Lemon Drop wrote:
[quote=DeusxMac]
[quote=hal]
Damn - live and let live - don't confuse victims with crappy politicians.
Why do you think those "crappy politicians" continuously respond to these deaths with
"Thoughts and prayers"?
Because they know that's what the "victims"
want to hear.
This is a nonsense response. Joe Biden is one of the strongest presidents we have had on gun control. His first impulse in these terrible situations, as a practicing Catholic , is to offer prayers of condolence to the victims.
The "good" politicians offer "thoughts and prayers" for the same reason as the bad ones; it's what's wanted and expected by a sufficient percentage of their supporters
Lemon Drop wrote: Why is it so hard to hold both these ideas?
What you are confusing it with is politicians who actively oppose gun safety legislation, and their only comment is "praying for the victims," or "we need to harden the doors." It's not their religious expression that it is the problem, it is the failure to take meaningful action to reduce violence.
The issue is the flawed, and more critically counterproductive mindset that "prayers" have, and will have any actual ability to alleviate
future carnage.
Lemon Drop wrote: If you make the prayer the problem, you are doing nothing to solve this serious issue.
It's the outward manifestation of the "belief", a self-deception that praying will have some magical effect on:
- Changing the minds of the "God, Guns, Grits, and Gravy" zealots
- Changing the minds of the politicians who lust for the votes of those zealots
- Changing the minds of the gun manufacturers
- Changing the minds of individuals set on killing others