Interesting Diatribe on Politics & Fear

Quote from palmbeachdude:

People who believe in the rapture are not trying to promote laws that cause everyone to adhere, like the promoters of the global warming fantasy. This is more than a small difference.

By the way, people of faith who are not "fundamentalist nutjobs" are not really people of faith at all. It may give some a warm and fuzzy feeling to say they are, but what is their faith in? If they can decide for themselves what truth is, then that means everyone is a person of faith, doesn't it?


my apologies, after-the-fact, I realized that may offend.

"nutjob" is a matter of opinion, considering very little, if anything, is actually provable. I try to steer clear of disparaing anyone's faith. Unless that faith is destructive to me.
 
using fear to manipulate voters in this manner should probably be illegal

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061021/pl_nm/osama_dc

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans unveiled an advertisement on Friday featuring the image and words of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and a warning to voters that "these are the stakes" in the November 7 election.

The Republican National Committee ad, first shown on its Web site and scheduled for airing on cable television early next week, also includes images of al Qaeda fighters in training and other al Qaeda leaders.

"What is yet to come will be even greater," the ad quotes bin Laden as saying, before concluding with the words: "These are the stakes. Vote November 7."

President George W. Bush's Republicans, slipping in the polls from public dissatisfaction with the
Iraq war, are fighting to retain control of Congress in the election. Democrats must pick up 15 House seats and six Senate seats to win a majority in each chamber.

Republicans hope to turn the debate in the campaign's closing stages back to their traditionally strong issues of national security and the war on terrorism, although recent polls show Democrats overtaking them on that turf.

Democratic Senate campaign committee spokesman Phil Singer called the ad a "desperate" effort to spur Republican voter turnout.

The bin Laden ad recalls one of the most famous American political ads, the 1964 "Daisy" ad used by Democratic President Lyndon Johnson in his race against conservative Republican Barry Goldwater.

It featured a small girl picking a daisy and a countdown to nuclear explosion before an announcer says, "These are the stakes."
 
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