Fried Brown on Both Sides

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So the campaign equivalent of a daisy-cutter bomb was dropped on the Roy Moore campaign yesterdiddy. There are certain things we don’t know, and certain other things are stinking obvious.

Let us begin with what we don’t know. The allegations have been made, and Moore hotly denies them, calling them defamation. So, not having had a trial yet, we don’t know if the allegations are true.

“The one who states his case first seems right, until the other comes and examines him” (Prov. 18:17, ESV).  ““A single witness shall not suffice against a person for any crime or for any wrong in connection with any offense that he has committed. Only on the evidence of two witnesses or of three witnesses shall a charge be established” (Deut. 19:15, ESV). “You shall not fall in with the many to do evil, nor shall you bear witness in a lawsuit, siding with the many, so as to pervert justice” (Ex. 23:2, ESV).

That noted, the first obvious thing is that this was rolled out in the midst of a nasty political campaign. The allegations concern the late seventies, which means that the story is almost purely a political instrument—that instrument being a hatchet.

The second thing is that a host of RINOs moved into action almost immediately, looking like one of those choreographed swimming routines from the 1950s. John McCain called for Moore to stop burning daylight and to step aside right now. There was also the more cautious maneuver (Flake, McConnell), where they opined—and opine is the only real verb for it—that if the allegations are true, he ought to step aside.

If the allegations are true? Well, of COURSE. If the allegations are true, the citizens of Alabama ought to do more than politely request that Moore step out of the race. If the allegations are true, they ought all to pitch in, buy the world’s biggest frying pan, fill it with about half a foot of piping hot bacon grease, and fry the good judge a deep brown on both sides.

Now I will admit it—that previous paragraph was a tad flamboyant. But I put it that way for a purpose. A defense of the presumption of innocence ought never to be read as a defense of the guilty. If he is guilty of this, he deserves everything he is getting and more. If he is guilty, to have this revealed in the course of a political campaign—where he is campaigning as a defender of the law of God—would not even be a dirty trick. A grand defense against any lawsuit for defamation is to show that the charges are true.

This is because the following statements are not equivalent. They do not mean the same thing:

1. The accused did not ever molest a fourteen-year-old girl.
2. There is nothing wrong with molesting fourteen-year-old girls.

But we live in a time when to mildly suggest that #1 is a possibility is taken as a thundering and full-throated defense of #2. Not a bit of it.

So if anybody suggests that I am defending Moore because he is “my guy” for the Senate, this would be false. I am defending him because he is the accused. But I do know the world is a sordid place, and I do not know the judge personally. I therefore acknowledge that there is a possibility that the charges are true.

So if he confesses that they are true, or if they are shown by biblical criteria to be true, then I am here and now promising a future blog post on the subject. I further commit to have it set to at least 300⁰ F, and you will be able to hear the bacon grease from at least three blogs over.

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Maeve Magdalen
Maeve Magdalen
7 years ago

The fact that the main accuser, Ms. Corfman (the ONLY accuser under any legal age of consent) scrubbed her Facebook and LinkedIn accounts, nor is there any mention of her on her son’s Facebook – despite being quoted in a newstory in 2013 regarding searches at his prom – is highly manipulative and suspect.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Maeve Magdalen

And isn’t she supposedly a Republican who voted for Trump? If so, why not make her allegations during the Alabama Republican primary? That way another conservative would still have a very good chance of winning the Senate seat.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Ah, well one accuser is a hard-core Democrat:
http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2017/11/_one_of_roy_moores_accusers_wo.html

It goes a lot further down the rabbit hole than that article, too. She worked for Hillary and Biden, wants Trump removed from office, “likes” some very far-left groups and has already posted (then deleted) things supportive of Doug Jones.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

It’s very convenient when pro-Democrat political beliefs are implied to be a reason to disbelieve an accuser, but pro-Republican political beliefs are not considered a reason to believe an accuser. Whenever all potential evidence can only be cherry-picked to be relevant in one direction, then you will always end up believing whatever you wanted to believe.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

It’s very convenient when you try go ignore a mountain of evidence with a comment like that, too.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Mountain of evidence of what?

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Exactly what I said earlier: “She worked for Hillary and Biden, wants Trump removed from office, ‘likes’ some very far-left groups and has already posted (then deleted) things supportive of Doug Jones.”

If you’re going to so harsh on Christian, Southern conservatives, then her politics need to come into play as well. Or is she somehow exempt?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

By “she worked for Hillary and Biden”, you appear to mean that her self-owned translation business did sign language work for them. And she’s a democrat. What do you think being a democrat and doing sign language work is evidence of? Roy Moore has already admitting befriending her after he spoke to her high school civics class and conceded that he might have dated her, but “doesn’t remember.” So since he’s conceded what she alleged, it’s hard to make her out to be some liar. The only thing I have been hard on “Christian Southern conservatives” here is their actual… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

How do you feel about Moore’s ambiguous denial/acceptance of that very accuser’s claims?

Moore has admitted getting to know her after he met her when he spoke to her high school civics class: “I knew her as a friend. If we did go out on dates, then we did, but I do not remember that.”

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

It’s also convenient how WaPo failed to disclose the political affiliations. And they wonder why the credibility of mainstream media is lower than Trump’s. Jonathan wrote: Whenever all potential evidence can only be cherry-picked to be relevant in one direction, then you will always end up believing whatever you wanted to believe. It’s interesting how quick Jonathan is to believe the worst in us, however, the political leanings of accusers can actually be quite relevant, especially given the timing of things. It’s something that ought to be disclosed, for the sake of transparency. Contrary to Jonathan, no one said it… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

How do you feel about Moore’s ambiguous denial/acceptance of that very accuser’s claims?

Moore has admitted getting to know her after he met her when he spoke to her high school civics class: “I knew her as a friend. If we did go out on dates, then we did, but I do not remember that.”

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

It sounds like a cautiously phrased reply which might not be true. But it also might be. If you asked me if I dated John Jones in 1979, I would have to say, “I don’t remember a John Jones, but if he says I dated him, I probably did.” Jonathan, who remember whom they dated during the 1970s, that decade of disco delight?

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

I bet if John Jones was twice your age, you would remember him. Now, if you had dated dozens of men twice your age, maybe not. Either way, it seems as if Mr. Moore had/has a young girl fetish and that’s Icky.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

You’ve turned around the situation, haven’t you? The claims are suggesting that Moore dated many much-younger girls. Using your logic, it’s not surprising that Moore might not remember all the details for all of them.

Just like Jonathan, and many others, your personal perception of the propriety of a relationship between an older man and young girl (“that’s Icky”) is impacting your thinking on the Moore situation.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKR, as to the charge of allowing my personal perceptions of the impropriety of a thirty-something man dating 16 and 17 year-olds, I plead guilty. How do you plead?

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

Since your sentence is incomplete, I ask if your guilty plea is an admission that you are biased to suppose that Moore must be guilty, or simply an acknowledgement that you find such a relationship improper?

I would find such a relationship to be suspicious and watch it carefully as it is unusual. However, I do not presume that such behavior is predatory or even inappropriate.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKR, I have no way of knowing if Moore is guilty. I do find his admitted behavior is improper. I’m sorry, but I can find no justification for an grown man dating a 16 of 17 year-old girl. It raises a red flag.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

Jonathan avoided answering this question, so I’ll ask you. At what age does one
become a “grown man”, and thus ineligible to date 16-year-olds?

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKR, certainly by the time Roy Moore was dating them. Wouldn’t you agree? Let’s try to stay on topic. Deflection is AdadO’s game. See below. FYI, that’s not snark.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay, I have already provided my opinion on that question, and, no, I don’t agree. My question is just as relevant as you and Jonathan expressing your personal distaste for a romantic relationship with the ages given. Since that is a large part of your approach to this issue, I am trying to ascertain how either of you would determine, based on ages, the acceptability of a relationship. If you are unable to do this, then your personal objections are purely subjective. If so, then the question of the propriety of Moore’s behavior is also purely subjective. When it comes… Read more »

Melody
Melody
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

From The Washington Post article: “She recalled her mother saying she was “the luckiest girl in the world” that Moore wanted to date her, noting that he “had this godlike, almost deity status” … Gibson alleged that she and Moore only kissed twice and said in retrospect, she’s “glad nothing bad happened.” “As a mother of daughters, I realize that our age difference at that time made our dating inappropriate,” Gibson told The Washington Post.” How is this a story?

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Melody

Melody,

Some consider it inappropriate that a 32-year-old was interested in dating teenagers, some still in high school. But I suppose you know that is not the entire story. One woman claims he sexually molested her on a date when she was 14 years old. That is a more serious allegation that should be investigated fully.

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

And despite 38+ years of Moore’s prominence she never said a word or called the authorities? Uh-huh. I am not fully disbelieving the accuser because I do not know anything firsthand, however the timing looks massively coincidental to this election (and I do not believe in coincidences).

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKR, once again you failed to recognize a grammatically correct sentence. It is a complete sentence. There is subject and a verb with a prepositional clause. Just because the prepositional clause is at the beginning of the sentence doesn’t mean that the sentence is incomplete or incorrect. Maybe a basic grammar refresher course is in order? I’d be happy to suggest one or two.*

*mild snark

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

I presume you are saying this is a complete sentence: “OKR, as to the charge of allowing my personal perceptions of the impropriety of a thirty-something man dating 16 and 17 year-olds, I plead guilty.”

So, you plead guilty to the charge of allowing your personal perceptions to do what?

By the way, I seem to have missed your explanation of how I should write a proposed change to specific text.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKRickety, having now seen the statements about his behavior by about a dozen women including former deputy D.A. Teresa Jones, alongside his very unconvincing denials, it appears he is lying at least, especially regarding his conduct with the main accused. It’s not even about a “he says, she says” differing interpretation or exaggeration of events. Either Miss Coffman , her mother, her friends from the time, and the Washington Post are all involved in a vast conspiracy AND a number of other women are badly exaggerating Moore’s conduct at the time, or Moore is lying about his conduct at the… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

It appears that you supposed that I am ignorant of the claims and denials. That is far from accurate.

It is my opinion that there is reasonable doubt that the sexual molestation allegations by Corfman are true. Apparently, you believe they are true. In reality, those specific allegations are, in fact, he said, she said.

I don’t think there is any point in anyone insisting that their own view is correct. There is insufficient evidence to say it is beyond reasonable doubt.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I believe that it is much more likely than not that Moore is lying about the degree of his contact with high school girls.

Rather than “reasonable doubt”, because this is not a legal trial, what do you think is the most likely explanation that explains the statements of Ms. Corfman, her mother, her childhood friends, and the other witnesses to Moore’s behavior while also taking into account the “denials” Moore made?

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

Without specific evidence, possibilities are: political conspiracy (by either party), desire for attention, following the trend of #MeToo, a belief that they might get paid for later interviews, and regret for their immature decisions as teens. I think the first is the most likely, in light of the timing.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

What evidence do you have for political conspiracy that would make that option more likely the the option that Moore engaged in inappropriate conduct? On “regret for their immature decisions as teens”, I’m not even sure what you mean. Moore has generally denied any pattern of dating teenagers and specifically denied even meeting Ms. Corfman, so how would that explain the story? On “a belief that they might get paid for later interviews”, how would that option even be possible considering that the Washington Post approached them rather than the other way around and you have 7 witnesses who would… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

I said “without specific evidence” for a reason: I don’t know the truth. You don’t either. I provided my opinion. Believe what you want. It is extremely unlikely that you would accept any reasoning I provided, so I am not going to bother.

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Either Miss Coffman , her mother, her friends from the time, and the Washington Post are all involved in a vast conspiracy AND a number of other women are badly exaggerating Moore’s conduct at the time, or Moore is lying about his conduct at the time. Of course, the Washington Post has NO reason other than journalistic integrity to publish a story containing an as-of-yet unproven accusation of sexual molestation against Moore. I mean, it’s not like they endorsed his opponent or anything: Some Republicans may be tempted to overlook these shortcomings in deference to Mr. Moore’s party label. In… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

So you consider a political endorsement to be meaningful evidence of political conspiracy?

Do you have any other evidence?

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

So you consider a political endorsement to be meaningful evidence of political conspiracy? I consider a political endorsement of the opposing candidate to be meaningful evidence of the Washington Post’s anti-Moore bias, as well as its eroding credibility. Can you say “conflict of interest”? The Post sought out these four women, only one of which has an accusation of wrongdoing. The Post printed a story potentially damaging to Moore. The Post endorsed Moore’s political opponent. Or are you so naïve as to believe the fact that the Post endorsed Doug Jones has no bearing whatsoever on their hit piece against… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

I think you just posted an excellent survey of the actual ways in which a newspaper can get a story wrong. If those were the most egregious examples you can come up with out of over a million stories the Post has published within the 40-year period you cover, then you’ve given us a meaningful data point of the frequency and depth of their errors, as well as the degree of their willingness to admit fault.

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Anthony Weiner icky?

Or

Bill Clinton icky? (27 year age difference)

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  adad0

Yes, and yes. What’s your point?

Melody
Melody
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

My husband’s grandfather was 23 years ‘older’ than his grandmother. She was fifteen when she gave birth to the first of their nine daughters. They were married for nearly 40 years until his death. This is such a silly story. Why weren’t these precious little girls able to speak up until now? He’s been in the public eye and a controversial figure for over 20 years.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Melody

Uh, you’ve been alive during the last year when a LOT of sexual misconduct allegations are only now coming to light, right? And the girls did not go public, reporters sought them out. “Neither Corfman nor any of the other women sought out The Post. While reporting a story in Alabama about supporters of Moore’s Senate campaign, a Post reporter heard that Moore allegedly had sought relationships with teenage girls. Over the ensuing three weeks, two Post reporters contacted and interviewed the four women. All were initially reluctant to speak publicly but chose to do so after multiple interviews, saying… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

He claims not to remember dating teenagers at all but then says “maybe” in response to several specific allegations, people who knew him have come forward claiming that he made point of dating high school girls.

Could you really not remember whether or not you dated high school girls when you were 32? How is that something one could be unsure about?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

My assumption is that she, like most people, cares about their own personal life a lot more than she cares about party politics. This is only a wild guess, but perhaps she hoped in the primary that Moore would just lose to Luther Strange and that would be the end of that and she wouldn’t have to say anything. But when he beat Strange and it became apparent that he would almost certainly win the seat, she was too disgusted by that idea and felt the only way left was to go public, with all the risks that entailed. Another… Read more »

Nathan James
Nathan James
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I got the impression from the WaPo story that their reporters approached her.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Nathan James

You’d have to question how they found out, of course. But if it is true that she did not initiate the timing, then yes, that certainly makes that accusation moot.

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I agree. Occam’s Razor would be well used here. re the desire to jump to conspiracy. Adjacently, victims of sexual abuse very often keep the experience to themselves for various reasons. Some glaringly obvious if you consider the comments here. Which is easier, to breathe a sigh of relief that you made it through and hope it will all fade to a bad dream, or put yourself through the wringer where even ‘christians’ sneer online and off, questioning your veracity.? The spouting here about complementary biblical principles concerning the ‘responsibility’ men have to provide for and protect women seems suspect… Read more »

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

Randi, material evidence is considered “witness” as well.

Think Bill Clinton, “the christian” and the stain on the blue dress.

In that case, the testimony that Bill Clinton was a lounge lizard,

matched the material evidence, the stained blue dress, proving Clinton’s guilt.

But when Bill Clinton was being impeached for being a lounge lizard,

who ignored the proof and voted not to impeach / convict Bill Clinton?

Oh! right. Liberal Democrats who were about as non-christian as Bill.

Many, including liberals, obviously always choose giving their brothers (like Bill Clinton) the benefit the doubt.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

Wait, you’re following a principle from a friar-theologian? Next thing you’ll be quoting Aquinas!

Occam’s razor would more accurately suggest that a bunch of perfectly-fitting stories, some 38 years after an alleged event, is not what it seems.

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

“sneer online and off, questioning your veracity.?” This is hard to take as an honest statement. The overwhelming majority of the comments have done nothing approaching sneering. Rightly not assuming the word of one stranger to be of more value than another’s is not mocking disdain. ” Many including Wilson obviously always choose giving their brothers the benefit the doubt. ” You’re interjecting sex where none exists in the principle. You give doubt the benefit of the doubt. “After all, the bible says you need 2 or 3 witnesses yes? I guess just too bad for her that the 14… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Maeve Magdalen

The only thing that’s highly suggestive to me of is that pretty much any normal person, on becoming exposed to millions of people who want to destroy you, would not want those millions of people digging into their personal life and disrupting their places of work and the lives of their friends.

Your quick attack, by name and going into unrelated details about her children, being a case in point.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“going into unrelated details about her children” – Oh come on. This is all over the internet. When you’re willing to accuse a public figure of something like this, you’ve opened yourself to that kind of scrutiny.

I bet you didn’t got out of your way to defend Barron Trump during the election. If you did, please send links.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

I’m confused by what you think I said – you’ve proven my exact point. How do you think that your reply supports Maeve’s suggestion, and what would defending Barron Trump have anything to do with anything?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Maeve Magdalen

One of the other accusers was 14 at the time as well, no?

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

From the WaPo article: “Wendy Miller says she was 14 and working as a Santa’s helper at the Gadsden Mall when Moore first approached her, and 16 when he asked her on dates….”

Without knowing what “first approached her” means, it’s hard to say what happened before she was 16.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

One article I read indicated that Wendy Miller’s parents were approached at 16, but that she wasn’t allowed to actually begin dating him until 17. I don’t recall that Miller accused Moore of any sexual misconduct either.

Davis Wilson
Davis Wilson
7 years ago

Since the allegations are way past the statute of limitations, they will only be tested in the court of public opinion, not in a court of law. So the only things we have to go on are the accusers’ narratives and Moore’s denials. By that score, the charges presented by the accusers are weighty and have significant indicia of truth, including specificity, consistency, lack of hyperbole, and numbers (notwithstanding the delay of several decades in their assertion). In contrast, Moore’s denial presents no facts that would provide a basis to dispute these accounts–it’s essentially just a Bulverism attacking the source… Read more »

Sam Hughey
Sam Hughey
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

To many, it really isn’t important to determine or know if the allegations are true or not. It’s only important to ‘make’ the accusations. People remember the accusations and assume there must be something to them if they were made at all. In addition to this, if the allegations are false, or at least not proven, the accuser should face criminal charges, as well the accused, if guilty.

Zachary Hurt
Zachary Hurt
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

Hi Davis, as a Roy Moore supporter and someone who actually knows him personally (I worked for him during a summer internship while I was in law school, and was hired to clerk for him last year prior to his removal from office), I obviously am predisposed not to believe these allegations against him. What is more, the allegations are inconsistent with the man I know, and with his consistent commitment to his Christian faith even when it has cost him dearly. On that basis, his case is distinguishable from Weinstein &co (beyond the basic fact that those men admitted… Read more »

Davis Wilson
Davis Wilson
7 years ago
Reply to  Zachary Hurt

Zach, I think that’s a really fair analysis from someone ideologically and personally tied to Judge Moore. And I think that you frame nicely a test for the truth of the allegations: absent evidence that they are the product (and not just the instrument) of a sophisticated political attack, the best explanation for the allegations is that they are true. I also hope that Judge Moore and his supporters will investigate the sources rather than just attacking the motives of the accusers.

Zachary Hurt
Zachary Hurt
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

Moore has now followed up the boilerplate denial with an interview on Hannity. I found his further denial credible, and I believe him.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Zachary Hurt

I’m quite surprised you find that denial credible. He denied having dated teenage girls despite a rather large body of reports that suggest that he made it his pattern to date teenage girls, and that this was well-known. Then he turned around and sort of unclearly admitted that he had dated teenage girls. He admitted knowing Glorida Deason, the 18-year-old cheerleader who claimed she had dated him for months, but wouldn’t admit to dating her, denied giving her alcohol and then claimed she was definitely 19 at the time. He denied ever having met Leigh Corfman. That would mean that… Read more »

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Zachary Hurt

Great comment. Like literally 100X better than some in the previous post…who assume Moore is guilty because the Washington Post and the rest of the MSM are always reliable…as are people who wait 38 years to accuse someone at the most critical point imaginable. Anyone who refers to Moore as a “sexual molester” with no caveats is nothing more than a rabble rouser at this point.

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

“Anyone who refers to Moore as a “sexual molester” with no caveats is nothing more than a rabble rouser at this point.” Exactly…part of the modern “give us Barabbas” crowd employed to do nothing more than defame (“Here, we’ll pay you a Hundred Grand to lie about this good man so we can steal the election.”) It’s part of the common theme of destroy first…really took hold with Justice Clarence Thomas. It’ll get a lot worse…case in point: If you haven’t heard the tape, listen to yesterday’s Dennis Prager’s first hour repeated from the other day, his interaction with an… Read more »

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

BTW, the exploding heads are all around, just without the visual (ala, Kingsman: Secret Service).

Sadly, in the case of Judge Roy Moore, his detractors are likely within his same political party…they simply cannot have their exclusive club infiltrated by good Christian’s.

