The Right is Wrong. Again!

Evidently, last week, Pat Robertson’s CBN website posted some bullshit. This isn’t exactly news because the tinfoil hat-wearing asstards over there are always posting some bullshit. However, this was bullshit that made most of the rest of the Religious Reich look at them and go, “Homosaywhat?” Evidently, according to one Kimberly Daniels, the entire Halloween candy supply has been “dedicated and prayed over by witches.”

Um, homosaywhat?

Seriously? It’s not bad enough that the main Christian holidays were, as has been said a eleventy-pi times, stolen by the Catholic church and Jeezified so as to make the filthy pagans come worship where they were told and to the god they were told to worship, but now this crazy bitch is going after the fucking candy? Woman needs to take her meds. And the CBN pulled the “story” (well, it really is a story, but it’s pure, unadulterated fiction) within hours of it going live. Someone had a lucid moment, evidently.

This piece of crap “reporting” was balanced by a well-done post by Vin Suprynowicz. I tend to not read a lot of political blogs (I have a hard enough time keeping up with a half-dozen podcasts), but when Brett posted this link to Facebook, I went and read. And giggled. And cackled with glee. It made me happy. Of course, some people may take umbrage with it. That’s fine; take as much as you want. More will be made, I’m sure.

What does umbrage look like, I wonder? I’m guessing it’s remarkably similar to a glass swan. And we all know that CBN and the rest of the Religious Wrong is pumpin’ out enough of those that they’ll scrape the Sahara to bedrock in a couple of weeks.

Blogged under Politics,Spiritual by Jeremy on Tuesday 3 November 2009 at 12:18 am

Leave a Reply

People I know
Gold 'n' Purls
Miss Meliss
UltraMundane
HizKnits
Cafe Writing
My mom's blog



SparkPeople
Ravelry
Hulu
The Rules


Men and the Goddess
The Wild Hunt
WitchesBrewHaHa

Kickass Sites
The Panopticon
Men Who Knit
Wil Wheaton Dot Net
ShrinkGeek

Graphics made by
Creator

Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional