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Have you ever been even close to being in that situation? An awful lot of them would far rather have a regular job -- because having a regular job to show up at every day is far easier than having to scrape for mere survival every day.
Rarely.
That says FAR more about you than about poor people.
which guy and who said it. …

Neither do fibbers
I have friends who worked in the UK, and from what I can gather the social welfare system there is fairly easy to manipulate and the money is comparatively good. You can earn a lot more in government support on The Dole while unemployed than you might earn while employed. And if you have 3 or more kids, you qualify for a significantly bigger house from government, leading to people being dubbed "professional breeders."
Can any UK Jubbers back this up, or is it more urban legend?
-d-
I have friends who worked in the UK, and from what I can gather the social welfare system there is fairly easy to manipulate and the money is comparatively good. You can earn a lot more in government support on The Dole while unemployed than you might earn while employed. And if you have 3 or more kids, you qualify for a significantly bigger house from government, leading to people being dubbed "professional breeders."
Can any UK Jubbers back this up, or is it more urban legend?
-d-
 Now every time she pass by anyone (especially british) who has a kid(s) she judges them like they are criminals/ society low life
 Now every time she pass by anyone (especially british) who has a kid(s) she judges them like they are criminals/ society low life 
^
Kabluey is telling you I'm a liar.
He's suggesting that my discretion is proving his hypothesis. It doesn't.
Although social progress is not on topic, as alms and charity are ancient traditions (as opposed to revolutionary social thoughts), your statement is inaccurate, hence not forgotten by the reader, as it was never learned as a truth.
As was already cited in a rebuttal of this, groups like Quakers, Methodists, United Churches of Christ, Episcopalians, Unitarians, Presbyterians, Lutherans, and others have often led the fight when society needed to change in the 19th and 20th centuries. Today, some of the most vocal and active supporters of gay marriage are coming from progressive denominations. The same is true about immigrant policy.
Here in Albuquerque, an intrusive anti-abortion measure was introduced on the local city ballot this year, and we defeated it last week. Two weeks prior, my Sunday School class dedicated its hour to hearing from a religious coalition representative who laid out what the proposition was, how we were working to defeat it, and what we could to to help. My denomination is an active supporter nationally of such pro-women's rights legislation, and specifically, pro-choice.
Learn about history of reform and then make your claim. It is as biased as it is untrue.
No one contends that the status quo doesn't dominate some of the largest institutions in a society, including churches, but likewise, the rebel minority does not inherently work outside the framework of their own organizations which are frequently churches: same religion, different interpretation and execution of the teachings.
What is it with people not being able to read properly? I said social progress never came from religion. I didn't say social progress never came from religious people. And when they did, it was because these people had adopted progressive ideas, not because their religion told them so.Actually, you said exactly that, as shown clearly in the post quoted above.
Again, the examples you cited were exceptions. And even then, they got their ideas from progressives. Had their ideas been really from religion, most religious institutions would have come to the same conclusion. But since most religious institutions almost always came to the opposite conclusions...If by "claim credit" you mean cite real world examples from real world churches that I personally had experience with versus abstract attacks without basis, I guess you're right. Maybe you "knew" my post would follow yours because you have a history of bigotry and I have a history of making it plain.
Yes, people like you. Revisionists."People like me"? Sounds bigoted. As for future transgressions or propaganda, I couldn't defend that, as I haven't done, am not doing it now, so am not able to do the time travel thing. It is a sign your argument has failed when you have to contrive offenses for your opponent, or people like him, to commit. Huge fail. I know lots of atheists, few who might be considered evil. Again, you paint an argument not made.
Again, you're pointing out exceptions and trying to pass them as mainstream.The fact is, church groups ARE supporting gay rights, and that is in direct contradiction to your earlier post, and it is a public fact, not opinion. Again, bigotry loses in the face of reality.
The catholic church represents a sizable portion of the Christian religion. If you're going to try to pass progressive ideas as coming from religion, you can't escape including the catholic church.As I am not a Catholic, I will leave them to defend their own. BTW, I never see you post about the flaws of your own native country and its institutions, so maybe it is perfect by comparison. I'm assuming you left to be a social missionary to your current country?
Religion really is as powerful. Atheists are unelectable, even more unelectable than gays. And every presidential candidate must swear allegiance to religion if he wants to be electable.Gee, religion must be much more powerful than I had ever dreamed. It is the only social force at work in society's evolution, huh? There is obviously no relevant historical evidence of biological prejudices for sexuality. Since Christianity is obviously the only force capable of repressing gay progress, it must be a well-known fact that ancient Egyptians, Chinese, Indians, Babylonians and the like had gay marriage. Let's check the murals in the ruins and find the examples.
You mean change as in trying to change gay people to straight? LOL I've heard that before.My religion is an active force in my community for change, for protection of the poor, for gay rights, and for women's rights. It is true locally, and it is true nationally, and internationally. And I have already named multiple examples of other denominations that do the the same.
Exactly. There isn't one church any longer, and the legacy of Catholicism and other prominent churches no longer encompasses the entire institution.
It might be a better world if the disenfranchised were running it, but I doubt it. Poverty isn't a virtue any more than wealth is.

