lucem-ferre
Slut
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Why the bag though ? he is hot, apart from the rapey stuff.
For me, any hotness he might have had completely goes away knowing he raped kids.
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Why the bag though ? he is hot, apart from the rapey stuff.
...disturbing ...
You have left out the name of the second person you're quoting. By any perspective, I would think being murdered is more 'damaging' than being raped.![]()
That is a matter of perspective. Someone who has been raped and going through the physical/emotional/psychological damage as a result might disagree.
By all means, take a stand for starvation, child-brides, genocidal tribal warring, and disease. I'm sure Kincaid is the voice for countless millions who prefer malaria and malnutrition. Good to hear from the far far far right. The back to the less-than-basics movement gets so little space here in Hot Topics.
Oddly, Kincaid (Richardson) did not return to her family and the poverty of Antigua. Must come across better on paper than in the real application of such a flamboyant statement.
Granted, her writing is worthy of praise, but that doesn't make every utterance wisdom nor applicable to the missionary issue, which isn't synonymous with colonial power.

You confuse foreign aid from the State and missionary activity. Churches and NGOs voluntarily fund enterprises that help the developing world. Unlike colonial days when missionary activity might be concurrent with Westernization of other cultures, there is much more sensitivity today to respecting indigenous cultures. That doesn't erase the need for aid that goes beyond any religious mission, and many religious missionaries today provide technical skills that are needed by the groups they aid.
I'm sure I'm not the most religious person on JUB by far, but I am often the one foolish enough to rebut those who hack at what they portray as the corpse of a failed institution. Foolhardy or otherwise, that depiction isn't accurate to what is actually out there in the world, and especially not accurate to the U.S.
And Kahaih's cynical view of control may apply to some groups, but hardly describes missionary activity in total. South Korea comes to mind. More than half the population is Presbyterian, hardly known today for being controlling or dominating. In Africa, Nigeria is a center of Anglicans, hardly the puppets of England, they are marching in a distinctly conservative motion contrary to the norms of the UK.
It's easy to portray missionaries and the denominations who send them as some kind of throwback to the 19th century age of empire, but that's not accurate, and presenting Africa as some colony exploited solely by Old School Catholics or Fundamentalists is just a trope that conveniently ignores other branches of Christianity.
I don't believe you were.I believe you meant it and now you're trying to dig your way out of a hole that you placed yourself In.I was being sarcastic, dont you see?
And yet you espouse the pro-gay propaganda missionaries.....And yet you ignore the anti-gay propaganda missionaries have on the African continent and their effect.
Would this include the pro-gay missionaries, or just the ant-gay (or more specifically "religious" ) missionaries you despise? I say if you want to get rid of one, you'd best get rid of both....stop missionary works there... or anywhere.
But of course you say stop missionary work as you are unequivocally anti-religion, and it is your prerogative, but it is equally the prerogative of others to do as they please.
And citing that some denominations make a point of being anti-gay in missionary work doesn't make it true of all. The same can be said of the US population. The fact that we have gun advocates or anti-gay organizations in the US doesn't make it true of all Americans.
Equating anti-gay and missionary is a presumptuous and one-sided attack. Many missionaries don't waste their time embroiling themselves in political and social issues when they have much more immediate challenges. That's not to say that there are not those who do, but you are using a broad brush and not being accurate, just taking the lazy view, like the whole colonial schtick.
And I repeat what I have posted many times, Africa was anti-gay without the apparently hypnotic powers of the white man. That fact that some ultraconservatives go abroad and find resonance among other social conservatives doesn't make them the white devil. The ugly truth is that certain groups, both Arab and Sub-Saharan Africans, have a violently anti-gay culture which was ripe for inciting. That doesn't make the homophobes foreign or domestic blameless, but it isn't something reasonable people would have imported either.
You confuse Christianity with "the West." It didn't begin in the west. It spread here from Jerusalem, then Greece, then Rome, then Northern and Western Europe.
And it doesn't have any patent on proselytizing: Hinduism, it's exported offspring, Buddhism, and Islam all spread beyond their homes and not because someone was travelling and happened across them and thought that would make a good souvenir. They all have had missionaries in one form or another.
