Unbelievable. Crooks and Liars reports that a commenter over at Our Lady of the Concentration Camps's place says,
You know what I think? [The Tennessee church shooter] didn’t hate liberals. He hated Christians. He wanted to leave the impression that he is conservative who hates liberals, however, to discredit conservatives.I guess that's why he had all those right-wing books in his house, and decided to shoot up a liberal gay-friendly not-exactly-Christian church, huh?
Yes, I know that one comment on one blog does not represent much, but it shows, doesn't it, the frantic, desperate lengths to which these people are going to go to deny the obvious: this murderer is one of their creations.
More at Instaputz.





7 Responses:
The article Malkin links to waves its hand at the liberal-hate this guy had and suggests focusing on the "fact" that he hated Christianity.
It's still all the "liberals" faults.
Oh for the love of GAWD..
WTF is it with 'these' people? The friggin liberals are to blame for everything from the common cold to hurricanes.
I friggin' knew this would happen. I'm going to have to dig up some links where these people rail against the UUs for being anti-Christian.
UUs aren't just 'not exactly Christian', they're NOT Christian. They do not believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ. *sigh*
Not only that, it would appear that NOBODY in the Unitarian congregation was packing heat and thus the gunman was taken down - literally and physically by a group rushing the man - but not killed in retaliation.
That in itself, the refusal to bear arms in church or possibly, anywhere else, will certainly be part and parcel of the spin that the right-wing pundits will spew.
"Those damned traitorous tree-hugging, gay-loving, war-hating libruls. They're just asking for it."
Yup. Those religious fundamentalist right-wing Cons are just brimming over with the soured milk of evangelical kindness.
They do not believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ
On the whole that's true, but not being a UU myself I hesitate in generalizing about them -- hence my phraseological hedging.
There are "UU's" that may believe in the divinity of Christ but would be a very small minority. There are many, however, that would consider themselves "Christian".
That sounds kind of like 9/11. Those weren't actually muslims on those planes, they were just christians trying to make islam look bad.
Makes perfect sense.
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