Comment

Indiana GOP Pushes Bill to Mandate TWO Invasive Ultrasounds

98
stabby2/21/2013 3:10:46 pm PST

re: #91 FemNaziBitch

That’s an interesting insight

So people whose religious beliefs have them do cruel or evil things:
1) feel some discomfort in that role
2) feel some discomfort for being hated for being evil
3) can’t blame their religion or themselves, if they were capable of that level of independence they wouldn’t be cruel fanatics.
4) so they blame their victims
5) in any case they feel like victims themselves, not of their beliefs, not of (what they believe to be) God’s commands, but of people who judge them for doing objectively evil things.

It’s funny. I don’t think religious terrorists feel the same way. They’re higher on their belief in their specialness, their own holiness. And they don’t think of their victims as human at all, so they don’t feel victimized by their victims’ opinions…

But I wonder if there might be some cases of overlap.