Then you watch the Dem’s going after one of their own, Donna Brazile, who is now backtracking her allegations.

Satan is sure working overtime.

Ray D.
7 years ago
Reply to  Zachary Hurt

It sounds like you know him from working with him recently.

When these allegations were alleged to have occurred, Moore was 32, single, and a Democrat.

I am not saying anything about his guilt or innocence, only that he may have changed over time.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Ray D.

It’s very interesting that he was a Democrat. I wonder how the current situation would be viewed if he were still Democrat.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Three things are rather obvious.

1. He wouldn’t have a chance in hell of being elected in Alabama.

2. Most or all of those who are supporting him now would be denouncing him.

3. Some of those who are denouncing him not might instead be supporting him.

Here’s a thought experiment for you. If Barack Obama had been accused of the same, how do you really think that you and everyone else, especially our host, would have responding differently? Do you believe he would have had even the slightest chance at election?

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

If Obama had been accused of the same, I expect that “everyone else”, including the media and other influencers of public opinion, would have responded differently. So much so, that I believe he likely would have been elected regardless.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

That’s not the question I asked.

If that article with that degree of evidence gets written in the middle of Obama’s campaign, there is no chance on God’s Green Earth that he is able to continue as a viable candidate. None.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

Really? You asked two questions. I answered the first one, at least partially. I certainly answered the second question.

Would Wilson have responded the same? I don’t know but I like to think so. For me, I like to think it would be the same, too. As to other commenters, it likely would be different, and I suspect that your response would be different, too.

One of the differences in response is that I greatly doubt that the article would have been written about Obama. Again, your belief about Obama’s election chances is purely conjecture, as is mine.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“If that article with that degree of evidence gets written in the middle of Obama’s campaign, there is no chance on God’s Green Earth that he is able to continue as a viable candidate. None.” If anyone is still taking Jonathan seriously, you can stop now. Obama was treated with the most delicate of kid gloves by the media. We still know very little about what he did during the 47 years before he became president. Anyone who dared to ask was given the “What are you, a racist?!” treatment. This would never make it close to the desk of… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

“We still know very little about what he did during the 47 years before he became president.” That’s a patently ridiculous claim. Virtually every detail of his life, from who his parents were to where he was born to where he lived to what exact elementary schools he was enrolled in to what he studied to who his friends were to who his pastor was to every job he held and what he did there and what his coworkers said about him, and every ideological belief he held or demonstrated along the way, was dissected in microscopic detail during the… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I would like to see the mainstream media source that gave “Obama is a secret Muslim” any traction whatsoever.

Just because people complained about Obama over silly reasons does not mean that the media gave him a hard time about it. The media discussed every negative point of Hillary’s too……for about 3 seconds…halfheartedly. Obama provably lied to the American public numerous times and it was nigh on impossible to get a mainstream news source to care.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

There was no traction to be gotten because the story was ridiculous,to this date lacking any evidence whatsoever. There wasn’t a single fact to report to give it traction which they failed to report. But they STILL reported the story, so the claims that they wouldn’t report on a negative story remain groundless.

And it wasn’t “3 seconds”, the story was regularly covered from early 2008 through the election by hundreds of news outlets even though there was nothing new to see there.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

That’s garbage and if you have even hint of objectivity or honesty, you’ll admit it.

The MSM made very little of the Obama-Ayers connection, even though it was much more significant than Obama admitted:
http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/presidential-campaign/32072-obama-and-bill-ayers-together-from-the-beginning

Imagine if McCain or Romney had similar connections with the co-founder of a neo-Nazi group that conducted bombings of public buildings. They’d be out of the race as soon as the news was released.

That’s just one example. There are dozens of others.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

I’m glad you picked an example that was already widely known, had been a campaign issue from start to finish, and got enormous media attention. There were literally hundreds of articles written on the subject. Far more attention than Donald Trump palling around with Gerry Adams at a Sinn Fein fundraiser, eh? Of course, literally raising money for a terrorist-associated group just months before the cease-fire broke and Sinn Fein’s allies bombed London isn’t nearly as bad as….which of Obama’s actions exactly? Obama’s associations with Ayers were broken by the mainstream media in Feb 2008, a good 6 months before… Read more »

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  Zachary Hurt

Then there is this from someone who actually worked with him as a peer- not a summer intern:

Former Dep. DA Theresa Jones, who worked alongside Roy Moore, tells CNN: “It was common knowledge that Roy dated high school girls, everyone we knew thought it was weird…We wondered why someone his age would hang out at high school football games and the mall…”

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

RM2, Fake news. Left wing conspiracy. What’s wrong with an adult man Roy’s age dating high school girls? After all, it’s in the Bible.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

You haven’t changed. Still being snarky. In the first place, I don’t believe there was an equivalent to dating in Biblical times. More importantly, please show where the Bible makes any statement suggesting age differences in male-female relationships are of importance.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

So, you’re saying it’s not fake news or a left wing conspiracy? It is fine with you that a thirty-something man liked to serial date 16 and 17 year-old girls? Didn’t the Alabama state auditor invoke Joseph and Mary in defense of Roy Moore’s proclivities?

Yes, at times a can be snarky. It’s a failing that I’m not terribly proud of.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Weird but not necessarily criminal. I dated professors. My friends married professors they had dated. My daughter had teachers who invited her out after she had graduated and turned 18. I don’t think this is as unusual as you think.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Of course it’s not necessarily criminal. But that certainly isn’t the behavior I would expect from someone seeking the office of mayor of my small southern town, much less the office of US Senator. Nowadays, dating one of your students is the surest way for a professor (male or female) to lose their job. Would you agree that generally there is a significant difference in the maturity of a 16 year-old and an 18 year-old? Regardless of their maturity, 18 year-olds have reached the age of majority in the US (with a few slight exceptions). What would you have said… Read more »

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay, my daughter’s first boyfriend was 19 when she was 16. His parents were a lot more nervous than I was because of California’s sometimes tough enforcement of stat rape laws. But they were well supervised, and he was protective of her. Her second BF was 12 years older, but they didn’t start dating until she was 18. That relationship lasted five years. So maybe I’m not the one to ask! I would have had a problem with a teacher asking her out on a date while he was still her teacher. I would not have been okay with it… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Jill, you’re right. Times have changed greatly in our lifetime. Some for the worse, some for the better. I would expect that had your daughter’s first boyfriend been two or three years older and was also dating several other 16 year-olds, you would have taken a different tack. But then what we are really talking about is a thirty-something man with what appears to be a proclivity for dating young teenage girls. That’s a lot different than a well supervised 19 year-old dating a well supervised 16 year-old where both sets of parents are on the same page. But even… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

Both here and to me elsewhere, you say “also dating several other 16 year-olds”? This implies that the guy is dating multiple teens simultaneously. I have seen no suggestion that Moore was doing such a thing. Why are you using this phrase?

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

It certainly isn’t ideal, and I am sure it is no coincidence that this happened right after her father left and stopped having contact with her for a long time. She is now dating within her age group which I do think is healthier. When a girl dates a much older man, she tends to develop a facade of maturity that really isn’t there under the surface.

lndighost
lndighost
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

The whole ‘dating’ culture is fraught with peril. It’s a dumb and dangerous way to do things, and I wish we wouldn’t participate.

The age gap relationship in itself needn’t be any kind of a big deal and I think it’s often a good idea because of developmental differences. An 18 year old girl is likely to be too old for an 18 year old boy.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

I have known teachers to get fired for that. It is considered extremely inappropriate as it opens the door to “grooming” your own students as you wait for graduation day. In fact, at least one of the girls Moore dated has turned out to have met him in Civics class. I cannot recall ever, ever having met a respectable man in his thirties who could be described as eschewing woman his own age to serial date high school girls. I wonder if there’s a single Republican in the country who honestly believes that Barack Obama wouldn’t have been run out… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

Let’s be clear that, contrary to way your comment reads, Moore was a guest speaker at the Civics class. That is a far cry from a teacher grooming students.

Your personal experience of older men dating high school girls is of little value as it is purely anecdotal. It is countered by others’ experiences (as shared her by Jill Smith and perhaps others).

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I don’t think that Jill said he knew respectable men in their 30s who made a point of eschewing women their own age in order to date high school girls.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

I don’t know if it’s fake news or a left-wing conspiracy, although I think the latter is a possibility. But I do object to a person who claims to be a Christian objecting to a behavior, implying in the process that it is non-Biblical without any support.

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

“Yes, at times a can be snarky. It’s a failing that I’m not terribly proud of.”

Rubbish. It’s a vital and necessary skill to have.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

MeMe, unfortunately around here snark is a necessary skill. But I’m still not terribly proud of it. Thank goodness I can sit down regularly with folks that I agree and disagree with and have reasoned conversations and debates. I have found that I learn more from those who see things differently than I do.

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay, the Lord can take anyone and put them to good use. One of my favorite sayings is, “you’ll either serve as a good example or you’ll serve as a stern warning, but either way you’ll serve.” There are some people in my life who have served as a good example of “yeah, don’t be like that.” I try to cheerfully receive them. :)

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

Funny, the Bible sure doesn’t mention “snark” as a good or helpful behavior for women:

“Rather, it should be that of your inner self, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is of great worth in God’s sight.” I Peter 3:3-4

“Even so must their wives be grave, not slanderers, sober, faithful in all things.” I Timothy 3:11

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

JP,

I cannot immediately think of a Scripture to support it, but I don’t think snark is good or helpful for any Christian. It’s certainly not edifying.

Nathan James
Nathan James
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I think there is God-inspired snark in the bible. How about “what went ye out for to see, a reed shaken with the wind? … A man clothed with soft raiment?”

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Nathan James

That’s quite a bit different than bashing others here for being “bitter divorced” people “with no friends” isn’t it? Or have you not read much MeMe?

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Remember, not only no friends but no life and no church either! In smearing someone, you want to make sure you cover all the bases.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OJR, would some please tell that to Mr. Wilson.

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

The bible doesn’t explicitly say not to burn a cat alive for fun, but I am guessing you know somehow that would be morally repugnant.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

RM2, thank you. I wish I were as quick witted as you.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

I am always astounded when a so-called Christian is willing to consistently align himself with an avowed agnostic, atheist, et al. In your case, I should learn to expect it.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I was even more surprised when 80% of White Christian evangelicals were willing to consistently align themselves with a practical agnostic who by all appearances only takes on the Christian label to draw support.

This is a REALLY poor time to suggest that aligning oneself with a non-Christian is a sign of moral failing.

At least, AFAIK, Clay has not compromised himself on issues of sexual morality, greed, or truth in the process of aligning with a non-Christian on some issues….which is far more than I can say for others.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, Now that I’ve figured out that the “practical agnostic” is Trump, I’ll give you my reply. I’ll stick with my contention that it is amazing to see Christians align with agnostics, atheists, et al. You see, I did not vote for Trump. In fact, I voted for no one for President. My state is one of many that do not allow write-in votes, so that was not an option. I made no claim that such an alignment is a moral failure. In my opinion, it’s more of an intellectual failure, which can, though, lead to moral failure. The fact that… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKR, right is right and wrong is wrong. If a Christian assures me that, according to the Bible, the earth is flat ,and an atheist astronomer shows me photos of the earth from space, whose picture of the earth should this Christian align with? Calling someone a so-called Christian because they don’t agree with you is a cheap shot. You’re better than that.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

Right according to what standard? I am fairly certain that there are many “Christians” who believe abortion, homosexuality, sex outside of marriage, divorce for incompatible differences, etc. are acceptable. However, they are sin according to the Bible. It’s not a question of whether they agree with me, but whether they agree with God.

Consistently aligning with a non-believer on spiritual or moral questions is akin to being unequally yoked, which Christians are commanded to avoid.

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

The shape of the earth is not a moral question, and it’s one that humans have the ability to verify without God. Neither is the case the here.

As a human, you are fallen. Your personal sense of morality is tainted. That’s why you’ve been given a moral handbook. Your argument essentially boils down to “morality is how I feel it is” which is a fundamentally anti-Christian view. If you take anti-Christian views, it’s hard to fault someone for calling you “so-called”.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris
Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Not that specifically, though I did make a lengthy facebook post about a month ago when the story about the conservatives calling it heresy came out.

The gist of it was:

“I completely relate to the conservative faction. They just have the rotten luck to be in the only faction of Christianity where they have to care what Francis says.”

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

Randmann,

It’s weak evidence. How many peers did he have there? Why has only one made this claim?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKRickety, would you accept that among 70-something-year-old small-city Alabama folk who were privileged enough to work in a law office in the 1970s,the large majority would likely be of a political persuasion that would lead them not to cast aspersions on Roy Moore’s character? Not to mention that most people, no matter what they saw or who they were voting for, just would rather not go public speaking negatively about any public figure. Not to mention, of course that in Alabama such an act could have serious negative consequences for one’s employment or associations. She said that not only she… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Zachary Hurt

Zachary, now combined with the statements of other persons who knew Moore at the time and Moore’s very unconvincing denials, I believe it highly likely that Moore is lying, especially regarding his conduct with the main accused. It’s not even about a “he says, she says” differing interpretation or exaggeration of events. Either Miss Corfman , her mother, her friends from the time, and the Washington Post are all involved in a vast conspiracy AND a number of other women are badly exaggerating Moore’s conduct at the time, or Moore is lying about his conduct at the time. “I was… Read more »

Rob Steele
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

It looks like he’s suing for defamation”, which I guess would give his accuers ample scope to prove their case.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Rob Steele

That’s a political ploy – there is absolutely 0% chance of him winning a defamation suit on those facts. It will go nowhere.

As far as his accusers having “ample scope to prove their case”, what exactly would you consider proof in a case such as this?

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Looking like a political ploy does not prove that it is such. Presumably, you are intelligent enough to recognize that the article and accusations also look like a political ploy.

I suppose that “what Pastor Wilson says about how we SHOULD react is also very helpful” means that you will be applying that principle. Unfortunately, your comments suggest that you are instead supposing that “The one who states his case first” is indeed right.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

One of the accusers (Deborah Gibson–not the singer) definitely sounds like she fits the “political ploy” description.
https://thepolitistick.com/bombshell-roy-moore-accuser-worked-hillary-clinton-joe-biden-campaigns/

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Because she’s a democrat with a sign language interpretation business who did interpretation work for democratic political campaigns?

That doesn’t mean anything other than that she’s pro-democrat and has a useful skill, which I believe still allows you to make non-conspiratorial sexual advance allegations.

In fact, she’s one of the ones who Moore has admitted knowing after he met her when he spoke to her high school civics class: “I knew her as a friend. If we did go out on dates, then we did, but I do not remember that.”

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

That’s one of the accusers whose story Moore has already admitted could well be true.

Moore has admitted getting to know Deborah after he met her when he spoke to her high school civics class: “I knew her as a friend. If we did go out on dates, then we did, but I do not remember that.”

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

No, of course not. But “prayersofadoration” appears to think it is relevant or evidence of something, while in reality there’s literally no information to be gained from the filing of that suit. There are accusations which are also so clearly political ploys that they give one very little information. Obama being accused of cocaine-binging with gay prostitutes in his limo was one of those. Tom Cruz being accused of adultery by the National Enquirer by anonymous witness who were not the women themselves was partly in that direction. This one does not fit those nearly as well. And to go… Read more »

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I think he meant to say Ted Cruz, not Tom Cruz, or Tom Cruise.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

hahahahahaha. That was a fairly hilarious typo. I seem to making them more often recently, which likely means I’m not getting enough sleep as I really shouldn’t be old enough for that yet.

Vva70
Vva70
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

I may be misreading you, but it almost seems that you’re suggesting we should accept a lower standard of proof of guilt in light of the fact that this will never see a court of law. Is that what you’re saying? And isn’t that kind of backwards?

Davis Wilson
Davis Wilson
7 years ago
Reply to  Vva70

The standard of proof is commensurate with the consequences of the finding. To imprison or execute someone in a criminal case, we require that a jury of their peers find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. To take someone’s money or property in a civil case, we only require a finding by a preponderance of the evidence (more likely than not), which may be made by judge or jury. So when the consequences are not judicial at all because of the passage of time, but political or personal, I submit that the standard of proof is more informal–you don’t need a… Read more »

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

Davis, isn’t “the standard by which we adjudicate the character and fitness of a candidate for public office.” Bill Clinton and Anthony Weiner?

AKA, the looooooooooooowest common denominator?

; – )

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

I don’t know what the case is with Moore and I know nothing about his accusers, but I’m not generally intimidated by charges of Bulverism. In real life, motives and the credibility of sources are rightly taken into account.

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

According to ‘biblical principles’, Roy Moore did nothing wrong except not be married no? So much for biblical principles.

Also, there is no statue of limitations for sexual crimes to minors under age 16 in Alabama.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

randallmanntoo wrote:

According to ‘biblical principles’, Roy Moore did nothing wrong except not be married no? So much for biblical principles.

Roy Moore is married.

What ‘biblical principle’ says that not being married is wrong?

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

When Moore was 32 and preyed upon a 14 year old girl. By ‘biblical principles’ marriage would make this perverse idea of a ‘relationship’ acceptable. My point.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

randallmanntoo wrote:

By ‘biblical principles’ marriage would make this perverse idea of a ‘relationship’ acceptable.

Marriage makes all the difference between fornication and honorable sexual union. However, randallmanntoo has shown a pattern of jumping to conclusions based on no evidence, and testimony of only half of the parties involved.

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

I have heard the testimony of Roy Moore. He flatly denies it. I think Moore is a liar and a predator. I believe the accusers, none of who knew each other. Many who told friends and relatives about Moore decades ago. This is corroborated by an incredible well sourced article by a respectable newspaper.

Sex aside. A 14 year girl and a 32 year old man should not be having any kind of romantic relationship. Only the morally bankrupt here or bible-blinkered would try to rationalize this via marriage.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

I have been told (haven’t looked myself to see whether it was true) that 14-year-olds were not considered minors in Alabama in the early 1980s.

bethyada
bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan
carandc
carandc
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Delaware!!! I thought I knew you!!!

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Be aware that minor status, or age of consent status, doesn’t directly relate to legal marrying age. I understand that about half the states allow marriage at very young ages, such as 14, with parental and/or legal consent.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

,
The WaPo article says “In Alabama, the statute of limitations for bringing felony charges involving sexual abuse of a minor in 1979 would have run out three years later….”. So, why should anyone consider anything else you say to be true?

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

Davis Wilson said:

So the only things we have to go on are the accusers’ narratives and Moore’s denials.

Davis Wilson should have stopped right there; everything else he said was superfluous.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Actually, no – the Washington Post reported that the accusers’ mother and two of her childhood friends stated that the victim told them of what happened decades ago long before Moore was a national figure. And the fact that there are three other girls of similar age who state that Moore pursued and/or kissed them is meaningful too. Of course, what Pastor Wilson says about how we SHOULD react is also very helpful. Because many other Moore supporters in Alabama are saying quite the opposite, even to the point of claiming that they’ll support Moore’s election whether or not he… Read more »

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Actually, yes Jonathan — the Washington Post also records Moore’s denial: In a written statement, Moore denied the allegations. “These allegations are completely false and are a desperate political attack by the National Democrat Party and the Washington Post on this campaign,” Moore, now 70, said. Just like Davis Wilson said: So the only things we have to go on are the accusers’ narratives and Moore’s denials. Anything wrong with that statement, Jonathan? This also from the Washington Post: Aside from Corfman, three other women interviewed by The Washington Post in recent weeks say Moore pursued them when they were… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

FP, I simply don’t know how to respond to someone who ignores what I’ve already said. You have claimed that 1 person’s word is the only thing to go off of, but there is clearly other corroborating evidence, including what three other witnesses said they were told by the accuser at the time and what three other young girls said about Moore’s behavior towards them, as well as circumstantial evidence about Moore’s behavior with young girls that has been confirmed by witnesses. So yes, your statement is false. What evidence would you admit as sufficient? As far as Christians defending… Read more »

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, what specifically did I say that was false? Did you read what I wrote, or did you ignore it? …there is clearly other corroborating evidence, including what three other witnesses said they were told by the accuser… What “three other witnesses”, Jonathan? The only information they have IS from Corfman; they weren’t there to witness Moore allegedly molesting Corfman. And how do you know they’re telling the truth? If I found out any of my kids were molested, you can bet your bottom dollar that I would have notified the authorities immediately and that there would be hell to… Read more »

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: As far as Christians defending Moore go, once again I am referring to the ones who have said that they will defend him EVEN IF HE IS GUILTY. That includes both public Republican figures in Alabama, private citizens in Alabama, and posters on this thread. No doubt Jonathan could dredge up some random private citizen saying such a thing, but can Jonathan quote “posters on this thread” claiming that they would defend Moore even if he is guilty? I hadn’t seen any. He also needs to provide citations for “public Republican figures in Alabama” who have made such… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

Katecho, those comments are all over the board (bdash alone has made at least three) and I posted the Alabama officials’ names and quotes on this thread more than 14 hours ago. It looks like you’re the one people should stop trusting, as you made these claims about my failure to prove my point at least three times and once stated explicitly that I hadn’t done it when I clearly had. Bibb County Republican Chairman Jerry Pow said he’d vote for Roy Moore even if Moore did commit a sex crime against a girl. Marion County Republican chairman David Hall… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I’m not going to dig through all of this, but the majority of your citations aren’t examples of people defending Moore’s actions. Voting for him does not necessarily require you condone any of this. Many voted for Trump. Few did so as an endorsement of Trump’s personal life.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

I’m not sure what you’re trying to parse, but my exact original quote was “Because many other Moore supporters in Alabama are saying quite the opposite, even to the point of claiming that they’ll support Moore’s election whether or not he committed sex crimes against young girls.”