Religious conversion is also not tantamount to converting a culture. Observe Buddhism in India, China, Japan, England, and elsewhere. I don't see adherents stripped of their cultural identities. I see people with a common belief system who are very different.
Observe Islam in the Levant, and in Indonesia, and in Canada. I don't see people who share a cuisine, a history, a language, a music, or other cultural trappings.
Compare Christianity in Kiev with California or Rio. There are such amazing strong cultural differences, despite a shared myth or scripture, that asserting they are culturally converted is approaching either deliberate inaccuracy or unchecked bias.
"Leave other cultures alone" portrays the exchange as one-way. Mysticism has certainly made its inroads in the meeting of the minds, and tensions naturally exist between cultures. It's not new nor is it what it was in the 19th century.
This isn't some sort of brainwashing expedition where children are subverted. These are face-to-face encounters with adults, and it is there freedom to choose or reject any philosophy or religion that is out there.
You said "stop missionary works" because you are anti-religious, and your effort to stop it is every bit as arbitrary as their effort to promote it. Religion vs. anti-religion is just one more aspect of a diverse population.
. . . .
This isn't some sort of brainwashing expedition where children are subverted. These are face-to-face encounters with adults, and it is there freedom to choose or reject any philosophy or religion that is out there.
You said "stop missionary works" because you are anti-religious, and your effort to stop it is every bit as arbitrary as their effort to promote it. Religion vs. anti-religion is just one more aspect of a diverse population.
teenage missionary from Edmond, Oklahoma, said to be struggling with pornography and homosexuality, is now facing life in prison after he allegedly raped underage girls and forced young boys to perform oral sex on him at a Kenyan orphanage while other children watched.
. . .
In a press release Monday the FBI revealed that the teenager, Matthew Lane Durham, 19, was arrested last Thursday and appeared before a United States Magistrate Judge on Friday. . . . .
"This is a young man in our community that made choices to exploit children in an orphanage," said U.S. Attorney Sanford Coats in a KTLA5 report. "It's a true tragedy all the way around."
. . . while he was a volunteer with the Christian charity project, Upendo Children's Home in Nairobi, Kenya. Upendo was founded by a Christian Kenyan-American couple now living in Edmond. The home specializes in helping neglected Kenyan children through the provision of food, clothes, shelter, school and religion.
. . . .
. . .
Durham was a volunteer at the Upendo Children’s Home, located in Nairobi, Kenya, that was founded by an American citizen who is a resident of Edmond, Oklahoma. Upendo specializes in assisting neglected Kenyan children by providing them with food, housing, clothes, school and religion. The school is funded through sponsorships and donations. It is alleged that Durham volunteered with Upendo in June of 2012, June of 2013, December of 2013, and from April 30 to June 17, 2014. It is alleged that on the latest trip to Kenya, Durham stayed at the children’s home in an “overflow bunk” rather than at an offsite facility with a sponsor family where he stayed on prior visits.
. . . .
So, what you are saying is some missionaries leave this topic out and some reinforce the social conservatives of those places. This begs the question. What good are christians then if they can't even take a moral stance for social equality?But of course you say stop missionary work as you are unequivocally anti-religion, and it is your prerogative, but it is equally the prerogative of others to do as they please.
And citing that some denominations make a point of being anti-gay in missionary work doesn't make it true of all. The same can be said of the US population. The fact that we have gun advocates or anti-gay organizations in the US doesn't make it true of all Americans.
Equating anti-gay and missionary is a presumptuous and one-sided attack. Many missionaries don't waste their time embroiling themselves in political and social issues when they have much more immediate challenges. That's not to say that there are not those who do, but you are using a broad brush and not being accurate, just taking the lazy view, like the whole colonial schtick.
And I repeat what I have posted many times, Africa was anti-gay without the apparently hypnotic powers of the white man. That fact that some ultraconservatives go abroad and find resonance among other social conservatives doesn't make them the white devil. The ugly truth is that certain groups, both Arab and Sub-Saharan Africans, have a violently anti-gay culture which was ripe for inciting. That doesn't make the homophobes foreign or domestic blameless, but it isn't something reasonable people would have imported either.
…..Africa-the-continent wouldn't be quite in so poor a shape if we (ie, the western world) hadn't killed their infrastructure....
What infrastructure?...Anyway, when you need shit you feel like you have to go because if you don't go ...
