Context:
⢠"I think he ought to be worried about what's going on in the Good Lord's mind, because if there is retributive justice, he'll get AIDS from a transfusion, or one of his grandchildren will get it." -- National Public Radio and ABC News reporter Nina Totenberg reacting to Senator Jesse Helms' claim that the government spends too much on AIDS research, July 8, 1995 Inside Washington.
⢠"The Rapture, and I quote, `is the immediate departure from this Earth of over four million people in less than a fifth of a second,' unquote. This happily-volatilized mass of the saved were born again in Jesus Christ....The evaporation of four million people who believe this crap would leave the world an instantly better place." -- New Orleans-based National Public Radio commentator Andrei Codrescu, December 19, 1995 All Things Considered.
⢠MARGARET CARLSON: And wouldnât it be a great thing if they moved it a few blocks? And Muslims and Americans who still worry would be talking to each other. Letâs compromise.
MICHEL MARTIN (NPR): Why should they move it?
CARLSON: Well, why donât we compromise?
MARTIN (NPR): Did anybody move a Catholic church? Did anybody move a Christian church after Timothy McVeigh â who adhered to a cultic, white supremacist cultic version of Christianity â bombed the Murrah building in Oklahoma? â CNN's Reliable Sources, August 22, 2010. Martin is host of NPRâs âTell Me More.â
⢠"I think he ought to be worried about what's going on in the Good Lord's mind, because if there is retributive justice, he'll get AIDS from a transfusion, or one of his grandchildren will get it." -- National Public Radio and ABC News reporter Nina Totenberg reacting to Senator Jesse Helms' claim that the government spends too much on AIDS research, July 8, 1995 Inside Washington.
⢠"The Rapture, and I quote, `is the immediate departure from this Earth of over four million people in less than a fifth of a second,' unquote. This happily-volatilized mass of the saved were born again in Jesus Christ....The evaporation of four million people who believe this crap would leave the world an instantly better place." -- New Orleans-based National Public Radio commentator Andrei Codrescu, December 19, 1995 All Things Considered.
⢠MARGARET CARLSON: And wouldnât it be a great thing if they moved it a few blocks? And Muslims and Americans who still worry would be talking to each other. Letâs compromise.
MICHEL MARTIN (NPR): Why should they move it?
CARLSON: Well, why donât we compromise?
MARTIN (NPR): Did anybody move a Catholic church? Did anybody move a Christian church after Timothy McVeigh â who adhered to a cultic, white supremacist cultic version of Christianity â bombed the Murrah building in Oklahoma? â CNN's Reliable Sources, August 22, 2010. Martin is host of NPRâs âTell Me More.â