“Defending Moore” was a shorthand for that.

Although Zeiger, Hall, and Seibenhener are certainly minimizing the sinfulness of the actions if not outright defending them. Pow and Blocker are disgusting in saying that they would still support Moore even if he committed criminal sexual abuse against a child.

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Pow and Blocker are disgusting in saying that they would still support Moore even if he committed criminal sexual abuse against a child.” It’s only disgusting if they share your view of what a vote is. Suppose we live in a very physically dangerous time. Roving gangs of thieves and murderers place normal people in danger every night. You’re looking for someone to keep guard at your house while your family sleeps. You have one, and only one applicant, but it you know that he molested someone decades ago. Do you send him away, leaving you and your family vulnerable… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

How is it that in just two years, White Evangelicals have gone from the group most likely to say that a candidate’s personal sin can disqualify him from office to the group least likely to say it? It’s not just the inappropriateness of the rationalizations being put up. It’s the fact that all and sundry can see that Christian rationalizations on these issues have shifted abruptly in recent history, and can see exactly why, and it reflects terribly on the church. This all demonstrates a view of the world where you’ve become far more afraid of man than of God.… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Well, not carrying this view, I tend to agree with you. I’ve opposed sexual deviancy and dishonesty on the right in Trump, didn’t vote for him, and paid dearly in personal relationships for doing so. That said, the response if I did see things that way would be “20 years ago we weren’t as a society on the edge of a cliff, about to go over.” The idea is that, politically, RIGHT NOW is more important than virtually every other time in our history, so right now we need to worry about victory, not decades old ethics issues. If you… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

Except that the people driving that ridiculous idea are those who seek votes. There have been Republican majorities in 2/3 of the branches of government for something like 90% of the last forty years. They control all three branches now. Electoral distribution, gerrymandering, and the ages of Supreme Court Justice makes that likely to continue for the near future. If society is going of the cliff, it’s probably time to pull our faith out of politians, especially really messed up ones, and put it somewhere else. Damaging our Christian witness in order to put our future in the hands of… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

“There have been Republican majorities in 2/3 of the branches of government for something like 90% of the last forty years.”

Looking at Presidents and control of Congress, you will find that Republicans have had the majority in 2/3 of the branches in 20 of the past 40 years, that is, 50% (including the current session, 22 of the last 42 years, giving 52%). A far cry from “something like 90%”. I don’t think your math skills are that bad, so it would seem your perception is quite mistaken. Based on your comments here, I am not surprised.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Look at all three branches of government instead of just two of them and you’ll get a more accurate answer.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

Not being inclined to care much about the specifics of our government, I had stupidly forgotten about the Judicial branch, which has had a Republican majority  for all of the past 40 years. Going back to the page I previously linked, I think I correctly count a total of 14 Congressional Sessions where there has been either a Republican President, or the Republicans have held a majority in both the House and the Senate.

From that, I get a “more accurate answer”, that is, (14 * 2)/40 = 70%, which is still not near 90%.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Thank you for quickly clarifying the most obvious error and the self-rebuke! That is refreshing here, and I completely accept it. On the math I was speaking with slight imprecision – by “the last 40 years”, I was thinking back since the Reagan administration, which was actually started only 37 years ago. Since that time, the only periods in which the Democrats controlled 2/3 of the branches of government were 1993-1995, and 2008-2010. As that will remain true through 2020, that would have given the Democrats control over 2/3 of the branches of government for only 4 of 40 years,… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, “So going back to my original claim, if society is going off of a cliff, then “let voting for Republicans take precedence” appears extremely unlikely to be the fix.” Since the Republicans have not acted upon their stated platforms, I strongly agree. Neither they nor the Democrats have shown an interest in turning society in the right direction. A Christian might suppose that the church would be pushing society in the right direction. Unfortunately, that is not true. It is my opinion that the church has been far more influenced by the world, than the opposite. I know many… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I do believe that is dismissing of the faith and hope that God speaks into our lives. Not that I blame you – I get down too. But I have to believe in something more, and I have to believe that it will happen through God’s hand, and I have to believe that I am to do everything I can to be His instrument in that. I agree that in many times and ages the church becomes influenced by the world. I believe that is particularly bad now. I do not believe that it always true, or necessary. We are… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

And it would be good to be one of those people laying off the repeated personal attacks against me simply because I hold the “wrong” position. The number of those personal attacks which have backfired in this one thread alone is astounding.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

And more now:

“Yeah!” Covington County GOP Chairman William Blocker tells me he’d consider voting Moore even if hard proof of sexual abuse emerged.

“There is NO option to support to support Doug Jones, the Democratic nominee. When you do that, you are supporting the entire Democrat party.”

“Other than being with an underage person – he didn’t really force himself,” Alabama Geneva County GOP chairman Riley Seibenhener tells me. “I know that’s bad enough, but I don’t know. If he withdraws, it’s five weeks to the election…that would concede it to the Democrat.”

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

It’s interesting that Pastor Wilson quoting the Biblical passage asking for multiple witnesses. I’m wondering if he’s aware that the mother of the victim and two childhood friends of the victim stated that the victim told them of Roy Moore’s activities at the time, and three other teenage girls (ages 14, 17, 18) have stated that they were kissed and/or pursued in a dating relationship by Roy Moore at the time.

At the same time, interesting that Roy Moore has issued general vague denials, but no denial of specific acts that I have seen yet.

bethyada
bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Roy Moore’s activities at the time, and three other teenage girls (ages 14, 17, 18) have stated that they were kissed and/or pursued in a dating relationship by Roy Moore at the time.

Was he married at the time? If not, what is wrong with pursuing a relationship with a 17 or 18 year old?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Having a daughter around that age and having spent much of my adult life working with youth around that age, I’d be more likely to reject my nonviolent principles then let a a 30-something-year-old-man make out with my daughter, especially a man who appeared to particularly target girls of that age, especially one who appears to have done so behind their parents’ backs. There’s no magic maturity line crossed at 16 – a 17yo high school girl is far more like a 14 year old than she is like a 32 year old.

bethyada
bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, you are going from a kiss to making out, and you are letting your modern prejudice show. I would rather let a 16 year-old daughter marry a godly, virginal 30 year-old man than date an 18 year-old player.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

his morality is based on age!

apparently having large age gaps, is a sin
he keeps inventing various sins based on his own morality

it is hilarious!

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

You’re the person who said the victims shouldn’t be believed because they’re women and women are natural liars, right?

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

bdash, even your buddies have pointed out how silly you are. Of course morality can be based on age. A 32 year-old man passionately kissing a willing 29 year-old woman is vastly different that the same man doing the same with a willing 14 year-old girl. Please tell us that you can see the difference. If you can’t, then any further communication is pointless, and I hope you don’t have any daughters. Or, come to think of it, any sons.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

bethyada, wouldn’t having your 16 year-old daughter wait a few more years before marrying that 30 year-old godly, virginal suitor be even a better idea?

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay Crouch, Would it be better to wait because A. the daughter is 16, or because B. the suitor is 30? I’m going with A myself, I would’t approve the 16 year old marrying a 18 year old any more than I would approve her marrying an 30 year old. For that matter, outside of a shotgun wedding, I really wouldn’t approve an 18 year old, male or female, marrying. The age difference matters some too, but it isn’t what matters most. I make that point because I get the impression some people are of the opinion age disparity between… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

bethyada, I don’t have a problem with an older man marrying a younger woman or vice versa. Obviously the age difference between a 42 year-old and a 30 year-old is not the same as that of a 30 year-old and a 16 year-old. Life experience and individuation and all that. As to your comment about shotgun weddings, I’m an ardent subscriber to the aphorism, “two wrongs don’t make a right”.

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

bethyada didn’t make any comment about shotgun weddings, but marrying at 18 isn’t categorically a wrong, it just isn’t generally the best idea. Single motherhood and a child with no father in the picture is generally a worse idea. Having accomplished together something that should have waited for marriage, the closest the couple can come to making it right is to marry.

I agree the difference between a 42 year old and a 30 year old isn’t the same as that between a 30 year-old and a 16 year-old. Would you say the latter case is categorically wrong?

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

JohnM, sorry about attributing the shotgun wedding to bethyada. I’m not sure that a shotgun wedding is ever right. Perhaps the parents should be willing to help the young mother raise her child. Even if the couple is madly in love, 16 is too young, 18 is not much better. Who knows, maybe the couple will mature to the point that a marriage would be fine. Being married at a young age is hard enough. Adding parenthood, in most instances, would make it nearly impossible. A 16 year old marrying a 30 year old is categorically unwise. Wrong, as in… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

Exactly.

The age is a problem, the age gap only accentuates that problem.

bethyada
bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

It depends. In many situations yes, in some situations no. And better they marry than start fornicating.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I wouldn’t want my daughter to date a player either – how is that relevant?

Have you seen the Hannity interview? Moore sounded a lot more like the player than virginal. He said he “dated a lot of young ladies” after he came back from the military and answered a number of questions with “generally” and “I don’t recall” and suggested at several points that he couldn’t even remember who he had and hadn’t dated or how he had approached them.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, I am three years younger than Judge Moore. I could not possibly tell you with any accuracy the number of young men I dated or how they approached me! If you don’t marry young, chances are good that you have dated far more people than you can remember in later life. And I am talking “dates,” not one night stands.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

I’m betting you can remember whether or not you were dating high school boys in general when you were in your 30s. Moore either is unable to remember that entire stage in his life, is being subject to a vast conspiracy, or is lying.

bethyada
bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I used the term player to mean sexually promiscuous, not dating with no sexual behaviour.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I’ve been reliably informed that “man whore” is the current G-rated expression.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, Apparently, your “nonviolent principles” are weakly grounded when you are willing to reject them at your own whims! Your argument about the propriety of relationships between older men and teenage girls seems to be based primarily on your own standards. There is no Biblical command specific to this type of relationship, but you infer that it is Biblically wrong. You are opposed to a 30+ man “making out” with your daughter. Would you be opposed to an 18-y-o doing it? Where is the line? Who gets to decide that it is inappropriate? You, society, the Bible, the church? Let’s get… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

My feelings about the general propriety of relationships between teenager girls and older men is indeed based on my own standards – obviously all of us base our feelings on our own standards. In this case, they come from a great deal of both experience and counsel. When I was in high school one of my 17yo friends had a sexual relationship with a 51yo volunteer on the track team. The relationship was quite disturbing, he took advantage of his greater maturity to manipulate her vulnerabilities. He ended up in jail, thankfully. When I went to university the school strongly… Read more »

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, I can’t feature a 17 year old being an appropriate object of a affection for a 51 year either, but what do you mean by ” manipulate her vulnerabilities”?

Frankly I’d tell a 30 year old he ought to be able to do better than a teenager, and I’d think him pitiful if he really couldn’t find anybody closer to his own age who would have him. I tell the teenager to get real and not kid herself about the one thing he could really want with someone as young as her.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

My friend had a lot of deep insecurities, as many teenage girls do. The good thing is that most teenage boys are bumbling fools full of hormones too, so they tend to be on a rather similar playing field. But I have seen many times that a more mature person who has been “playing the game” for a little while and reached mental maturity has a very easy time identifying and exploiting the vulnerabilities of young women even if they are quite incompetent around women of their own mental age.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

That is probably generally true, but there are some emotionally and intellectually mature 18 year old women. (I wasn’t one of them.)

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Jill, outliers are exceptions that prove the rule.

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay, the “rule” is Bill Clinton, right? ; – )

” reached mental maturity has a very easy time identifying and exploiting the vulnerabilities of young women even if they are quite incompetent around women of their own mental age.”
(and incompetent around women who can throw lamps and ash trays.)

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, the age of consent has to be set somewhere. In my state, it is 18. This is at the highest end of the range, and I have no problem with it. But, we have to be willing to concede that, the law having set it there, 18 year old girls can date older guys without automatically gaining victim status, and older men can ask them out without automatically being predators.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

And when I see a 60 year old walking around with an 18 year old I can automatically feel he’s a sleezeball.

Criminal charges are not at issue here. Clinton’s behavior would have been despicable whether or not he broke any laws as well.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

True. But would you argue that–leaving the 14 year old out of it–Christians should reject a candidate on the basis that, as a man in his early 30s, he dated 17 and 18 year olds? Would it make a difference if the dates featured kissing but not intercourse? I might see this as a reflection of a man’s immaturity but not necessarily of his morality. Depending on what he got up to on those dates.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

It’s interesting that you wrote, emphasis mine, “Clinton’s behavior would have been despicable” rather than “Clinton’s behavior was despicable”.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Why is that emphasis interesting? I said that Clinton’s behavior “would have been despicable even if he did not break any laws.” Clinton did break a law, but I was making clear that it was not merely the act of law-breaking that I found despicable.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

Because of your wording, it seemed to me that you implied that Clinton did nothing despicable. Your intention would have been much clearer if you had said “Even though it was not illegal, Clinton’s behavior was despicable.”

By the way, your failure to quote yourself accurately here leads me to generally question the accuracy and truth of the quotations you provide to support your position.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

But he did do something illegal, so it wouldn’t have made sense to write it that way.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

My mistake. So I suggest “Criminal or not, Clinton’s behavior was despicable.”

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKR, did you accidentally misquote Jonathan or was it intentionally? Either way you owe him an apology.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay, The first quoted phrase is what Jonathan wrote. The second quoted phrase was my suggested rewording. I think that my intent was quite clear. However, if that is the wrong way to suggest different wording, please educate me on the correct way to do it. EDIT: I thought you were referring to comment 210761. Perhaps you were instead referring to comment 210803. In the latter case, it is quite clear that the quote was a suggested wording, and, as I understand it, that is an acceptable use of quotation marks. My statement about Jonathan not quoting himself accurately was a… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

You eliminated four words from the phrase that made it clear that I was not at all saying what you claimed I was saying.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

My primary point was that the grammatical tense you used (“would have been”) implied that Clinton had not actually done anything wrong, whereas using “was” would have made it clear that he had.

I cannot figure out which four words I eliminated. I did include “would have been” which are the words of importance to my perception of your meaning.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

No, “would have been” no longer implies that when it is followed by “whether or not”. “Obama would have been eligible for the presidency whether or not he was born in Honolulu!” You can quickly see that someone making such a statement is OBVIOUSLY telling you they think Obama was eligible for the presidency, right? The only thing it is vague on is Honolulu. Similarly, “Clinton’s behavior would have been despicable whether or not he broke any laws” is OBVIOUSLY telling you that I think Clinton’s behavior is despicable. The only thing it is vague on is law-breaking. Seriously, get… Read more »

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

The manner in which the comment section is now more focused on misrepresenting every statement I make… EVERY statement, Jonathan? You’ve probably made more comments on this thread than anyone else. Or are you going to say that I’m misrepresenting you when I quote your exact words and tell me that EVERY STATEMENT you make doesn’t actually mean all of them? JP Stewart is right. You are not to be taken seriously. Have fun further beclowning yourself. P.S. Glad to see you’re still whining and moaning over being called out on your stupidity regarding the whole illegal aliens thing. Must’ve… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

The irony.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

The fact that it is obvious to you is hardly surprising, as you were the author. It wasn’t to me. Ask your favorite expert on English for an unbiased opinion.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKR, Jonathan’s statement, as written, clearly indicates that he believes Clinton was guilty of immoral behavior regardless of the legality of it. I’m sorry that the grammar tripped you up. Sometimes that happens.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Really? Ask my wife. She’ll tell you in a skinny minute.

Ray D.
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Witnesses still need to be cross examined to see if they are truthful. Otherwise, we get situations like what happened to Naboth.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Davis Wilson

I think the fact that prominent Alabama republicans (and commenters here) have already suggested that sexually using a 14-year-old is no big deal and he should be elected even if he’s guilty is an important issue.

Ray D.
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

That proves that they are idiots or hacks. It does not affect Roy Moore’s guilt or innocence.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ray D.

Agreed – my MAIN issue at this point is Christians that excuse sexual misconduct for political reasons, not the specifics of whether Roy Moore is innocent is guilty. Roy Moore’s guilt or innocence says little about anyone other than Roy Moore (I’m not the person here who makes broad generalizations about a particular political party whenever any single member of theirs is accused of sexual misconduct). I believe that there are people involved in sexual misconduct across all lines, and I believe that faithful committed Christians are less likely to be such people than anyone else. But broad-scale rushes to… Read more »

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote:

I’ve named names with Alabama political figures who are guilty of it though, and some commenters here have joined them.

Who here has said such things? Naming names is not sufficient. There needs to be quotations, with citations to provide context. These are not trivial accusations for Jonathan to be tossing around.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

Katecho, I posted the names and quotes multiple times over 14 hours ago: Bibb County Republican Chairman Jerry Pow said he’d vote for Roy Moore even if Moore did commit a sex crime against a girl. Marion County Republican chairman David Hall said it was irrelevant and wouldn’t affect his vote because it was 40 years ago and all that happened was they kissed and he tried to get her to touch his genitals. Alabama State Auditor Jim Ziegler said that even if the Washington Post’s report is completely true, it’s “much ado about very little. There is nothing to… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

And more now:

“Yeah!” Covington County GOP Chairman William Blocker tells me he’d consider voting Moore even if hard proof of sexual abuse emerged.

“There is NO option to support to support Doug Jones, the Democratic nominee. When you do that, you are supporting the entire Democrat party.”

“Other than being with an underage person – he didn’t really force himself,” Alabama Geneva County GOP chairman Riley Seibenhener tells me. “I know that’s bad enough, but I don’t know. If he withdraws, it’s five weeks to the election…that would concede it to the Democrat.”

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

where in the bible does GOD SAY 18 is the legal age?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

I don’ t think it’s a hard cut-off at 18 – like I said earlier, I wouldn’t let mid-30s Roy Moore anywhere near my 18-year-old daughter either. One could make the argument that Paul’s warnings against being “unequally yoked” apply, but I would say it’s a more general prescription towards protecting children from sin, avoiding fornication, being beyond reproach, etc. “where in the bible” used in a blunt manner is of limited effectiveness when dealing with sex acts with a child, national borders, birth control, slavery, and many other issues. You have to go off of more general principles, because… Read more »

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Exactly God doe s not seem to police the age at which people have sex…. you have issues with it- those are your views you are applying your personal views not Biblical principles to other people and judging them based on your personal views. also you have no say over your daughter – we live in a feminist age…. u condemn those who still support him if this were true, how are they doing any different to christians supporting pro gay candidates?!! in fact the bible says a lot about gay sex, not so much about 14 year old sex…… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, please bear in mind that this is the same group of folks who applauded Mr. Wilson for bravely marrying a convicted pedophile to a young, albeit adult woman. It speaks volumes that these same folks see nothing wrong with a 32 year old man approaching 16 year old girls in a romantic context. Though considering their arguments in defense of Jamin Wight’s abuse of a young teenager, that’s not surprising either.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, for legal purposes, it has to be a hard cut-off. Once a girl has reached legal age, her parents can continue to try to protect her from unsuitable men but the law cannot. It seems to me that effectively protecting a quasi-adult child from fornication and sin would require prohibiting her from dating altogether. Especially the nineteen year olds in her college dorm.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

I agree that it must be a hard cutoff for a “legal purpose.” But we are not talking about legal purposes here, nor were we talking that when the morality of the Clinton-Lewinsky affair was the question.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

In fact, the much more recent Anthony Weiner case wasn’t about “legal purpose” until the final incident last year, yet long before that he was buried by his party (resigned after the first incident, then had his campaign manager resign and got destroyed in the election when he tried to make a later comeback), not to mention regularly lambasted on this blog.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

@Jill Smith,

Preventing fornication for many children today would require the parents to keep them in isolated confinement. I am quite certain that would be illegal, and I am not advocating it.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote:

I think the fact that prominent Alabama republicans (and commenters here) have already suggested that sexually using a 14-year-old is no big deal and he should be elected even if he’s guilty is an important issue.

Jonathan needs to immediately provide citations for this claim, or else retract it. Which commenters here have said any such thing? Which prominent Alabama republicans? Names and cited quotes, or else Jonathan needs to stop bearing false witness and breaking the ninth commandment.

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

“Names and cited quotes, or else Jonathan needs to stop bearing false witness and breaking the ninth commandment.”

