Comment

Whole Foods Caves in to Pressure from Bigot Brigade, Cancels Ramadan Promo - Update: Whole Foods Clarifies, Continues Promo

120
LeftyRambles2413 (HappyWarrior)8/09/2011 11:46:15 am PDT

re: #114 Atlas Fails

What amazes me is how little empathy formerly persecuted groups seem to have for the current bogeyman of the week. While Catholics never faced the discrimination of blacks or Jews in this country, they were viewed as outsiders who were trendy to hate for a time (hence the rise of the Know-Nothings.) Now, I go to church and see cars with bumper stickers that say things like “One Big Mistake America” in the parking lot. Some of my church’s members attend TP rallies and blather on about it to me, because I keep my politics to myself and I guess they assume I care about theirs (I don’t.)

Most Catholics voted for Obama and still support him, albeit by a narrow margin. But there is a sizable conservative element that is extremely hostile to gays, Muslims, and those who are pro-choice. I’m pro-life myself, but some of the rhetoric is waaay over the top. I was in Catholic elementary school during the election of 2000, and our teacher told us she was voting for Bush, because Gore wanted to kill babies. I went home crying, thinking that Al Gore was going to kill my baby sister. Shades of Jesus Camp.


I know what you mean about pro life. I’ve felt a conflict about the issue for a while and I too had a sibling who was born around the 2000 election. I could never relate to my more conservative Catholics friends’ families. We’re talking Alan Keyes types here. I always felt a little looked down upon since my upbringing wasn’t religious at all. But my great uncle was a priest and my dad and his siblings went to Catholic school so I still feel culturally Catholic due to my heritage.