by Pa Rock
Citizen Journalist
Rightwing noisemaker Laura Loomer, a fringe provocateur who has Trump's ear (the good one, not the one he scratched in Pennsylvania), has been on a tear over the last several days bitching about children in Gaza who are suffering war wounds and birth defects caused by the war, and are being flown to the US for medical treatment. In a just and civilized world her hateful rhetoric about the US squandering medical resources on someone other than bonafide Americans would be dumped into a dirty toilet and then flushed into the sewer where it belongs, but in our MAGA dominated alternate universe where white makes right, she is actually influencing official government policy.
After Loomer spent several days stirring up the crazies, the US State Department relented and announced on Saturday that it was pausing all individual visitor visas from Gaza - including those of badly injured children. The next day, Sunday, Loomer posted her disgust with even that move on"X":
"The GAZA visas don't need to be temporarily halted. They need to be TERMINATED FOREVER."
It is unclear at this time whether Loomer poured her hate slop onto the internet before or after her church services on Sunday.


2 comments:
Humanity and Christianity don't necessarily go together. I have often thought that is a puzzle. I wonder if someone is a bad Christian or if Christianity is not as good as it's purported to be. I lean toward the latter. What's that saying? “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 don't think it really takes religion. I think it takes the inability to see how your logical falicies shape your life. If MAGAns considered that, they wouldn't be MAGAns. I believe the same goes for religions. Well, Laura Loomer is either a hypocrite or a fool. Either way, she's in the bad people section.
Rock, if that doesn't get a response, nobody's at home.
A perspective from 10,000 feet reveals that most of the horrid examples of Christianity take place when it assumes the trappings of government.
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