I’ve read the quotes from prominent Alabama republicans, the comments here, and Pastor Wilson’s post. Clearly Jonathan is not bearing false witness. Most reasonable people would come to the same conclusion he has, and many have.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

Katecho, your insinuation that I have borne false witness and broken the 9th commandment is ridiculous and you need to apologize for that. I already provided the quotes FOURTEEN HOURS AGO. It looks like you’re the one people should stop trusting. Bibb County Republican Chairman Jerry Pow said he’d vote for Roy Moore even if Moore did commit a sex crime against a girl. Marion County Republican chairman David Hall said it was irrelevant and wouldn’t affect his vote because it was 40 years ago and all that happened was they kissed and he tried to get her to touch… Read more »

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan said:

…your insinuation that I have borne false witness and broken the 9th commandment is ridiculous and you need to apologize for that.

Jonathan said in another thread (comment #210427):

And White Southern Christians are now openly defending the sexual molester of teenagers

Jonathan, if Roy Moore is in fact not guilty of sexual molestation, then you are in violation of the 9th commandment.

I’d be careful if I were you.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

No FP, I was referring to the 3 Alabama Republicans in leadership positions (now at least 5) and others who explicitly said they would support Moore even if he did commit sexual acts against 14-year olds (even crimes in some cases).

That was correctly interpreted by others and confirmed by me long before you posted this comment. I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you missed those explanations, because a Christian so well ware of the dangers of falsely representing others almost certainly wouldn’t have done so themselves so cavalierly, would they?

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, you also referred to Moore as “the sexual molester of teenagers”. Or did you forget that part?

That is what I was addressing. As an additional bonus, I even bolded it so you would get a clue.

Apparently, I’ve overestimated your ability to comprehend the written word, Jonathan.

…because a Christian so well ware of the dangers of falsely representing others almost certainly wouldn’t have done so themselves so cavalierly, would they?

That’s rich coming from the guy who declared Moore guilty without evidence, let alone a trial.

Holy hypocrisy, Batman!

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

FP, the five Alabama Christians I quoted said they would support him even if he was guilty of the accusations, therefore they were certainly saying that they would defend the sexual molester of teenagers.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Though I should add, now combined with the statements of other persons who knew Moore at the time and Moore’s very unconvincing denials, I believe it highly likely that Moore is lying, especially regarding his conduct with the main accused. It’s not even about a “he says, she says” differing interpretation or exaggeration of events. Either Miss Corfman , her mother, her friends from the time, and the Washington Post are all involved in a vast conspiracy AND a number of other women are badly exaggerating Moore’s conduct at the time, or Moore is lying about his conduct at the… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

I have to apologize. When I looked back at an earlier thread and saw there were more comments, I read all my original comments and saw that in some of them I HAD suggested that Moore was guilty. That’s of course not the suggestion that Katecho is talking about, nor is it what I was saying in the statement that you quoted, but it was what I was implying in other statements so I can see how it would be assumed of that statement as well. I think at this point the evidence points strongly towards his guilt, but I… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

And more now too:

And more now:

“Yeah!” Covington County GOP Chairman William Blocker tells me he’d consider voting Moore even if hard proof of sexual abuse emerged.

“There is NO option to support Doug Jones, the Democratic nominee. When you do that, you are supporting the entire Democrat party.”

“Other than being with an underage person – he didn’t really force himself,” Alabama Geneva County GOP chairman Riley Seibenhener tells me. “I know that’s bad enough, but I don’t know. If he withdraws, it’s five weeks to the election…that would concede it to the Democrat.”

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I think there is no doubt that some people would support him even if they knew the allegations to be true. I don’t understand that because my support for him–if I had any–would be predicated on the presumption of his innocence. I don’t think those people are doing him any favors. If I were innocent of a serious moral charge, I wouldn’t appreciate any defenders who said that if true, it is no big deal! I think it is also unarguable that many Christians no longer require sexual morality of their chosen candidate. But I think this change pre-dated Trump,… Read more »

Job La Salle
Job La Salle
7 years ago

Too many women lie about rape for a mere accusation to be considered proof of wrongdoing. If Moore steps down, barring incontrovertible proof, then he isn’t man enough for the position anyway.

Ray D.
7 years ago
Reply to  Job La Salle

Wrong. He may decide that even though he is innocent, his prospects are too damaged to continue.

Or he may be guilty and repentant, and step down even though no solid case can be made against him.

Capndweeb
Capndweeb
7 years ago

375 is the preferred temp for a golden-brown crust. Otherwise, spot-on!

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  Capndweeb

Unless you are cooking some Philly Habbersett scrapple, need about 400 deg. sit for 10 minutes per side to get the right crust. Yum.

Milwaukee Matt
Milwaukee Matt
7 years ago

I understand that Wilson has a low view of reporters but surely 30 interviews is at least an inch closer to corroboration than the baselessness that is suggested. Saying, “prove it to me” but willfully not reading the proof. Isn’t it wilson always saying that “sin comes in bunches” and that “ideas have consequences” all things that say context matters and the outline, the structure of a life has implications. Moore knew these girls. Confirmed by multiple sources. That fact alone and the likelihood of his time spent with them is enough of a contour to suggest something was up.… Read more »

Milwaukee Matt
Milwaukee Matt
7 years ago
Reply to  Milwaukee Matt

and before I hear it, the courts are not an infallible arbiter of truth. They at their best try to recognize and apply externalities to their own authority. They are in place FOR truth and FOR justice but the absence of a criminal conviction, especially for child predators, does not constitute innocence, only slipperiness. Wilson should know this from his own experience.

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Milwaukee Matt

” the absence of a criminal conviction, especially for child predators, does not constitute innocence, only slipperiness. ”

Then what, by your standard, would allow an innocent man accused of such a crime to go back to a normal life? He was alone with a woman, and she says he did it, so even though the courts can’t find him guilty you can just persecute him for the rest of his life? How can an innocent man avoid disdain?

Milwaukee Matt
Milwaukee Matt
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

A pattern of creating opportunities to pull a young girl away from safety, to be alone with her in a way that willl flatter her for whatever his devices. That is not merely being alone with someone. I hear people in the comments saying “number of interviews doesn’t matter” or some approximate but the content revealed by talking to the people who knew the shape of Moore’s life (yes many of them!) was this pattern. To the man who does these things and follows this pattern I say as Wilson says, “knock it off” It’s not persecution, it’s description. Make… Read more »

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  Milwaukee Matt

We have all made the mistake of being in a place where we realize this may appear as it isn’t (the proverbial innocent picking up the murder weapon the moment the police arrive, conclusions are jumped.). Busy people often do this when they are innocent in their thinking and action (not saying Moore is innocent, no one but him and God know for sure, and I wasn’t there so have no say in the matter…just saying anything can look like whatever anyone wants it to, innocent or not.) The real trick in all of this, especially when confronted with a… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Milwaukee Matt

“A pattern of creating opportunities to pull a young girl away from safety, to be alone with her in a way that willl flatter her for whatever his devices. That is not merely being alone with someone.” This description includes presumed intent. You don’t get to assume your conclusions when evaluating the evidence. Every time a man is innocently alone with a woman and accused of wrongdoing, it is always placed in this light regardless of what actually happened in the meeting. “I hear people in the comments saying “number of interviews doesn’t matter” or some approximate but the content… Read more »

soylentg
soylentg
7 years ago
Reply to  Milwaukee Matt

Milwaukee matt says: “There might not have been two witnesses there, but by that standard Cain would be innocent.’
There were at least three witnesses against Cain: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Four if you count his brothers blood crying out from the ground. I rest my case.

Matt Bell
7 years ago
Reply to  Milwaukee Matt

Cain was not innocent, nor would he have been rightly convicted in court absent the testimony of two or three witnesses.

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Milwaukee Matt

” but surely 30 interviews is at least an inch closer to corroboration than the baselessness that is suggested. ‘ A thousand interviews is not necessarily more or less evidence than 1. ” Saying, “prove it to me” but willfully not reading the proof.” Coming to a different conclusion than you does not mean he isn’t reading the evidence. “Moore knew these girls. Confirmed by multiple sources. That fact alone and the likelihood of his time spent with them is enough of a contour to suggest something was up. ” No. No it doesn’t. I’ve known and been alone with… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

If Moore did what these four girls claim that he did, what would you consider “good enough” evidence that we should not support his election to the Senate?

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Wait, in Doug’s previous post you called him a sexual molester as soon as the news came out. Now you’re qualifying that with “ifs”?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

No, I was referring to the statements by several Alabama Republican officials who stated that they would support a sexual molester. They stated very clearly that they would support him even if he was guilty of the acts in question.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

No, here’s your very first quote, shortly after the news broke out, on Doug’s prior blog post:
“And White Southern Christians are now openly defending the sexual molester of teenagers because voting for Republicans is more important than….literally anything.”

No qualifications or caveats. You and MeMe both bought into the story prima facie. If you can’t admit this was premature, I don’t think there’s any point discussing this further. It appears he was guilty in your eyes the moment the story hit the newsfeed.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

JPS, that’s not the only way to read the quote. Isn’t it true that white, southern Christians have come out and said that even if Moore is guilty, they would support him? Jonathan was just taking them at their word.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay, no I’m not changing the subject. He called him a molester in his first post on the topic.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

If you and Jonathan want a Clintonesque discussion of what “is” is, fine, but I’m not going down that postmodern route.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay,

Reading that quote any other way requires willful suspension of disbelief. I understand his point about the political support, but there is absolutely no doubt that Jonathan clearly stated that Moore is “the sexual molester of teenagers”.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Do you agree with those supporters? Would you still vote for Moore? Is that a fair question to ask?

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

I don’t know enough information yet. Let’s keep the goalposts where they should be for now.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Clay interpreted me correctly, and I have 3 quotes of prominent Alabama Republicans saying exactly what I claimed they said.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Now 5 prominent Alabama Republicans.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

No, you’re trying to completely dodge the issue. You called Moore a sexual molester as soon as the allegations were made. Your biases are very obvious and everything else you’re saying has to be taken with that grain of salt.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Alabama Republicans said explicitly that they would defend a sexual molester. They SAID that whether or not Moore is a sexual molester. I never once said “Moore is a sexual molester”, I said Alabama Republicans affirmed that they would defend voting for a sexual molester.

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, your exact words, and I quote:

And White Southern Christians are now openly defending the sexual molester of teenagers…

THE sexual molester. Definitive article. No caveats. The context makes it clear you were talking about Moore being THE sexual molester of teenagers.

Stop the lying, Jonathan.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Yes, I’ve already stated five of them saying quite quite clearly they would defend the sexual molester of teenagers.

They said that they would support Moore even if he had committed sex crimes against teenagers, thus they are admitting to being willing to defend the sexual molester of teenagers.

This is not the first time you’ve tried to make a ridiculous argument of literally no benefit to anyone based solely around the claim that I lied about my own grammar.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

As supporting evidence, I’m willing to put up literally EVERY other one of the dozens of statements I made about the case over the next 24 hours, every single one of which aligns with what I already told you I meant. Your interpretation relies on me having strangely held a different view in everything else I said, but letting it slip what my “real” and inappropriate view was in that one sentence because you don’t like the article I used.

That’s frankly ridiculous for an internet board.

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Yes, I’ve already stated five of them saying quite quite clearly they would defend the sexual molester of teenagers. That is not what I was talking about, and you bloody well know it. Stop dodging. Your interpretation relies on me having strangely held a different view in everything else I said, but letting it slip what my “real” and inappropriate view was in that one sentence because you don’t like the article I used. You said again, without qualifiers: …thus they are admitting to being willing to defend THE sexual molester of teenagers. Time for an English lesson. Definition of… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, I understand your point about political support of Moore in spite of the allegations, and I do not argue that such statements have been made. However, you did refer to “the sexual molester of teenagers” and it was not quoting someone else. Who was this a reference to, if not Roy Moore? If it was a reference to Moore, then you, in effect, did say Moore is a sexual molester. If that was not your intent, then clarify exactly where you stand on the question of Moore’s guilt in light of the allegations by Corfman. Do you consider him… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

It was a reference to the hypothetical “Moore who had committed sex crimes against children” that prominent Alabama Republicans were stated they would still defend. Once again, I can put up as evidence literally every one of the dozens of statements I made about the case in the following 24-48 hours. The silliness of this comment section has gotten beyond defense. There are far too many commenters who are expending far more energy putting on trial a single “the” I used on a different post days ago, even after I’ve clarified my meaning a dozen times, than they’ve expended on… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

“The silliness of this comment section ….”

Try understanding that your comments are not as clear as you think. When specific objections are made, acknowledge your lack of clarity and clarify when possible, rather than supposing the reader does not understand your point. I have tried to do this myself on this comment section.

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Jonathan’s comments are intentionally unclear, at best. He’s banking on being able to weasel out of what he says — and the implications of what he says — based on technicalities. The few times he makes clear statements, it’s your fault for not “interpreting” him “correctly” when you call him out.

Remember, this is the same guy who initially dismissed Moore’s denials because they were “vague”.

Reminds me of the adage: If it weren’t for double standards, he wouldn’t have any.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

False.

My statements about where I have stood on Moore as the evidence has emerged are all you need to know where I stood on Moore. You don’t get to take one vague statement that doesn’t even mention Moore (because he wasn’t the focus of the statement) and then pretend that all the statements I made regarding Moore were not my opinion, and your interpretation of a statement about something else was my real opinion all along.

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

My statements about where I have stood on Moore as the evidence has emerged are all you need to know where I stood on Moore. You don’t get to take one vague statement that doesn’t even mention Moore (because he wasn’t the focus of the statement)…thus they are admitting to being willing to defend THE SEXUAL MOLESTER OF TEENAGERS Who are you to say what I can and cannot use when it comes to your statements? You don’t get a pass simply because you fail to understand a little concept known as “context”. Learn your place. And no, this one… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

I said, clearly in your very quote, that they admitted being “willing to defend” the sexual molester of teenagers. It is clear that they have declared themselves “willing to defend” the sexual molester of teenagers. It is also clear in that very thread where all this started, that more than five days ago I said, “My issue is the men who are claiming that we should support Moore even if he is guilty.” That should be all the clarification you need. Unless attacking me and claiming that I am lying in my repeated clarification of my beliefs is more important… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I very immediately clarified every statement I had made. when asked The response in every case was to immediately dismiss my clarification and proceed as if I was crazy and a liar. Every other statement I made about the case was in line with my clarification, even though many of them came before I was asked for a clarification. That context was also ignored. Other posters supported my own explanation of my meaning. That was also ignored. Therefore, your suggestion that clarification is the issue has clearly been proven false. FP is a perfect example of this. Have you seen… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

I have to apologize. When I looked back at an earlier thread and saw there were more comments, I read all my original comments and saw that in some of them I HAD suggested that Moore was guilty. That’s of course not the suggestion that Katecho is talking about, nor is it what I was saying in the statement that you quoted, but it was what I was implying in other statements so I can see how it would be assumed of that statement as well. I think at this point the evidence points strongly towards his guilt, but I… Read more »

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Milwaukee Matt

Matt wrote: I understand that Wilson has a low view of reporters but surely 30 interviews is at least an inch closer to corroboration than the baselessness that is suggested. I haven’t seen the Emerson College poll, but I was led to understand that mainstream media credibility is 10 points lower than even Trump’s credibility ratings. However, is Matt saying that the raw number of reporter interviews somehow accumulates as evidence of guilt? What’s the legal theory behind that notion? How many times was Crystal Mangum interviewed in her accusations against the Duke lacrosse team? Matt wrote: Isn’t it wilson… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

The evidence to back that claim is that the girl’s mother has confirmed that Moore asked to be alone with the girl, that the girl told her mother what Moore had done several years later, and that two of the girl’s childhood friends have stated that she told them about the relationship at the time. As far as the three other girls (who were aged 14, 17, and 18 at the time), I would consider dating and kissing teenage girls who are not your spouse to be gross misconduct for a 30-something Christian man, regardless of whether you consider it… Read more »

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, I don’t like Judge Moore and wouldn’t vote for him in the first place. But I am having trouble seeing any misconduct in dating a girl who is over the legal age. My daughter had a boyfriend 12 years older than she was, and he waited until she was 18 to ask her out. We may find it weird but I can’t see that it is gross misconduct. The underage girl is a different matter entirely. Has anyone explained why this allegation never surfaced during his previous campaigns? It seems to me that if I knew him to have… Read more »

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Would you vote for his pro-abortion opponent or just not vote?

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

I don’t know anything about his opponent. If he (the opponent) is an enthusiastic pro-abort, I would probably not vote. If he is a centrist Democrat who does not support the pro-abortion plank of the party but is good on other issues I care about, it would be a tougher call. As a npncitizen, I have never been in the position of having to vote for an explicitly pro-abortion candidate. I live in a state where that will become an issue for me in the future. Catholics are taught that if everyone on the ballot is pro-abortion, vote for the… Read more »

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

As in the recent Presidential race, the inability of the “conservative” party to put forward candidates above reproach is a problem that can’t be overstated. It’s almost like we are under some kind of judgment, or something.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Perhaps the recent run of women willing to name their abusers that started with Cosby, then to Trump, then to Weinstein, and now has taken off had an influence on her. Perhaps the fact that news about him has greatly increased and become far more frequent, and in the area of him gaining power, is what pushed her to finally make it public. In the past, Judge Moore’s two most news-worthy events were both in the context of him getting kicked out. It’s possible that she was hoping he’d lose the primary and she wouldn’t have to come forward. It’s… Read more »

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

J’, I think the long, drawn out Anthony Weiner perv. Conduct case broke the dam on this issue.
That, coupled with Weiner’s initial conspiracy to try and blame Breitbart for a hack.
Once people saw that a protected, lying Democrat perv could still be exposed, that likely gave people some hope that their reports of wrongdoing by people in power, could weather the resulting storm.

Thanks Bill Clinton!
Thanks Anthony Weiner ‘
????????

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  adad0

Anthony Wiener was forced to resign less than a month after the allegations first surfaced, and that was just sexting, not even physical contact. When he tried to run for mayor two years later, his campaign chair resigned when a second instance of sexting surfaced and he only got 4.9% of the vote in the end. When a third incident surfaced his wife left him, and now he’s in prison because one of the incidents involved a 15-year-old, who should have been plenty old enough according to a few posters here. That was a good example to bring up, though… Read more »

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Do keep in mind that the electronic material evidence, Weiner’s sexts, proved the testimony of the accusers.
Just like the stained dress material evidence proved the testimonial accusations made against Bill Clinton!

Material evidence is a form of “witness”, which in the cases of Weiner and Clinton, proved their guilt.

With this Moore case, it sounds like there is only testimony so far.

Finally, Jesus was falsely convicted on the basis of false testimony and no material evidence.
This is one reason why Godly people insist, as does the Word, on corroborating evidence, that supports testimonial accusations.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  adad0

Ye t there are a large number of Republicans and Christians claiming they would still support Moore even if he was guilty. While Weiner was immediately destroyed, even though for the first five years the accusations against him did not constitute a crime.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

Where do you stand on the subject of forgiveness? Specifically, do you believe that God forgives those who repent?

Would you express repentance if you were accused of sexual molestation if you did not do it? Would you repent if you do not remember doing it, but others say that you did?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

1. Yes, I believe God forgives those who repent. I even believe that someone guilty of criminal or inappropriate behavior, who repents in a meaningful way and can work through his behavior, is eligible for public office. Of course, there would be exceptions (for example, if the inappropriate behavior was a massive abuse of power, he’d probably be better off permanently disqualifying himself from such power). 2. I would express repentance if my own inappropriate actions had led to the accusations, if I had put myself in a position to be accused by making other poor decisions. I would repent… Read more »

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, 1. What do you mean by repents “in a meaningful way”? What do you mean by “can work through his behavior”? I’d think just stopping it would be the requirement. Or since we are talking about eligibility for office, having long since stopped it. 2. Maybe. The thing is, alleged inappropriate actions are the substance of most of the accusations here. If you didn’t think you did anything that was inappropriate, but many people insisted you did, how would you respond? 3. I’m not sure why it would be tricky. If you honestly didn’t remember it, any expression of… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

1. I wouldn’t be comfortable with someone who had merely stopped their sinful behavior without having paid a real penalty in terms of personal contrition and, if possible, attempts to make things right with the victims. Otherwise I have little hope they won’t fall right back into it again. 2. By being exceedingly honest about exactly what I had and hadn’t done and defending the appropriateness of what I did do. And ad we are human, there is almost always SOME fault of judgment or morals of ours within the situation which we can own. I have trouble trusting people… Read more »

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, 1. Why would you be so concerned with their having paid a penalty? Are you insisting on punishment? Do they need to punish themselves? Making things right with victims where possible would be a thing to do, yes, but I’d care more about their being a changed person such that it hasn’t happened in a long time and won’t/can’t happen again, more than I am with any expressions of contrition. In fact, I’m put off by demands for groveling apologies for every offense, real or supposed. 2. Rather begs the question. If you simply mean explain events frankly for… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

1. Because I hear a lot of people say a fake “sorry” and move on without showing any evidence of true repentance. In my experience, along with true repentance comes a desire to make things right, which variably involves some cost to the person repenting. 2. Too often denials are based on playing games with the accusation. “That is a lie!” (I was wearing boxers , not briefs, when I assaulted her.) “I did not have sex with that woman!” (what is “sex”, anyway?) If I never met the woman, of course there’s nothing to apologize for, and I can… Read more »

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

1. I hear a lot of people say fake “Sorry”, with no change in behavior to give evidence of repentance. Not every wrong done is of a nature that recompense is possible.

