John Stewart put it:
It started when Fox Business Network host Stuart Varney described a $15 an hour minimum wage as the "emotional" part of a social justice narrative, and was more concerned with the economics. Stewart reacted to the position as comically heartless: "That is the kind of statement that is usually followed by a dead business partner and the ghosts of Christmas past, present and future."

Varney only made things worse when he asked for a "moral judgment" whether someone with minimal education should "really deserve $15 an hour."

"Oh, I'm making one," Stewart retorted.

But the Fox hosts started to enter Rush Limbaugh territory when they criticized Pope Francis for his recent comments denouncing trickle-down economics as unfair to the poor.

"You're going up against the pope?!" Stewart exclaimed. "Pope doesn't go to where you work and slap Jamie Dimon's d*ck out of your mouth!"


Having a good moral compass is a good thing to have. Basing it on a false idea will almost always lead you astray. Here is a little truth: There is no Ayn Rand Jesus. The real Jesus and Ayn Rand were moral polar opposites.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v86/slc987/nomanger_zps003f2583.jpg


&
Raine
 

60 comments (Latest Comment: 12/12/2013 21:53:49 by Raine)
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