2. If you didn’t cross the line you an break things down without apologizing for anything. Of course you can’t break things down if memory is as deceitful as you imply in #3.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

1. Yes, that’s why my original statement said, “if possible”.

2. Yes on the first point, and “you do your best” on the second point. Because our memory and self-perception is indeed deceitful, a careful rendering of our recollection of events step by step is often exactly what is necessary to align accounts and get to the bottom of what really happened.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

You give the accuser and the WaPo much benefit of the doubt. How about doing the same for Moore?

I’ll remind you again that you said “… what Pastor Wilson says about how we SHOULD react is also very helpful. “ Do you truly follow that principle, or is it another instance where you drop it on your own whim?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I have to apologize. When I looked back at an earlier thread and saw there were more comments, I read all my original comments and saw that in some of them I HAD suggested that Moore was guilty. I think at this point the evidence points strongly towards his guilt, but I was wrong to suggest it so strongly in those first posts, and even more wrong and embarrassing to have defended myself extremely misleadingly on that account. That is very much my bad, and I think I have to shut up now.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: I have to apologize. When I looked back at an earlier thread and saw there were more comments, I read all my original comments and saw that in some of them I HAD suggested that Moore was guilty. I think at this point the evidence points strongly towards his guilt, but I was wrong to suggest it so strongly in those first posts, and even more wrong and embarrassing to have defended myself extremely misleadingly on that account. That is very much my bad, and I think I have to shut up now. I accept Jonathan’s apology here.… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

And the new explanation that some posters have suggested is that the Washington Post approached the girl, having apparently found out about it through the rumor mill that had widened over time (possibly one of those teenage friends who she told).

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

The original article has quite a bit of detail on why the woman never went public. However, she did tell her mother and two friends.

She did not initially choose go public now either. The Washington Post had heard rumors about Moore’s behavior with teenage girls and did extensive investigative journalism to uncover who those girls may have been. They apparently convinced her to finally go public after several interviews.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

” I would consider dating and kissing teenage girls who are not your spouse to be gross misconduct for a 30-something Christian man”

Well in many parts of the world–and in many times in history–that would be perfectly acceptable. If you look at everything through a 20th-21st Century U.S. perspective, maybe, but even then it’s not always considered gross misconduct in all places and circumstances.

Also, he was single at the time…the “who are not your spouse” part is a bit misleading.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

@JP,

It seems that Jonathan personally finds it offensive when a 30-something Christian man is dating and kissing teenage girls, but he will accept it, I presume begrudgingly, if they are married.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I agree that being outside marriage is certainly an additional issue that I have with it. Those who are defending “kissing a 14yo isn’t bad in all cultures!” are ignoring that kissing an unmarried 14yo behind her parents’ back could get you killed in many of those cultures. As far as marriages go, I think that most such marriages are inappropriate and examples of gross misconduct as well. I’m probably the only person on this forum who has publicly disrupted a child marriage. I wouldn’t say that “always” been the case, but it could only be otherwise in places where… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

I’ve been in places in the world where it was “perfectly acceptable”, and it was clear that it was gross misconduct even then. It is very easy for a 32-year-old to manipulate and abuse a 14-year-old, even where it is legal, even where the 14-year-old has been pushed into marriage with him. I agree that there could be very certain circumstances in very different cultures from ours, where children are raised completely differently, it would be merely “non-ideal” rather than “gross misconduct”. I don’t feel that anyone alive today who grew up in America fits into that category. I don’t… Read more »

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

The WP quotes seven women who either describe Moore pursing a sexual relationship with them as teenagers, or hearing from the other girls about his predation sometime before he became known in the media. That is a little different than one accuser giving 30 interviews herself. From the WP: “Wendy Miller says she was 14 and working as a Santa’s helper at the Gadsden Mall when Moore first approached her, and 16 when he asked her on dates, which her mother forbade. Debbie Wesson Gibson says she was 17 when Moore spoke to her high school civics class and asked… Read more »

ron
ron
7 years ago

Republican Senate Committee has withdrawn funding.
Deep State running scared. Trying to keep this guy out.
How coerced was this female to come forward What does she stand to gain?
Stinks to high Heaven.
Good luck proving something from 40 years ago.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  ron

What do her mother, childhood friends, and the other victims have to gain? Cause they’ve all corroborated the account too.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Are you presuming they have nothing to gain? How would you know? You don’t know, do you?

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

And it wouldn’t be hard to make sure everyone keeps to the same story…as long as you keep secrets pretty well and don’t make your circle too big.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Why are you responding to me, rather than saying virtually the exact same thing to the person I was responding to? As I said about, when literally any evidence can only be interpreted to mean anything in one direction, then the outcome is obviously pre-determined. At this point literally anything can be taken as evidence that they are lying (one Republican official responding to the information that the accuser was a Trump voter with “that’s exactly the profile of the kind of person the Democrats would use”), whereas absolutely anything that points to them telling the truth is following with… Read more »

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Why are you responding to me, rather than saying virtually the exact same thing to the person I was responding to?”

Chill, dude. I was simple following the chain and flow of comments. As for everyone’s stories supposedly matching so well after 38 years, I’d say that’s very suspect and may point to collusion. Often in these cases, the stories don’t match very well just a few years (or even months) later. Human memories and perceptions are far from perfect and full of biases and holes. There’s a lot of literature on that .

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

This is a bit hilarious, because a large proportion of Moore defenders are currently running with “did Corfman speak on a phone from her bedroom or from a different room in the house!” as the key discrepancy which shows that either Corfman or the mother is lying and thus cannot be believed. So which is it – that the slightest discrepancy points to lying and thus the stories can be dismissed, or that the lack of discrepancies is very suspect and may point to collusion? If feels like there’s an attack ready to launch at the witnesses for literally any… Read more »

ron
ron
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

The mother has come forth contradicting the account. WaPo has admitted “encouraging ” this person to come forward after 6 interviews! http://tinyurl.com/yav898od

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  ron

That’s old  news, and relatively insignificant. I see nothing in the article about “encouraging” them to come forward.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  ron

Directly above you is someone claiming that human memories are faulty and the general agreement of the witnesses against Moore thus suggests collusion….and then right here we have you (following Breitbart) claiming that the SMALLEST discrepancy in a detail is enough to discredit the whole thing.

Do you realize how silly Brietbart’s conclusion is when you think about it? We’re down to, “In which room of the home did she speak to Moore on the phone?” as the supposed linchpin of the case.

MeMe
7 years ago

“If the allegations are true, they ought all to pitch in, buy the world’s biggest frying pan, fill it with about half a foot of piping hot bacon grease, and fry the good judge a deep brown on both sides.” Here is something different about me when it comes to abuse, I do not wish to deep fry people. Yes, this would be an atrocity that likely caused a great deal of harm, but frying Moore is not going to fix anything on a societal level. I should like the entire debate over rape and exploitation to evolve somewhere beyond… Read more »

Trey Mays
Trey Mays
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

I don’t disagree with much of what you said, but I do think you’re taking Doug’s hyperbolic, satirical language a little bit too literally. I think he was primarily trying to make sure the point got across that he wasn’t defending Moore if he is guilty, he’s defending Moore’s presumption of innocence until proven guilty (if he is).

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Trey Mays

Since some people will take statements literally, I think it would be better if Doug (and everyone else) would avoid the hyperbole.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Also since it would be helpful to know exactly what frying him means. Are we talking demanding that he step down? Just this time, or never run again? Excommunicate him from his church? Sue him? Denounce him publicly? Lynch him? It could be a lot of things.

Jane
Jane
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I think you’ve been around here long enough to judge the reasonable range of possibilities when Wilson says something. Throwing up every possible range of meanings, after having read Wilson for years and knowing what sorts of things he does, and does not, support, does not seem like a fair approach at all.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jane

Can you explain what you think he is referring to then? Honestly hoping to know.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I wasn’t trying to defame Wilson at all, didn’t think throwing out those options would do that, just pointing out that it leaves it imprecise.

Jane
Jane
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I’m not completely sure what he means but surely lynching is off the table, based on experience with Wilson’s views?

I believe you weren’t trying to defame Wilson. Still the degree of experience you have with Wilson should eliminate from your mind the possibility that lynching was among the options, so including it could be unintentionally defamatory, and IMO shows a lack of care for his reputation on your part.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jane

I only included “lynching” to point out that the semi-literal interpretation of his words remains on the table when the actual interpretation is unclear. I still honestly don’t know what he actually meant nor has anyone else offered a clear interpretation.

But it’s worth pointing out that Pastor Wilson is not opposed to the execution of those who commit sexual sins against minors, though I full well know that he doesn’t agree with doing it under the current government.

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

Memi, I think the root of “these issues” is God’s truth, and people administering justice in a Godly fashion, which our host outlined.

After that, God’s truth is always offensive to the ungodly, so truth working its way out, will always look like “ whack a mole” at some points.

Sometimes the best we can hope for is a wise word, spoken at the right moment, which silences the unjust.
When that happens, Justice can proceed.????

Trey Mays
Trey Mays
7 years ago

Excellent, biblical response to any serious allegation like the one Roy Moore is being accused of. I think it is also important to note that that Scripture passage talking of multiple witnesses is saying that charges can’t be brought until 2 or more witnesses. It doesn’t necessarily mean those witnesses make the allegations true, but it doesn’t mean they are false either.

Roy Moore needs to organize a press conference laying out his denials in detail point by point, telling his side of the story.

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  Trey Mays

Problem is the horses are already out of the barn…it’s the “When did you stop beating your wife?” scenario, — a no win. The people wreckers know by striking first they place doubt that is very difficult to overcome.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Trey Mays

Exactly. So far his denials have been quite vague.

Of course, specific denials would merely put him on par with the accuser…except that she has others from the time period supporting her allegations, which places her story ahead.

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Madonna propositioned me in exchange for me to vote for Hillary Clinton .

Does anyone believe me? ????

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Trey Mays

His shifting “denials” are looking very unconvincing now alongside the accusations and additional witnesses to his behavior that have come forward. “I was a deputy DA in Gadsen with Roy Moore. I have no doubt these stories have validity. Roy was known to eschew dating his own age and preferred teenagers. I challenge all of my colleagues in the Bar and on the bench at that time to come forward to support that Roy Moore should not be elected to represent the place of my birth and my home for many years.” “It was common knowledge that Roy dated high… Read more »

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago

While I have no doubt some allegations about Weinstein, et. al. are true, I have to wonder about this mass allegation hysteria we’re experiencing. It reminds me a bit of hundreds of people claiming to be abducted by UFOs…or seeing some human-bird creature flying in W. Virginia once an initial sighting is reported. Add in the fact that we live in a heavily drugged (both legal and illegal) society where some can barely distinguish between reality and virtual reality (social media, entertainment, gaming, etc.)…and you almost have to question some of it. Especially when there’s a huge push for all… Read more »

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Case in point, Hope Solo has joined the parade (circus?).
https://www.yahoo.com/sports/hope-solo-accuses-former-fifa-president-sepp-blatter-sexual-assault-204752918.html

Never mind that she’s been arrested for assault herself.

Or this: https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/jenny-mccarthy-says-steven-seagal-asked-her-undress-205453631.html

A lady who was photographed in her birthday suit multiple times (and seen that way by millions of men) claims she was traumatized and cried when asked to do the same for a movie. Next we’ll hear that a XXX porn actress was horrified when a Hollywood actor told her she “looked hot in that dress.”

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

I don’t see how, after all this time, anything can be proved or disproved beyond a reasonable doubt. If he was guilty of illegal behavior with an underaged girl, the time to investigate it was 38 or 30 or even 20 years ago. I am sympathetic to women who feel they can’t press charges, but they have to understand that justice can’t be done 40 years down the road. There are so many episodes in this judge’s career where one would think an accuser would have spoken out. “He cares about the ten commandments? Well, let me tell you…” Why… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

While you are likely correct that he won’t be convicted by a court of law, I think the preponderance of evidence is not looking good. How do you feel about his claim that he didn’t date teenagers…or, um, doesn’t remember it – despite a rather huge body of evidence that suggests that he not only did it but went out of his way to make it his pattern? How do you feel about his claims that he never met the Ms. Corfman, despite her being extremely detailed in her accusations, NOT being the one who came forward to the pres… Read more »

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

I think we are seeing a new wave of media-fed hysteria. Innocent people went to jail in the 1980s because it was considered hateful to question the testimony of four-year-olds. Our past experience with frenzies of mass accusations should make us more, not less, reluctant to assume guilt without real evidence.

soylentg
soylentg
7 years ago

In light of this fine post, I offer the following all in good fun and invite additions/corrections and other half baked thoughts by the peanut gallery. Postulate: The effect on the candidacy of those accused of sexual immorality is inversely proportional to the truth of the accusations. Examples: Bill Clinton – truth of accusation 10 / effect 0 Donald Trump – truth of accusation 9 / effect 1 Herman Cain – truth of accusation 1 / effect 10 Clarence Thomas – truth of accusation 1 / effect 6 Roy Moore? – BTW, I only put the truth of accusation numbers… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  soylentg

I’d put Trump’s effect at a 2 or 3. It’s had some notable effect. Just not as much as the material demands.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  soylentg

Does anyone remember the 11th hour allegations against Ted Cruz for affairs and adultery? Remember the scandal story run by the National Enquirer with the five pixelated women ready to testify? Where did they all disappear to after the primaries? Not one of them wanted to throw the first stone?

Who will ever know the truth of the accusations, but the effect was certainly a 10 against Cruz.

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

While I’m usually the first to stand up for Cruz and the dirtiness that happened in the primaries, I don’t think the lies told about him are what beat him. He serves in the senate as a fighter. He’s ready to clobber his opponents whenever it’s called for. I don’t know who was advising him, but as soon as he entered the primaries he started campaigning as Mr. Rogers, ready to put on his sweater and loafers and be everybody’s friend. Sure enough, the guy who won the nomination is the one the audience saw as the fighter.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  soylentg

Why is Clinton a zero but Thomas a 6?

Thomas became a Supreme Court Justice after a couple weeks and remains in almost the highest position any judge could ever attain, with no obstruction to his power whatsoever. Clinton didn’t lose the presidency, but it definitely detracted from his agenda and was used as a weapon against him repeatedly, even against his wife 20 years later.

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago

“But we live in a time when to mildly suggest that #1 is a possibility is taken as a thundering and full-throated defense of #2. Not a bit of it.”

Then there’s this from Challies’ A-La-Carte this morning:

http://www.flare.com/news/child-star-millie-bobby-brown/

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  paulm01

You really worship challies don’t you?

Andrew Lohr
7 years ago

If apostle Paul voted for Nero over high priest Ananias as judge in his (Paul’s) case, one can vote for Mr Moore over Demo Doug Jones even if the charges are true. A Senator’s job is to vote. Mr Moore would vote better than Mr “I will…stand with Planned Parenthood”– i.e., I will grope in your pants for money to murder little babies with–Jones. Mr Jones wants to do worse today than Mr Moore may have done 35 years ago. The establishment wants to do evil, stupid, arrogant things today (along with some sensible things and some for which its… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Andrew Lohr

This is disgusting, but quite in line with Alabama’s Republican establishmetn right now.

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago

The above blog advocating ‘biblical’ restraint written by the man who took the the side of an adult sexual predator who groomed and abused a 13 year old girl in his very own parish. Oh and yes and the same one who married off another young parishioner to a known repeat pedophile. For the sake of a thought experiment, you all might try to plug in your own daughters as the integer in any of these cases. To be fair, I guess it IS possible that the 14 year old in question in the Roy Moore case intuited that Moore… Read more »

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  Douglas Wilson

Huh. It doesn’t take a whole lot of mastery to see where you went wrong in either of those cases involving your own parish. With benefit of the doubt, I place your mistakes under the banner of Steven Weinstein’s maxim: “With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil – that takes religion.” I am always impressed at the juice you are able to muster to defend some awful human at the expense of the innocent under the banner of biblical principles. But of course, if biblical… Read more »

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

Randal, you really should know more of the facts instead of spouting internet nonsense.

There are Biblical principals against lying. Unfortunately one of the most vocal individuals you champion is a liar and those who don’t know the facts continue to harp on falsehoods spread on the internet.

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Who exactly is a liar? Please be specific.

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

Randman said:

but for good people to do evil – that takes religion.

Hey Randman, did you know that the guy who just shot up the church in Texas was an outspoken atheist?

Epic fail, Randman. To save yourself further embarrassment, you might consider going back into hiding, but if you want to demonstrate just how many podiatrists it takes to remove your lower extremities from the upper opening of your digestive tract, then please, by all means, keep commenting.

If anything, I’d prefer the latter. There’s more than enough popcorn for everybody, and I do like popcorn.

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago

Not believing in god was not his rationale for murder. Nor was his lack of belief in leprauchans. Anyway, you miss the point.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

Those looking into the case a lot more closely that you haven’t totally ruled out religious (or anti-religious) motivations:
https://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/texas-church-shooting/texas-church-shooter-may-have-been-targeting-his-mother-law-n817961

But maybe you have inside knowledge…from the leprauchans (sic)? It’s actually spelled “leprechaun” if you’re interested.

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

Randman, you’re right: The guy who shot up the Texas church wasn’t a good person who did evil because of religion; he was a bad person who did evil because of atheism.

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago

By that same logic he did evil because of non-astrology-ism.

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

This just in randi:

“Godwin’s law, now also applies to the mention of leprechauns, in addition the mention of Hitler.”
????

randallmanntoo
randallmanntoo
7 years ago
Reply to  adad0

If the little green shoe fits…

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

randallmanntoo wrote: It doesn’t take a whole lot of mastery to see where you went wrong in either of those cases involving your own parish. It also doesn’t take a whole lot of mastery to at least get the ages correct, which randallmanntoo apparently couldn’t even be bothered to do. From the CREC Presiding Minister’s Report, the court minutes from the sentencing hearing of Wight show that the judge held a strong distinction between “child sexual abuse” and “teenage sex”. The judge said: Mistakes were made here. I don’t want to detract from the seriousness of it. But this wasn’t… Read more »

Jane
Jane
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

Right. Natalie disagrees. The judge agrees. It’s pretty clear we’re ALL going to pick sides based on which side we’re inclined to agree with, since there are conflicting takes on the situation from those close to it and/or supplied with all the information to judge — and we are neither.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jane

The three people who know Jamin’s true nature the best, out of those who have come up publicly, would probably be his victim, his pastor, and his now ex-wife.

All three are giving us clear evidence that Jamin is NOT who he was portrayed to the judge to be.

Why would we still treat the judge’s opinion as meaningful when those who supplied the information that led the judge to form his opinion now state that the information they gave was lacking?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

I believe it is inappropriate to use that judge’s statement as evidence of the truth when Jamin’s own pastor, Pastor Peter Leithart, has declared that the court case was partially misdirected by Jamin’s deception and lies, and that he now knows Jamin to have behaved far worse than what they knew at the time. Natalie’s statements further confirm that, and of course Jamin’s criminal abuse of his now ex-wife should be the nail in the coffin. Do you find this statement from Pastor Leithart unconvincing? “It is clear now that I made major errors of judgment. Fundamentally, I misjudged Jamin,… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

Welcome back my friend to the show that never ends.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Douglas Wilson

Those who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  randallmanntoo

I love it when liberals refuse to show love to pedophiles but show lots of “love” to gays

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

Do you really not see a difference between gays who have consensual sex with adults, and anyone of either sex who preys on children? I don’t know any liberals who have sympathy for adult gays who have sex with minors.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

God does not see a difference so why should I.
and yes liberals have zero sympathy for pedophiles, that was my point!! – hypocrites

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

To be fair, I know liberals who are quite sympathetic to adult gay men who target teenage boys, and am disgusted by that.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Thanks. We can agree here. Not many say this publicly, but it’s a real issue.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

That is horrible.

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

I don’t know any liberals who have sympathy for adult gays who have sex with minors. Jilly, ever hear of NAMBLA? The fact that they even exist ought to tell you that liberals, if not having outright sympathy for them, tolerate their presence. Did you know that Nancy Pelosi marched in the 2001 San Francisco pride parade with none other than the late Harry Hay, the founder of NAMBLA? Hay once said: “If the parents and friends of gays are truly friends of gays, they would know from their gay kids that the relationship with an older man is precisely… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago

TCFKAfp, I’m sure Jilly doesn’t personally know anyone, liberal or conservative that has sympathy for adult men, gay or otherwise, who have sex with minors. I know I don’t. That doesn’t mean that we are so naive as to believe that they don’t exist. An adult would have live under a rock to have never heard of NAMBLA.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Yes, that’s true, Clay. I am surrounded by liberals. I have never heard a liberal whom I know personally express sympathy for gays who prey on minors. None of the people I know would defend Pelosi, Yiannopoulos, of the city of Seattle for going easy on adult sex crimes against children. (I would have said “my friends” but then I remembered that I don’t have any. According to MeMe who should know better than I do.)

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago

Hi fp, I meant that quite literally as in I don’t know any, not that I have never heard of any. I have heard of NAMBLA, but I don’t think of them as liberals, I think of them as potential predators. I don’t support anyone who gives cover to them or who defends them. I think that disgust for people who prey on the young should supersede any allegiance to party or political philosophy.

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

” I don’t know any liberals who have sympathy for adult gays who have sex with minors.”

I could of sworn the Seattle Mayor just resigned from a 30 yr career in which he enjoyed a great deal of liberal protection and support for his predatory behavior towards young boys.

MeMe
7 years ago

I must say Pastor Wilson, it’s absolutely tragic to read your post and the comments here and see not one ounce of concern for victims. It’s like, “every woman is always Potiphar’s wife. Women always lie. She probably wanted it anyway. Somebody is just persecuting this innocent man. Women are just delusional.” For those who don’t know, that is what is often referred to as “rape culture.” In the end, all Moore has to lose is an election, some pride, and his popularity. That’s it. That’s the worst fate he has to worry about. This a whole idea that men… Read more »

Nathan James
Nathan James
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

[ insert IT’S A TRAP meme here ]

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Nathan James

I wish. The really sad thing is the horse is already out of the barn, the heart has already revealed itself. I’ve got nothing to prove, nothing to unveil. I already know the game quite well. The other day I accused Pastor Wilson of not believing women. I meant that, and I meant it as kindly and as without judgment as possible. It simply is what it is. The problem being, women will never be protected under such a system, since our word is perceived to carry no weight and our testimony is thought to be meaningless. I’ve never see… Read more »

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

“The problem being, women will never be protected under such a system, since our word is perceived to carry no weight and our testimony is thought to be meaningless.”

I’m not sure what universe you live in, but plenty of honorable men have been taken down by unsubstantiated sexual harassment claims…and women have made false claims with no negative consequences.

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

…..plenty of honorable men have been taken down by unsubstantiated sexual harassment claims”

Since ALL men are perceived as “honorable,” and ALL women are perceived as having made “unsubstantiated claims,” your words mean nothing.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

MeMe wrote:

Since ALL men are perceived as “honorable,” and ALL women are perceived as having made “unsubstantiated claims,” your words mean nothing.

JP Stewart made no assertions using the word “ALL”. So how does pre-judging and dismissing JP Stewart help make the case against pre-judging and dismissing? It seems that MeMe wants to fight imagined partiality with her own radical display of actual partiality.

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

From Doug’s post on Friday:

Actually, these aren’t bad times to be delusional.

MeMe’s comment on that post (#210487):

I’m going to file this one under like-mindedness.

Let the record show that MeMe has finally declared herself to be delusional.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

I said nothing of the sort, though you make similar blanket statements…with all women always being pure and virtuous…unless some man pressures or tricks them into sinning.

And what’s with these guys who randomly pop up and defend you occasionally…then disappear? I notice they never show up when you’re calling someone a bitter, divorced loser with no friends. Maybe they’re commenters on your blog?

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

MeMe has repeatedly accused Wilson of a lack of concern toward women victims simply because he refuses to prejudge and show partiality toward an accuser (male or female). MeMe accuses Wilson of partiality toward men and against women, in spite of all evidence to the contrary.

Yet, in trying to lay this accusation of partiality, what we actually discover is that MeMe is overtly prejudiced toward believing a woman accuser, and disbelieving a man. So the one actually guilty of the sex-based partiality is none other than MeMe herself. How ironic.

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

“MeMe accuses Wilson of partiality toward men and against women, in spite of all evidence to the contrary.” There is ample evidence, it is clearly peppered through his writing and it is plain for most people to see. Once again, that is not really an “accusation” in the sense of condemnation, it is simply an observation. To not be biased towards victims and to not recognize the inequality between men and women and the cultural influences, is actually to demonstrate partiality heavily weighted in favor of men. He says, “So if he confesses that they are true, or if they… Read more »

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

MeMe wrote: To not be biased towards victims and to not recognize the inequality between men and women and the cultural influences, is actually to demonstrate partiality heavily weighted in favor of men. MeMe is directly acknowledging her own partiality toward women and against men, and rationalizing it. Yet she projects her own active sexual partiality onto Wilson. MeMe wrote: … which ultimately means it doesn’t matter how many women come forth, the testimony of women means nothing to him. This accusation is refuted by the written accounts of several women who have spoken out publicly in regard to Christ… Read more »

LittleRedMachine
LittleRedMachine
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

what a ridiculous comment. So, ‘innocent until proven guilty’ means nothing to you? That’s wicked.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

I’ve noted commenters now even saying that they would vote for Moore even if the allegations are true. Which is the line much of the Alabama Republican Party is taking as well: Statements like these are what I find most damning for the community: “After a long pause, Alabama Bibb County Republican chairman Jerry Pow tells me he’d vote for Roy Moore even if Moore did commit a sex crime against a girl. “I would vote for Judge Moore because I wouldn’t want to vote for Doug,” he says. “I’m not saying I support what he did.” “It was 40… Read more »

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

So should they vote for a pro-abortion candidate instead? Or just not vote at all, which would have the same effect?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Yes, I think our integrity as a community is MUCH more important than who is in that corrupted worldly institution of the Senate. I would rather that a sexual abuser whose positions I hated win office against my objection than that a sexual abuser whose positions I supported win office with my support. Only one of those would damage the Christian witness and our own integrity as a community.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

But the answer is that they should write in an honorable candidate whose positions they can support, not that they should support an unsupportable opponent. If the community had enough integrity as a community to do that, then that write-in candidate would then win. But such things never happen, because the “realists” keep yelling for us to vote for “the least of two evils”, which only guarantees that we get candidates who merge closer and closer to the most evil median they can reach while remaining just far enough on this side of the line to be “not as evil… Read more »

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

women are masters of lying
their statements must always be held with suspicion

This is to compensate for the feminist nature of our society where men are presumed guilty without trial ( the reverse of Saudi Arabia)

any real Christian would give put the burden of proof on the feminazi women

Nathan James
Nathan James
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

Two wrongs don’t make a right.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Nathan James

it is not wrong, to be suspicious of women…
go read Proverbs…

oh wait your a feminist, the bible does not matter….

David C Decket
David C Decket
7 years ago

I would not assume the post story accusations are true till proven true. Why assume that these allegations are even truthful in the first place?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  David C Decket

Because there are four different accusers, the mother and childhood friends of the main 14-year-old accuser have already stated that the girl told them of the relationship long before Moore became a public figure, other people from the time period have testified to Moore creating situations where he would be alone with teenage girls, and the nature of the accusations is quite credible and was confirmed over a period of time in multiple interviews. Can you state what more you would want to see in order to determine for yourself that the accusations were likely truthful? If the victim was… Read more »

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Can you state what more you would want to see in order to determine for yourself that the accusations were likely truthful?” As I’ve indicated before, I don’t know that the accusations are truthful, or that they are not. However, what I would want is an independent and impartial investigation by an investigator I could credit with knowing what they are doing . I would want the investigation to include interviews with the accusers and with Moore. I would want hard questions for both sides. I would want any apparent contradiction in the details of claims and/or denials to be… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Why do you describe all four of these women as “accusers”? There is no allegation of sexual misconduct for three of these women. If there is no crime (offending your sensibilities does not count), then I don’t see their significance to the situation. Also, it is not illegal for an unmarried man to find young women attractive and be interested in dating them (although sex with under-age women is illegal). If the girl consents to dating, then she is not a victim.

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKRickety….Keeping in mind that Moore’s “accuser(s)” never said a word until last week for something that happened almost 40 years ago and can’t really be proved either way. The timing is obviously fishy and smells rotten. Easy to accuse, not so easy to disprove, especially in this political climate where foul play to discredit and steal the election is the new playbook.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  paulm01

My intent was to object to the use of “accusers” because, at least to me, it implies that a crime was committed and that these women are all victims. In short, I am skeptical of the truth of the Corfman claim and consider the statements by the other three women to be reasonably irrelevant to it.

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Exactly…if a crime was committed – although beyond prosecutorial reach at this point – the law will mete that out in due time. Likely the whole thing is a payoff/set up, I’m smelling a rat picking at nits, especially compared to Madam Clinton’s massive lawlessness that may never see the inside of a courtroom.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I agree with you. If there was no evidence from the 14 year old, the only issues would be: Does a man of 70 have a duty to withdraw from a race because, at 32, he dated, hugged, and kissed teenaged girls? Do Christians have a moral duty not to vote for a man who, 40 years earlier, dated, hugged, and kissed teenaged girls? If I were a Moore supporter, sexual impropriety with a 14 year old would, if proven, be a deal breaker for me. But I honestly can’t be sure about the others. Probably every pretty girl gets… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Jill,

“They are clouding the issue by using the three other young women, presumably to establish pattern of conduct.”

Yes, and I find it extremely interesting that the most egregious sexual activity those three claim is kissing. Not exactly the smoking gun that would be expected if Moore was guilty of sexually molesting many young girls.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKR, would you allow a 32 year-old man to date, unchaperoned, your 16 year-old daughter? Would you condone him kissing your 16 year-old daughter? If you discovered that he was also dating several other teenagers, would you continue to allow your 16 year-old daughter to date this 32 year-old man?

Dave
Dave
7 years ago

This whole affair is political show for the masses to keep a Christian man out of Congress. The system doesn’t want him in office because he would upset the apple cart. The accuser didn’t say anything during the other times Moore was under the interrogation lights. Only now when he is positioned to move to D.C. did she come forward. Immediately the incumbent RINOs called for his stepping aside. Not after days of consideration, but immediately. Why haven’t they acted so quickly in the past for other politicians? Why are Alabama GOP Republicans trying to have Moore’s name struck from… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

So in your world, nationals Republicans and Alabama GOP Republicans are all part of a political show for the masses to keep a Christian man out of Congress.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

it is not in his world
Unless you are living under a rock, republicans have been proven to be no different to democrats

Bill Smith
Bill Smith
7 years ago

Having read the detailed description of the incidents, as well as the response from Judge Moore and his campaign, I can no longer endorse his candidacy for the US Senate. Mike Lee, a real RINO

LittleRedMachine
LittleRedMachine
7 years ago

there is no worse group of people than the GOP establishment. Mitt Romney and crew did the same thing to Todd Aiken over some poorly worded comments regarding rape and abortion. The seat was lost to the awful Claire McCaskel.

Same playbook. Washington Post goes all Fusion GPS on Roy Moore and up pops Romney, et al, to wag their fingers.

MeMe
7 years ago

“So if he confesses that they are true, or if they are shown by biblical criteria to be true, I am here and now promising a future blog post on the subject. I further commit to have it set to at least 300⁰ F, and you will be able to hear the bacon grease from at least three blogs over.” But the real question is, will that post be on fire because one’s pride and politics have been now been betrayed or because the lives of some very young girls were forever changed and they suffered great harm from a… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Statements like these are what I find most damning for the community: “After a long pause, Alabama Bibb County Republican chairman Jerry Pow tells me he’d vote for Roy Moore even if Moore did commit a sex crime against a girl. “I would vote for Judge Moore because I wouldn’t want to vote for Doug,” he says. “I’m not saying I support what he did.” “It was 40 years ago,” Alabama Marion County GOP chair David Hall tells me. “I really don’t see the relevance of it. He was 32. She was supposedly 14. She’s not saying that anything happened… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

And it looks like commenters have already jumped into the “I’m supporting him even if he’s guilty” boat, with Katecho going so far as to offer a “wasn’t Mary 14?” defense.

Ian Miller
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Where? I just checked all the comments, and I don’t see that particular “defense”.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ian Miller

It was three threads earlier, where the discussion started before Doug posted:

“I’m curious if the idea of Mary being betrothed at age 14, to someone twice her age, also makes Jonathan sick to his stomach. If not, why not?”

Matt Bell
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Was that a defense of sexual coercion, or a defense against man-made restrictions on marital ages?

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Matt Bell

Matt Bell wrote: Was that a defense of sexual coercion, or a defense against man-made restrictions on marital ages? Indeed. Perhaps it wasn’t a defense at all, but a direct challenge to Jonathan’s view of Scripture as a liability, and a challenge to the authority of his stomach. In any case, it seems to have resulted in Jonathan acknowledging that God’s commands to Israel (concerning the judgment of the Midianites in Numbers 31), also makes Jonathan sick to his stomach. Apparently there are multiple things that God instructed in Scripture that Jonathan finds repulsive, besides the instruction that Joseph should… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

Katecho, that is the 7th time in this thread alone you have made a false claim about me in order to attack my character. Once against I ask that you STOP focusing on personal attacks and instead deal with the questions at hand. The exact quote was: “And if I were to see a massacre as described in Numbers 31 today, it would make me sick.” And that is true. Is it not true for you? My point with that statement, which I made CLEAR in my comments following it, is that there are enormous differences between conduct in ancient… Read more »

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote:

It was three threads earlier, where the discussion started before Doug posted:

Hmm. First, Ted Cruz became Tom Cruz, and now my statements are being attributed to Doug?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

Katecho, you are speaking an obvious falsehood about me. Ian asked where YOU made that statement. I answered that you made it in the discussion that started before Doug posted. Your claim that I am attributing the statement to Doug is completely nonsensical considering the question I am answering, which is why it has been up there for over 5 days without anyone coming to the wacky conclusion you just did. It could only even look that way in your out-of-context quote. I am getting more than tired of people replicating out-of-context quotes from me to make claims that are… Read more »

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Ian Miller

Ian Miller wrote:

Where? I just checked all the comments, and I don’t see that particular “defense”.

How delightful to see others notice that pointed questions about Jonathan’s position are not the same as a defense of Moore. It means that Jonathan’s misrepresentations aren’t working.

In any case, here’s a link to my question about the authority of Jonathan’s stomach. I found it quite informative.

https://dougwils.com/s7-engaging-the-culture/year-of-the-pig.html#comment-210522

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

Ian may well agree with you, but that is not at all what he is saying in that quote. He said, “I just checked all the comments”, and by that it is clear that he meant all the comments on this post, not the comments on a completely different post where your statement was actually made. It is clear that when he made that comment he had not yet seen your statement. If Ian wants to pile on with your character attacks on me, he is free to do that. However, your attempt to quote him in order to further… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

And in terms of the actual subject, since I have very little trust that you will take my arguments seriously, I suggest you pursue this issue with Pastor Doug Wilson instead, who went even further than I did when he stated:

“In sum, when a 25-year-old guy sets his sights on a 15-year-old girl, I think it is safe to say that I hate it with the heat of a thousand suns, more or less, give or take.”

I’m not surprised that you have ignored taking Pastor Wilson to task and instead keep focusing on me.

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Don’t worry J’, somehow, some commentors jumped on the leprechaun boat!????

You’ll have to ask Randman how that happened.????

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

again what is wrong with that
when the alternative is supporting people who deny God created male and female and promote whoring!

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, once again you are standing in the gates acting the fool. You really do need discernment and wisdom instead of just typing foolish thoughts from your fingertips. Yes, this is political theater and yes you swallowed the political line completely. Why would you believe the Washington Post articles and all the tweets about this while disregarding other sources reporting one accuser worked for the Democrats including Joe Biden and another is said to be a serial accuser? Why do you believe the Washington Post when Alabamans are saying others were approached with offers of serious cash to accuse Moore?… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Most of this post is ridiculous and we all know where discussions with you on the facts inevitably lead, so I’ll just repeat myself. My main concern is not whether or not Moore committed sexual misconduct. He is one man, and the facts of the case will only prove whether or not one man committed sin. He does not represent all men, Southerners, Republicans, Christians, or anyone else. Except when those people rush to his defense so aggressively that they claim their support will continue even if he DID commit a sex crime. Except when those people make clear that… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

Thank you for finally clearly stating your complaint.

Unfortunately, you have instead spent much time and effort on supporting the claims of criminal sexual activity, rather than waiting to hear all sides of the story. The last phrase is my problem with you in your comments on this post.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I haven’t said that I know he’s guilty, I’ve said there is evidence for them to people who have denied there is evidence at all and were immediately dismissing them.

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

J’, any possibility that you are capable of making the proper distinction between testimony vs. evidence? If you are, that might make for fewer comments, but those few might be more valid. In context|legal|lang=en terms the difference between testimony and evidence is that testimony is (legal) statements made by a witness in court while evidence is (legal) anything admitted by a court to prove or disprove alleged matters of fact in a trial. As nouns the difference between testimony and evidence is that testimony is (legal) statements made by a witness in court while evidence is facts or observations presented… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  adad0

Neither I nor they were talking a legal court situation, adad. In the court of public opinion, the corroborating testimony of others IS evidence to support the possibility that the person may have done the acts in question.

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Wow? There are rules “In the court of public opinion”? I don’t think so J’. Rules in the court of public opinion are made up by all sides, and thus, are not “rules”. Again, keep in mind that the Prophets, Jesus, Stephen and Paul all ended up unjustly treated by “the court of public opinion”. “The court of public opinion” perverted justice and managed to fraudulently execute God. : – 0 A “court” cannot do worse than that. That is why the court of public opinion is not considered credible, by the credible. People who attempt an aggressive prosecution “in… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  adad0

Yes, adad, words have meaning in the court of public opinion.

We are only discussing what a word means, and if you want to claim there are no rules for that and anyone can deny that my word means what it is generally said to mean, then communication might literally become impossible.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Though I should strengthen that now – at this point I believe hat he is almost certainly lying about how general conduct with teenage girls. And I believe that if he is not lying about his conduct with Ms. Corfman, the only other option is a vast and difficult-to-believe conspiracy unlike anything I can recall.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

” a vast and difficult-to-believe conspiracy unlike anything I can recall.”

Like, perhaps, Watergate? I presume you’ve heard of that.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Watergate was a conspiracy by a particular group of presidential staff. This conspiracy would have to involve at least a dozen women who all knew Moore when they were younger (but many of whom claim didn’t know each other), along with one of the women’s mothers, along with a deputy D.A. who worked with Moore, along with apparently the Washington Post itself. I can recall nothing remotely comparable to that. But feel free to offer the hypothetical way you think it could happen. I challenged anyone to give a hypothetical alternative more likely than “Moore is lying about at least… Read more »

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Do you see a man wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for him.” Proverbs 26:12 “Like snow in summer and like rain in harvest,So honor is not fitting for a fool.” Proverbs 26:1 “Most of this post is ridiculous and we all know where discussions with you on the facts inevitably lead, so I’ll just repeat myself. Jonathan@210636 Jonathan, we do know where the discussion will go because you are a fool and do not see that which is before your eyes. You claim to be a Christian man, yet you argue and… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

I am quite grateful that your example of me being a fool was my insistence that the Civil War was about slavery. A least that means I’m not more of a fool than the authors of the Articles of Secession by those very states.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declaration_of_the_Immediate_Causes_Which_Induce_and_Justify_the_Secession_of_South_Carolina_from_the_Federal_Union

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, again you play the fool. You need to think and understand things better before you let your fingers do the typing on the blog pages. You missed the point. You discount true facts that are said and come out with links that are only a part of the situation but fit your tilted narrative. You pound away like a fool on one or two things that really don’t show the entire picture. Why did Lincoln not want to free the slaves? Why did Lincoln not free the slaves in the Northern states? There is more to the picture than… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Lincoln ran on the compromise position that he would not free the slaves, nor would he allow the expansion of slavery. The South seceded because they wanted the expansion of slavery and feared Lincoln would chip away at their other rights in regard to slavery. You really have to go out of your way to distort the clear battle lines, and ignore nearly the entire written history of the time itself (including ALL the documents of secession and ALL the attempts to make a compromise to avoid war) in order to even begin to suggest that it was not about… Read more »

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, you are a fool.

The Southern states were concerned with state’s rights. Before you were born that was taught in both Northern and Southern school systems. The New York Times published that the war was not about slavery. Did that enter into your history search? I doubt it because that is not taught in modern history classes.

Since you know so much, why don’t you tell us how the Federal budget was funded in the years before the Civil War?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Yes, due to a concerted campaign by former Southerners to redeem their embarrassing association with slavery, many lies about that history were taught in the public schools of your day. Thank God we have the actual documents from that period and are past such silly claims now. If you want to exalt the public school textbooks of the 1930s-1970s over the actual documents from the 1860s, that says more about you than about the Civil War. And tariffs against the South were at a relative historic low before secession, which is whey they aren’t mentioned in any of the main… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Thank God we have the actual documents from that period and are past such silly claims now.” Which confirm Dave’s argument. The personal letters of many, many, many southerners confirm that not many were in favor of slavery, but most all were opposed to the North’s means of controlling the South, and the specific “how” of the North’s plans for ending slavery. “I was much pleased the with President’s message. His views of the systematic and progressive efforts of certain people at the North to interfere with and change the domestic institutions of the South are truthfully and faithfully expressed.… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

Justin, Robert E. Lee is not the one who made the choice to secede or the choice to go to war. Nor did many of those letter writers have that kind of say – if you read letters by soldiers in Iraq in 2007, you would get a LOT of varied reasons why people chose to fight, and few of them would align with the reasons we went to war. Rationalizations abound, which is why no matter what leader is going to war or what their reasons, they almost always find soldiers to go to war with them for one… Read more »

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, you are a fool.

The texts we read in both Northern and Southern schools were from the source documents. It is a shame that you did not actually read them yourself –with the exception of that which wiki or google presents you.

Give an answer at the top of the page. There is more to the tarrifs than you know or are willing to research. Tell us how the Federal budget was funded.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave, what did Jesus say about calling a brother a fool?

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

“Answer a fool as his folly deserves, That he not be wise in his own eyes.” Proverbs 26:5 For those who read the Bible and reference it by the entirety, the point that Clay is misrepresenting is in Matthew 5:21-26. The reference is toward those who are angry with brothers. That is where Clay is incorrect because I bear no anger toward Jonathan. Jonathan claims to be a Christian, yet he cannot apply scripture to his postings or his manner of interacting in today’s America. Jonathan lacks discernment, in depth knowledge of history, politics, and economics. He is steeped in… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave – Nice dodge on calling your brother a fool. It helps me understand why you can’t see that social justice is writ large is the scriptures. Prov. 27:5.

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay, social justice as used today is not in scripture. Today, it is OK for a black man to shoot up a Christian church and not make news. However, the opposite brings national and international headlines. Today, it is OK to use the government to steal from those who work and give to those who are capable of working but don’t work. Social justice cries for the woman’s right to kill an unborn baby. Just where is that in scripture?

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave – Yes, I did read about it in the, wait for it, NY Times! So what’s your point?

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave – this has been reported. Maybe you need to expand your news sources. Let me know if I can help in that regard.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave – I’m curious. Do you know the actual percentage of your gross income you paid in federal taxes last year?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave, you can’t simultaneously accuse me of being driven 100% by social justice and then use as your example of social justice things that I’m not doing. Trying to claim that I’m pro-abortion or anti-work would be just silly considering my posts. And my goodness on that ridiculous headline-counting accusation – I thought it was liberals who tried to make everything about race? That “OK for a black man to shoot up a Christian church” incident got MASSIVE coverage. Type in Antioch Church Shooting to Google News and you get 46,000 replies. There must be many that aren’t about the… Read more »

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

For the casual reader, Jonathan is a young man who acts the fool all the time. Clay is an older man who accepts Christian foolishness. There is no dodge in the answer at all and Jonathan still needs to make a decision to either be a SJW or a Godly, Christian man.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

I’m rather deadened to you calling me a fool, but who are you daring to call a young man?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave, Google is actually an excellent source for getting at primary documents, though I’ve read on the Civil War beyond that and even taught the subject.

And as a rule, high school textbooks in the 1930s-1970s were terrible at using primary documents, and no, they were generally not based on them at all. I recommend “Lies My Teacher Told Me” for a survey of how high school history books deviate from primary documents, and why.

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, you are still acting the fool. My classmates and I had to read the source documents and commit many to memory. That was school not using the texts you referenced. My wife and I watched American education deteriorate and introduce false narratives. After living overseas for 6 years our return to a degraded America was obvious to the most casual observer. America has been served poorly by foolish Christians, both in positions of power and in homes, who purchased the current narratives as the way to go instead of scriptural paths. Don’t follow in their footsteps. Jonathan, you need… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave – At least you have stopped calling Jonathan a fool. Good for you, that’s a start.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

I’m guessing you have a different definition of “source documents” and “many” than I do. Please, name for me the many source documents you committed to memory. Also name the source document from the time that taught you that slavery was not the issue that started the Civil War. As far as the rest of your rhetoric, you keeping making this accusation about my lack of Christian faith, yet the only issue you name to support your accusation is my acknowledgement of the obvious historical fact that slavery was the primary issue which led to the Civil War. Now only… Read more »

bethyada
bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

jonathan, what exactly is your complaint?

If the allegations of Moore’s behaviour about touching a 14 year old in his underwear are true, this is a problem. But dating teenagers without any sexual misconduct… Why do you group this with the other complaint?

I concede that if the first accusation is true then the other accusations may be consistent with a problem, but of themselves, these other accusations are not accusations of any substance.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

What if it was much worse…what if they found out Moore had a boyfriend…that he once hired as a male prostitute,…who was running a male-prostitution ring out of his home? Oh wait, that already happened to Barney Frank…and the media very quickly forgot about it.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

I agree that much of the condoning/dismissing of Barney Frank’s lifestyle was despicable.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Be more specific.

My primary complaint is that many conservatives/Republicans/Southerners/Christians have stated that they would support him even if he’s guilty, and have even started minimizing sexual contact with 14-year-olds. That is by far my biggest issue and what is legitimately making me angry right now. But I think you’re getting at some smaller side issue.

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Something to keep in mind Jonathan, there is nothing new under the sun. The fact that “conservatives/Republicans/Southerners/Christians,” blame women and attempt to rationalize the exploitation of children while at the same time condemning gays for sexual sin is not exactly breaking news.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

MeMe wrote: Something to keep in mind Jonathan, there is nothing new under the sun. The fact that “conservatives/Republicans/Southerners/Christians,” blame women and attempt to rationalize the exploitation of children while at the same time condemning gays for sexual sin is not exactly breaking news. Jonathan and MeMe’s agendas seem to be resolving into one at this point. MeMe sees that Jonathan is trying to associate conservative Christianity, straight across, with the blaming of women and with rationalization of the exploitation of children. It’s such a tidy thesis. Who needs any qualifiers when one cares so deeply about the reputation of… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

That’s a ridiculous statement as I have had nothing to do with MeMe’s outbursts, nor do I share the vast majority of her agendas.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

How the heck was I downvoted for making a factual statement about what made me angry? Is that you again Katecho, just downvoting everything I say?

bethyada
bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

My primary complaint is that many conservatives/Republicans/Southerners/Christians have stated that they would support him even if he’s guilty, Fair enough, I agree. Though I think it important to distinguish supporting him because despite his faults he is better than the opposition vs supporting him outright. Along with you, I think it wrong to vote for Trump because of his character; but I understand the argument that refusal to vote for Trump is similar to voting for Clinton, and the claim the Clinton is far worse than Trump. So support for Moore may not be support for his (supposed) actions or… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

This is the nail on the head. You could end the thread with this.

Oh hey, I still owe you a response about God, Eve, and the punishment for the Garden of Eden. I got distracted and forgot about it. Long story short, I can not for the life of me find the translation that is 100% what I was certain what it was in my head. So I have no idea how I originally came to that conclusion. I’ll happily rescind my assertion, now lacking Biblical evidence.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: My primary complaint is that many conservatives/Republicans/Southerners/Christians have stated that they would support him even if he’s guilty, and have even started minimizing sexual contact with 14-year-olds. How did this “primary complaint” result in an accusation of hypocrisy against Wilson? Or was that just tossed in for good measure? If Jonathan had simply remarked that he is disappointed that certain professing Christians are willing to overlook a high profile conviction for sexual misconduct in their preferred politician, then he should expect more agreement than push back on this blog. But he doesn’t stop there. His intended target is… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

As I said clearly, that was my primary complaint but there were many side complaints. The side complaint you refer to is that Pastor Wilson takes any failing by individuals on what he perceives to be the “enemy” side as representing all the inherent sin of his enemies in general. But when the same failings appear on his own side, he takes them as isolated incidents that in no way reflect on any general problems among his own cohort. As far as your following statements I’m not sure what you’re driving at, but I can affirm that I usually assume… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I’m sorry bethyada, but a thirty-something man dating high school girls is creepy, at best. Would you care to offer some reasonable explanations as to why a man would want to do that? I can’t think of one.

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Clay, depending on where you live, men get established before looking at courtship and marriage. That is true in NYC and other locations with the Armenians and the Jews. The men are established in business and are able to support a family. In the deep south, that is also true to some extent — along with getting married when both are in their mid-teens. If you lived in the South, the rule was twice the girl’s age plus 7 for the man’s age was OK. Now, hardly anyone wants to get married so out come all the “I wouldn’t do… Read more »

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave, I have lived in the south for 61 of my 61 years and my family has been in the south since the late 1600’s and I have NEVER heard of that formula. That’s not to say that it hasn’t existed. That is my observation. Thanks for the history lesson.

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave, Since you mentioned the deep south, I have wondered myself if part of the disconnect here is owing to regional cultural differences? Think maybe?

The twice plus 7 “rule” came to mind too. Only I’d look at it – if we were to use it – as establishing an acceptable minimum, not an “ideal age”. If that were the measure applied then a thirty year old man should not be considering any woman under 22.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

JohnM, you’re using the same “half his age plus 7” guideline that I was taught when I was young. Dave’s “twice the age plus 7” would lead to a 30-year-old man being able to date a girl under 12.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

I am rather suspicious of a “twice the age plus 7” claim – that would be 31 for 12-year-old, 35 for a 14-year-old, 47 for a 20-year-old. With gaps that enormous I don’t even see the point of a formula – it would be borderline ridiculous to parse ages so specifically when you’ve already signed off on a gap that large.

In college I was told “Half the man’s age plus 7.” That leads to far more reasonable results that actually give the formula sense. Are you sure you’re not confused?

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, you are a fool.

No, I am not confused at all. I am sure you were told all sorts of things in college that were not of the American standard.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

I am a fool because I think that a supposed standard which claims that it is okay for a man who is 30 to date a girl who has not yet turned 12 is ridiculous? If you are okay with a 30-year-old dating a girl under 12, why not a 35-year-old? What’s the difference at that point? Of course, maybe your equation has a lower bound. Please specify. Because if you make that bound, say, 15, then claiming that it is okay for a 37-year-old to date a 15-year-old, but a 40-year-old doing it is just too much, seems just… Read more »

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, you are a fool standing in the gates showing how big a fool you are. Which three expressed incredulity? Clay didn’t. John M didn’t. Was it only Jonathan? Stop making things up Jonathan. Girls at age 19 used to be considered old maids. You wouldn’t know that because you only type foolishness. Run the formula the other way as it was taught in Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma, Ohio and other states. A 16 year old girl could be matched to a successful man at 39. A widow or maid of 33 could marry a man of 73 if she so… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Dave, look closer at those posts. JohnM was so incredulous at your formula that he simply assumed it was wrong and used the one I knew instead. Saying that a 37-year-old can marry a 15-year-old,but that a 38-year-old is too old for that and really should go with a 16-year-old, is parsing at a meaningless level. And then claim that a 21-year-old “old maid” is too young for a 50-year-old man, but a 30-year-old can marry a girl under 12…the formula just doesn’t work. Can you explain where your formula is helpful? Like, why you think it is okay for… Read more »

bethyada
bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

Not intrinsically no.

There are men who are sexually creepy. Many of them are interested in young women (and all sorts of other unmentionable behaviour). Don’t confuse that with men who happen to be date young women. Many women have married older men and both have stayed faithful forever. I think that the bigger problem is our excessive promiscuous culture.

As for any reason, you need to be more imaginative. If one is sexually faithful and he wants to marry an inexperienced woman then the demographic is overwhelmingly young.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

,

“If one is sexually faithful and he wants to marry an inexperienced woman then the demographic is overwhelmingly young.”

Very true. According to the CDC, about 64% of never-married USA women have had intercourse by age 19, about 75% by age 20, and over 90% by age 30.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I find those numbers misleading in a sense as they are taking from a completely different pool than the pool which a sexually faithful man is likely to be looking at. The % of women that I would be interested in is going to be well under 10% of the general population regardless of age, and most (though certainly not all) of the “sexually experienced” cohort is going to be washed out pretty quick, no? Even if I was of the appropriate age, why would I be any more interested in the 15-year-old who was about to have sex as… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

Without knowing your criteria, I don’t know if most of the “sexually experienced” would be quickly eliminated. I am, however, interested in how you would eliminate the remaining “sexually experienced” (assuming this was important to you). How would you know this, or determine it?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

When I was still on the market as a Christian man, the vast majority of women were not even close to being on my potential radar. The ones that were on my radar were far more likely to have maintained abstinence than the general population, without me even needing to specifically look for that trait, as it often correlates well with other laudable traits. I’m not saying that I would have been against marrying a woman who had repented from an earlier sexual history, I’m just saying that the odds of running into a woman who didn’t need to were… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, It seems you suppose  these women had maintained abstinence. I don’t see an answer as to how you would know this, or determine it for all, or even for an individual. I question the degree of difference of these women to the general population. It is certainly not as large as it should be. For example, per Most Unmarried Evangelical Millennials Have Never Had Sex (from the National Association of Evangelicals), 63% of unmarried evangelical Millenials aged 18-23 have never been sexually active, and only 46% of those 24-29 have not. Yes, 46% is “far more” than the 10%… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

You are still quoting general populations, which include the nominal majority. Again, the kind of women that I was looking for in a marriage partner is obviously not the kind that shows little “degree of different to the general population.” This of course does not mean of course would have required lifelong perfection, or that I would not have been happy to marry someone who came to God later in life. But if you’re looking only at women who are deeply and solidly committed to their faith, then the correlation is much, much higher. And as to how I would… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

“It is a MUCH more effective strategy than simply trolling for 16-year-olds and hoping someone else didn’t beat you there.”

I am dumbfounded at what you wrote.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I thought this whole train was in response to bethyada’s potential justification for Moore’s behavior: “If one is sexually faithful and he wants to marry an inexperienced woman then the demographic is overwhelmingly young” To which you replied: “Very true.” Followed by your posting of statistics suggesting that younger women are more likely to have not had sex than older women, followed by your apparent claims that it would be impossible for me to know whether or not my potential future wife had been sexually active. “Jonathan, It seems you suppose these women had maintained abstinence. I don’t see an… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, Yes, that’s the train. My objection to your comments generally is because I perceive you to be an intellectual snob, many of whom are very socially liberal. More specifically, you often phrase your statements in a fashion that, whether intentional or not, redirect or mislead. For example, your last statement here is: “And for that matter, why would you go around kissing unattached girls if keeping women sexually inexperienced before marriage was a primary goal of yours?” I see this as saying either that kissing makes a girl experienced  (not what I think bethyada meant), or the kissing was… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Personally, I believe that the vast majority of kissing that takes place while dating is inappropriate outside of the marriage relationship, carries no benefit and a lot of risk. It is a product of the fallings of our dating culture. My wife and I shared our first kiss (my first kiss to any romantic interest since I became a Christian at 19) on our wedding day. I still do not know the positive argument for boys and girls kissing their romantic interests,other than “it’s pointless to police that which you can’t control.” But a 35-year-old man should be able to… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

I think that “defense” was offered in response to various questions as to why a 30+ man might be romantically interested in teens. I think it was given as a possible explanation, not necessarily a likely one. It is, as I found out in the past day or so, rather implausible, because Roy Moore’s wife, although much younger, was not a virgin, but a divorced single mother when they married.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

“I’m sorry bethyada, but a thirty-something man dating high school girls is creepy, at best.”

But let me guess, Virginia electing the first openly transgender state legislator isn’t creepy at all… in fact we should celebrate it.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

How do Mr Moore’s denials that he dated high school girls fit into your calculus here? (Especially considering not just the four accusers that say he did, but the former colleague who claimed he did it so much to be known for it and the numerous witnesses who stated that he spent his recreational time in places that high school girls frequent. Not to mention the WaPo hearing the rumors themselves before they had even spoken to those girls.)

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

what is wrong with that?

Victorian morality is not Biblical morality?

Remember the other choice if it is not Moore is to support those who think men sleeping with men is to be celebrated.

why is that more moral than 14 year old sex?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

No, there is actually the possibility of maintaining integrity as a community and not “voting for the lesser evil”. If we actually did that, we wouldn’t always have to choose between two evils.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

What by voting for the fags?

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

” If we actually did that, we wouldn’t always have to choose between two evils.”

That’s a nice fantasy. We Christians are unable to agree that abortion is sin. In other words, “maintaining integrity as a community” is not a viable possibility.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

Neither is living my life utterly free of sin, but I’d rather shoot for that than simply give into the world.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

For someone allegedly so concerned about the reputation of the Christian community, Jonathan sure spends a lot of time spinning and distorting the facts in his attempts to cast the most conservative among us as a walking disgrace. He conducts a more sustained campaign of finger wagging and shame casting in our direction than even unbelievers outside the Christian community. When Jonathan can be imposed upon to actually document them, no one here is defending examples of Christians who excuse sexual immorality, but Jonathan seems to be bringing them up as a means to reveal his contempt for men like… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

You’re wrong, Katecho, but your false attacks are so general that I don’t even see an actual concrete claim to counter.

Rather than focusing so much of your energy on attacking my character, I would suggest we debate the issues at hand, as the “attack the messenger” direction this comment board has taken (which I hae taken part in at times) is enlightening no one.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago

Interesting that few are commenting about the fact that the accuser has declared bankruptcy not once but three times, as though that bad faith with her creditors isn’t relevant to whether we can believe her word.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

This might be the most unintentionally hilarious comment in the thread.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

You MUST have brought this up when Trump was accused of sexual misconduct, right? Because someone actually had to go looking to find out that information about her, while Trump’s has literally hundreds of examples of bad faith with creditors, employees, partners, wives, etc that has been in our face forever. Please link me to the relevant thread where you showed us that Trump’s extensive record of bad faith was evidence that we can not believe his denials.

Jane
Jane
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Unless Ginny was evidently a Trump supporter, why is her failure to denounce Trump the standard here?

FWIW, I’ve made this argument many times about Trump, though I can’t recall whether I’ve done in this particular comments section.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jane

Because she didn’t just use the argument, but commented on the fact that other people were failing to use it. So it seems perfectly within bounds for myself to comment on whether she was failing to use it in a much more obvious example.

If someone used that argument on Doug’s blog before, I certainly never saw it. Though I did see some Never Trumpers use the “if he cheated on his wife he’ll cheat on you” argument.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I used both those arguments, Jonathan. Also, there is no such thing as an insignificant lie.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

And…on cue, Jonathan shows up for a politically decisive debate to inundate the comments with his/her? tsunami of spin. Did the check arrive from OSF? (18 bil from evil doctor pork chop goes a long way).

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I can’t even begin to know what any of that means. I wish there was a quizzical smile.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I think OSF is a reference to George Soros’s foundation . Because the only other reference I found was Old Spaghetti Factory.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Jill
Yes. Evil Dr. Pork Chop (Toy Story) is an apropos nickname for OSF’s founder and principle benefactor (a.k.a. the man with a thousand eye bags).
If Jonathan doesn’t work for them, he should–he couldn’t do them better if he tried. He is the rhetorical tar baby–you just can’t engage or you get stuck to a bag of goo.
BTW, how is your snowflake? (I’ve been praying)

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I….guess that’s sort of praise that you think my posting has been effective…at something?

I don’t know much about OSF, but I doubt they hire people to comment on conservative Christian blogs.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

What is OSF and who is Evil Dr. Pork Chop??

Amused
Amused
1 year ago
Reply to  Jill Smith

Douglas Wilson.

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Speaks to motive as well (albeit unproven and purely speculation on my part). However, when facing financial trouble weakened people will often sell their soul for a few bucks in a heartbeat if the opportunity presents itself.

Bockelson
Bockelson
7 years ago

The bottom line is this: he denies it, there’s as-yet no proof of anything, and the accusers lack credibility. So unless something changes, I stick with good ol’ “innocent until proven guilty” – the same way I would hope to be treated in the trial of public opinion.

My opinion: the accusations are baloney. Mere stunts to try derailing his campaign. Moore needs to go on the hardcore offensive against this, no coddling. He needs to send this message directly to his supporters, repeatedly and powerfully: “I did nothing of the kind. This is a trick. Don’t be fooled.”

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Bockelson

What would you consider proof?

Did you also use this “innocent until proven guilty” defense in the posts regarding Clinton and the many, many others who have been accused of sexual misconduct on this blog? Pastor Wilson just accused a whole list of Hollywood figures of sexual misconduct only three posts back and claimed they were “basically proven” even though some of them have denied committing a crime – did you post this there as well?

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Neither Gennifer Flowers nor Clinton’s many other accusers waited 38 years. As Jill mentioned earlier, why not bring these accusations up years ago when Moore first became a nationally-known figure (i.e., his position on the 10 Commandments)?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

You do realize that there are literally hundreds of examples of people who waited decades to finally expose their sexual abuser which are coming out right now, and that many of them are quickly proving true, right? There are obviously many, many reasons for people to not want to go public with that, even when their abuser was a public figure. Someone else has suggested, though, that it was the Washington Post who found her rather than the her going public. As the Post reported her mother and several childhood friends already having known of her involvement with Moore at… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Are you seriously trying to suggest that there’s absolutely *nothing* suspicious about waiting for the statute of limitations to be up so you can’t be called to testify and be subject to perjury laws? Does that mean she’s lying? No. It just gives more solid of a foundation to not automatically believe the claim. Not that you need one because God’s standards in the situation have already been committed to writing.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

Yes, I would say that there’s noting suspicious about not going public with claims like this. The number of women who failed to report sexual misconduct in the 1970s and 1980s was certainly far far greater than the number who did report it, and both those numbers vastly outnumber the ones who reported and were lying. Did you read the article regarding why she never went public with the claims in the past or now, including the part where she didn’t choose to go public this time either until after the Washington Post approached her and convinced her through a… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“The number of women who failed to report sexual misconduct in the 1970s and 1980s was certainly far far greater than the number who did report it” How do you measure how many people did not report something? “and both those numbers vastly outnumber the ones who reported and were lying.” You mean the number of those that were proven to have been lying. That isn’t the same thing. For most allegations, proving that it’s a lie is impossible, thus the burden of evidence as it always is, is on the accuser. “Did you read the article….” No, nor would… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

Because if you actually know people and talk to them, then a police report is no longer the only way to know that bad things happen. India has over a billion people, but until very recent history had hardly any rapes reported despite it being generally known that there was an active “rape culture” in action there. How many Indians do you think you would have to talk to before you accepted that the number of rapes occurring was substantially higher than the number being reported? You’d have to be very naive or intentionally obtuse at this point to deny… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan,

Speaking of silliness, it’s amazing that you are going to use the situation in India (by the way, your statements about India are rather more vague than Moore’s denials), and then suppose you can logically extrapolate that to the USA in the 1970s. Is that what passes for rational argument in your world, or do you enjoy grasping at straws?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

OKR,, someone suggested that the only way they could think of to be aware of the frequency of rape was via police report, and I chose an easy example emotionally distant enough from posters that would help you see that police reports are obviously not the only way we gain awareness of crime rates. Pointing that out does not make 1970s America = India. Justin and OKR both, I’d be happy to commit to stop using any insults if you do as well. In fact, I’ll unilaterally stop on my own right now, as I know I have insulted some… Read more »

Justin Parris
Justin Parris
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Because if you actually know people and talk to them, then a police report is no longer the only way to know that bad things happen.” I didn’t say that there weren’t more cases than were reported. I asked how you measured them. You changed the topic. Answer the question. “India has over a billion people, but until very recent history had hardly any rapes reported despite it being generally known that there was an active “rape culture” in action there. How many Indians do you think you would have to talk to before you accepted that the number of… Read more »

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

Justin,

“How do you measure how many people did not report something?”

An excellent question. Apparently Jonathan has the special ability to do it. I hope he uses it for the greater good instead of wasting it in the silliness of the comments here.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Justin Parris

How do you measure sexual assaults? The most common way is a simple survey, the same way you measure any crime (as opposed to reported crime). There is a large body of evidence due to various types of surveys, and my personal experience confirms those general trends that far more assaults are initially unreported than are reported. There are other indicators (such as large numbers of admitted incidents getting reported long after the fact, or confessed attacks by imprisoned rapists outstripping reported attacks due to those rapists, or just the obvious fact that date rape is now known to be… Read more »

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“You do realize that there are literally hundreds of examples of people who waited decades to finally expose their sexual abuser which are coming out right now, and that many of them are quickly proving true, right?”

How “many”that are proving true…out of how many claims? Again, this is a mass hysteria movement, and the media has plenty of selection bias on what’s reported and what’s followed up on. Your own biases (on many levels) are quite evident as well.

Rich
Rich
7 years ago

I’m not sure the, “if he’s guilty, fry him,” mentality, is the right response at all. Would Douglas Wilson or any other man who grew up in the ’60s and ’70s, like to lay their sexual history out for all to judge? Isnt the man he is today, the criteria by which we should judge him? I came of age, in Alabama in those decades, before AIDS, with hippies and in the “free love” and drugs era, and promiscuity was rampant, yes, even among 14 year old girls. I think promiscuity was more rampant then than even today because there… Read more »

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Rich

I reckon anyone who reveals other peoples past sins should have their own sins revealed to all.

Also it is a double standard where men are not allowed to sin sexually but women are

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  Rich

When I was in second grade (a lot more than 40 years ago) I took a quarter to buy a cookie–eventually gave it back out of guilt. I swear, using the current “sin once, sin always” standard being selectively employed here (and yet to be proven), if I ran for office that incident would be couched as I am a lifetime thief regardless I have never stolen again.

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Rich

Rich wrote: I’m not sure the, “if he’s guilty, fry him,” mentality, is the right response at all. Would Douglas Wilson or any other man who grew up in the ’60s and ’70s, like to lay their sexual history out for all to judge? Wilson is certainly not ignoring the importance of a heart of repentance and restitution. Wilson thought it should be a consideration in Wight’s criminal case, for example. However, the decade of sexual immorality is irrelevant to the seriousness of the sin, and it may even be more incriminating that it was left unresolved by the perpetrator… Read more »

Phil Weingart
Phil Weingart
7 years ago

“he story is almost purely a political instrument” No “almost” about it. ” If the allegations are true, the citizens of Alabama ought to do more than politely request that Moore step out of the race. ” Absolutely not. Bite your tongue, sir. The question is NOT whether the allegations are true or not. The question is whether there exists an actionable violation of the law. We have a process for evaluating crimes. Laws exist for a reason. If, for example, there’s a statute of limitations after 30 years so that there is no legal remedy, then the question of… Read more »

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Phil Weingart

“The question is NOT whether the allegations are true or not. The question is whether there exists an actionable violation of the law.”

Well, I think the question is actually about his character, whether or not he has any integrity, and the depth of hypocrisy on display from Christian conservatives. The messages is coming across loud and clear, women have no value and will not be protected within those circles. As a result people reject conservatism, and even worse, reject the church and faith too.

paulm01
paulm01
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

MeMe…It’s about both his character AND the law (as in, PW’s well stated argument above). However, something that happened nearly 40 years ago likely is a far cry from Moore’s character today, just as it would be for most people (don’t most people mature and learn and change over time?) What I see is the willful hammering of a person from those who were not present yet somehow feel the right/need to not only judge in the rear view but then expand the discussion to half a dozen irrelevant points. Seems today every “news flash” somehow degenerates as a springboard… Read more »

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  paulm01

“It’s about both his character AND the law….” Except it is very doubtful any laws were broken and most likely the statute of limitations has expired anyway. I find it very unlikely that any of this has to do with the law, but rather it is about calling into question his hypocrisy, his lack of integrity,the huge double standard often promoted by Christian conservatives. People don’t trust Christian conservatives, people have seen too much of this kind of thing. So many people who don’t trust Christian conservatives actually voted for Trump in spite of his behavior, his locker room talk,… Read more »

The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
The Commenter Formerly Known As fp
7 years ago
Reply to  Phil Weingart

The question is NOT whether the allegations are true or not. The question is whether there exists an actionable violation of the law. We have a process for evaluating crimes. Laws exist for a reason. That is a great point. If there is no actionable violation of the law, then everything else surrounding this “case” is a bunch of hot air and has no bearing on anything. As for the “court of public opinion”, it is certainly no place to litigate anything, especially with a bunch of ignoramuses in that “court” bloviating about matters in which they know little. Given… Read more »

Matt@lessermagistrate
7 years ago

What I find nauseating is Christian men who have never hazarded their life by entering the civil realm but who like to sit in judgment of Judge Moore – acting like their above it all waiting for more proof to convince them of his innocence. While those of us who have been in the trenches for years, know there is nothing to wait for – what evidence is one to proffer 39 years later when one did nothing wrong and is being falsely accused? The young Christian men are particularly arrogant. To them I say: I know you live in… Read more »

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago

I don’t live in Alabama. Everything I know about Doug Jones I just read in a Wikipedia article. What, in particular, is objectionable about him, from a Christian, or conservative perspective? Why, apart from his being a Democrat, would his election be so awful that Roy Moore would be preferable, no matter what he did – IF – he did anything bad? Maybe there is something really bad about Doug Jones. I don’t know. I’m asking.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM
bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

being a Democrat itself is SATANIC

no true believer is a DEMOCRAT

bethyada
bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

People can be wrong and still be believers. And our behaviour is an important as our views.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

really?
people can advocate for murdering babies and still be believers?!!!

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

bdash,

That is ludicrous. Please stop posting ridiculous comments.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

WHY?
People can advocate for murdering people and still be believers?

Is this a christian blog or some universalist humanist hippy commune?

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

bdash,

I think you have jumped to the conclusion that my request that you “stop posting ridiculous comments” was in response to comment 211164. It was not, but was made nearly two days ago in response to your comment 210832 made about 2.5 days ago.

While it is possible that I could have made that response in less than 2 minutes, it is extremely unlikely. It would be wise to stop for a moment before firing off a response by mistake.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

I understood just fine.
People here do not believe baby murder ( aka democrat) is Satanic

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

Misogyny, false generalization, and insult is not an antidote to misandry, false generalization, and insult. Following and aping MeMe’s methodology is not the path for bdash to ever find legitimacy.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

I now know where your christian priorities lie….
opposing abortion is misogyny?!!

this si a christian forum?

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

bdash wrote:

I now know where your christian priorities lie….
opposing abortion is misogyny?!!

this si a christian forum?

One can oppose abortion without being bitter toward women.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

who is bitter?

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

You sound like someone trying to make conservative Christians look like morons. Are you for real, or just some alt-Left type with too much time on your hands?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

bdash’s history over a long period of time makes it difficult to believe he’s not real. I hope your incredulous reaction demonstrates just how horrific his positions are though. I’m really glad you finally called him out, too. I always find it odd that my positions here find no shortage of attackers, yet someone so extreme as to “make conservative Christians look like morons” gets comparatively little pushback from other conservatives. In this thread alone, bdash has: * Said “women are master liars” and therefore should not be believed * Said that Moore should be supported no matter whether he… Read more »

adad0
adad0
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Why is it that all of that just sits around with no pushback?”

Proverbs 26:20
Without wood a fire goes out; without a gossip a quarrel dies down.

J’, lots of comments should not be dignified with a response.
(Some people don’t even read certain commentors.)

After that:

John 7:24 “Stop judging by mere appearances, but instead judge correctly.” Jesus.

Lots of blog comments are long on appearance and short on fact.

These circumstances make many comments ripe for comedic response! ; – )
(and not much else.)

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  adad0

That’s indirectly a kind affirmation of the quality of my comments!

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“someone so extreme as to “make conservative Christians look like morons”

Keep in mind that a good many people here are not Christian conservatives at all, but rather red pills, manospherians, right liberals, and other assorted extremists.

CHer
CHer
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

Don’t forget the misandrists.

Jill Smith
Jill Smith
7 years ago
Reply to  CHer

And the losers with no life, no friends, and no church. (Oh, how could I forget–and a husband who abandoned them because they couldn’t keep a man.)

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

you mean Paul, Jesus, etc
they were pretty red pill….

Jesus was a misogynist, he should have selected 6 female disciples to balance the negative masculine energy….

I highly doubt this meme is christian

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“I always find it odd that my positions here find no shortage of attackers, yet someone so extreme as to “make conservative Christians look like morons” gets comparatively little pushback from other conservatives.”

Could be because other conservatives just choose to ignore him.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

or they are Cuckservatives aka fake christians.
That say murder is a sin
but think someone can go around campaigning for baby murder and still be called christian….

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

JohnM wrote: Could be because other conservatives just choose to ignore him. I downvote the more obnoxious posts from bdash, but most of what he says is on the level of bitterness and insult with very little content to even interact with. I’ve flagged several of his more aggressive insults. The part that I find dubious is Jonathan and MeMe’s attempt to suggest that bdash is somehow representative of thoughtful, unashamed Christian faith on this blog, or elsewhere. Jonathan and MeMe seem to want to interpret this entire blog through the lens of folks like bdash. The inevitable result is… Read more »

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I never said there is nothing wrong with having sex with a 14 year old
I think it is SICK and disgusting.
I asked you to show me where the bible calls it a sin

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

I’m glad you do. It’s the first time you’ve said anything like that. Here are your posts that led me to think otherwise: “what is wrong with that? Victorian morality is not Biblical morality? Remember the other choice if it is not Moore is to support those who think men sleeping with men is to be celebrated. why is that more moral than 14 year old sex?” “teenagers had sex in the bible I know you find it hard to believe but your daughter is a sexually capable woman open your eyes” “his morality is based on age! apparently having… Read more »

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

if voting to murder babies is not a sin,I am not worshiping the same God who died for our sins that you claim to worship

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

when people cannot logically refute something why would they respond. When they do- it can be good, broaden the mind or learn to better defend your case. When they don’t it does not matter. You should be glad people respond to you, it should help you master defending your point of view from anyone. Ignoring people who respond to you – because you think it is extreme is both weak and lazy ( if you were the original poster) had people debated the Alt right or Alt left and logically refuted them, they would have never grown this popular. but… Read more »

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I never said “men are not master liars”

everything else is logical
why is gay sex more moral than teen sex?
u have not demonstrated that.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

Come on bdash. I could say, “bdash is a sinner and should go to hell” without clarifying that my theology assumes the same as everyone, or “Pastor Wilson is an idiot” without clarifying that I think we’re all idiots, would be ridiculous.

You said “women are master liars” to explain why you believed Moore’s account and not theirs. It fits with a pattern of anti-woman attacks you have partaken in for a long time. If you just meant to say that you felt that way about everyone, you would have said, “people are master liars”.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

when it comes to sex, women have proven to lie more often than not….

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Less time than most here mate…
sounds like being Christian has no impact on ones beliefs or ideas…
interesting God you worship
sounds pretty weak

James Patrick Riley
7 years ago

In a related, breaking story, I found this very troubling..

https://www.jamespatrickriley.com/index.php/breaking-heterosexual-males-discovered-alabama/

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Was your problem with Kevin Spacey hitting on teenage boys that he was gay, or that they were teenagers?

Because if your only problem was that he was gay, then you sure seemed to focus a lot of extra effort on emphasizing that whole teenagers thing.

James Patrick Riley
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

You appear to be having basic reading comprehension problems. In a satire piece entitled “Kevin Spacey Opens Boys Drama Camp” you’re asking about the emphasis??

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Yes, it appears that you are emphasizing the youth aspect as well as the gender aspect of the Spacey allegations, no? That’s pretty elementary.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

teenagers had sex in the bible

I know you find it hard to believe
but your daughter is a sexually capable woman

open your eyes

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

With the other statements I’ve seen now about Moore’s behavior along with his shifting semi-denials, I’m strongly convinced that he is lying at least, and likely lying about his interactions with Leigh Corfman. “I was a deputy DA in Gadsen with Roy Moore. I have no doubt these stories have validity. Roy was known to eschew dating his own age and preferred teenagers. I challenge all of my colleagues in the Bar and on the bench at that time to come forward to support that Roy Moore should not be elected to represent the place of my birth and my… Read more »

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I’m quite grateful there are still some people in the world who can observe there is a huge power differential between a 30 yr old lawyer and a teen age girl. I take note of the fact that not only was Judge Moore known for dating teen agers, he eventually married one 14 years younger than him. So basically what we have here is a powerful man and a conservative Republican establishment lying about what their values really are, refusing to take accountability when they are questioned, and worse, demeaning and bearing false witness against some women who are most… Read more »

Dave
Dave
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, you really do need to stop your foolish typing. You can not be a SJW and a solid Christian man because the two are diametrically opposed. You continually push revisionist history as truth and think that settles the business when it doesn’t. You type huge amounts of blather that does nothing but show how big a fool you are. Why are other Alabamians saying that individuals were approached by the Washington Post with offers of big cash for dirt on Moore? Why don’t you cite them in your expose? Why didn’t you post that Corfman’s mom said there was… Read more »

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

Spot-on. And a liar. See his declaration of Moore as a “sexual molester” as soon as the news came out. Now he’s trying to deny it. And then there’s this statement: “If that article with that degree of evidence gets written in the middle of Obama’s campaign, there is no chance on God’s Green Earth that he is able to continue as a viable candidate. None.” This a patently absurd statement, given that the Washington Post would never post something like this about Obama. And if some conservative source did, the Jonathans and Clays of this world would write it… Read more »

MeMe
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart
JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  MeMe

Switch “man” and “woman” in the headline and then we’ll have some good satire.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

You actually think that Dave’s claims that the Civil War wasn’t about slavery, along with his quickness to regurgitate social media conspiracies as fact, is “spot on”?

Personally, I don’t repeat random conspiracies from social media, at all, unless the person is non-anonymous and has demonstrative reason to be trustworthy. None of Dave’s attacks have moved beyond that standard yet.

The rest of your false claims have already been well-covered above.

JP Stewart
JP Stewart
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“The rest of your false claims have already been well-covered above.”

And you’ve proven yourself to be a liar who attempts to tap dance out of foolish statements you’ve made.

We’re supposed to dismiss everything as a “random conspiracy” unless it comes from a Jonathan-approved source that’s (1) already endorsed Doug Jones (2) released similar 11th hour allegations before previous elections and (3) has a long history of agenda > facts when it comes to truth-telling:
https://townhall.com/columnists/mattbarber/2016/08/07/why-the-washington-post-has-no-credibility-n2202573

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JP Stewart

Teresa Jones, a deputy D.A. at the time, is on record by name saying that Roy Moore was known to troll the mall and target high school girls. Greg Legat, a mall employee at the time, is on record by name saying that he saw Roy Moore at the mall several times but was told by a police officer that Moore was banned from the mall and shouldn’t be there. He named that officer as J. D. Thomas. J.D. Thomas refused to comment for the story. He also mentioned his manager by name, Eddie Hill, but they haven’t been able… Read more »

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Dave

but you can
according to a lot here
me insisting that one cannot be an SJW democrat and be christian
was vile and extreme….

hilarious

I think murdering babies is vile and extreme but obviously I am in the minority on that among supposed believers here

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

bdash,

“I think murdering babies is vile and extreme but obviously I am in the minority on that among supposed believers here”

I don’t know what you base that on, because I think most here would agree that abortion is awful.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  OKRickety

when I said Democrats can;t be christian it proved most here think one can actively pursue God and baby murder at the same time

Ashley Winn
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

Oh my, this is quite a thread. So you all really believe you can’t be a Christian and vote Democrat. You all think abortion is the only issue Christian’s should care about? You all realize the government doesn’t actually require anyone to get an abortion, right? The responsibility for every abortion is with the person who chooses to have it. Meanwhile our Republican lead government is actively blocking refugees from coming here. Many, many of whom will die because our country is blocking them from coming here. The responsibility for that lies on your heads for continuing to vote into… Read more »

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Ashley Winn

irrational fear?
tell that to the girls who got raped by your refugees…

Malik
Malik
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

Whoa there bdash.  Let’s first say that I vote democrat and hate abortion.  Therefore, I vote democrat, only if pro abortion is not the issue they will push.  Great, no we have established that democrats aren’t all devel spawn, lol.  Now what is your deal with the refugees.  I didn’t hear about the rape thing, but you sound racist as heck.  Christians are supposed to be compassionate, right.  If girls got raped, that is awful, evil and terrible.  But it is the lesser of the two evils when the alternative is millions not being allowed in america for refuge and… Read more »

lndighost
lndighost
7 years ago
Reply to  Ashley Winn

Hi Ashley. Let me say first of all that I am not American and can therefore claim to be non-partisan. There are many things that Christians should care about. Killing babies in the womb is one of those things. The responsibility for every abortion is with the person who chooses to have it, and with the people who pressure her to have it, and with the people who perform it, and with the people who pay for it and with the people who vote to use public money to fund it and with the people who have so successfully brainwashed… Read more »

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  lndighost

Christians in the developed world should be concerned about terrorists?

wow
modern Christian men are so weak.
Allow rapists in their land …. all in the name of Godliness
hilarious

Katecho
Katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  bdash

If you switch around some of the nouns, the reasoning leaps come across just like MeMe’s. Not sure bdash really wants to take up such leaping habits.

bdash
bdash
7 years ago
Reply to  Katecho

tell that to the european girls who got raped by refugees

not a reasoning leap….

David Decker
David Decker
7 years ago

My how do you all have time to blather on and on. Get a job…or get a life outside this post please.

Malik
Malik
7 years ago
Reply to  David Decker

Sounds like you have no counter arguments

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

“they started creating new rights in 1965 and today we’ve got a problem.” – Roy Moore today

That’s not even a dog whistle, that’s a siren.

Looking for a life saver under the avalanche of allegations and he tosses THAT out???

Is there any serious, likely way to interpret that comment other than basically making a big shout-out for White Supremacy? I mean, it really looks that way on the surface, but to do such a thing would be so blatant and ridiculous that there has to be at least some fake pretend explanation as a cover story, right?

Malik
Malik
7 years ago

This case fits you biblical criteria. He was accused by three women, not one, which fits the two or three witnesses criteria. Then there is the fact that he was banned from the mall by the cops for being a creeper. This is someone no one should want in office. Whatever you think about the allegations, he was banned from the mall as a creeper. That is pretty apparent, and I believe disqualifies him from being fit for office.

OKRickety
OKRickety
7 years ago
Reply to  Malik

Malik,

“… he was banned from the mall as a creeper.”

If that’s an example of your knowledge of the facts, you failed miserably. There are allegations that he was banned from the mall, but only hearsay evidence has been provided. I think the same is also true for allegations that he was banned from certain stores at the mall.