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Thesis # 7 = The Word of God supports absolute authority,
rather than democracy
"It is imperative that the Southern (i.e. conservative, white
Christian) people stand against abolitionism, democracy, and equalitarianism."
"God has further ordained rulers over men in society. Romans 13:1, 'Let every soul be subject to the higher powers. For there is no power but of God; the
powers that be are ordained of God. Whosoever resists the power, resists the
ordinance of God.' And lest we think that God sanctions democracy as the only
righteous form of government, we should read the words of the Apostle Peter as
given to him by the Holy Spirit, 'Honor all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God.
Honor the King.' (I Peter 2:17) Thus God Himself acknowledges the authority of a
king."
What this spokesman of Christian Conservatism is referring to is a very important, famous, and controversial passage from the favorite biblical author of Conservatives, Paul of Tarsus, who gave the following perfectly clear instructions, regarding obedience to one's political leaders, no matter how evil they may be, (because 'there is no authority except from God') :
Letter to the Romans 13:1-7
'Let every person be subject to the governing authorities; for there is no authority except from God, and those authorities that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore whoever resists authority resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment. For rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad. Do you wish to have no fear of the authority? Then do what is good, and you will receive its approval;
for it is God's servant for your good. But if you do what is wrong, you should be afraid, for the authority does not bear the sword in vain! It is the servant of God to execute wrath on the wrongdoer.
Therefore one must be subject, not only because of wrath but also because of conscience.
For the same reason you also pay taxes, for the authorities are God's servants, busy with this very thing.
Pay to all what is due them-taxes to whom taxes are due, revenue to whom revenue is due, respect to whom respect is due, honor to whom honor is due. '
Anybody who really believes that this passage is divinely inspired and inerrant has no choice but to argue for "the divine right", not just of the kings of history, but of modern tyrants like Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Ho Chi Min, Castro, Milosovich, Saddam Hussein and all the other monsters to stay in power for as long as God allows. Far from allowing anyone to try to remove such rulers, this "Word of God" compels "Christians" to respect and obey such rulers : "there is no authority except from God, and those authorities that exist have been instituted by God. . . Therefore, whoever resists authority resists what God has appointed." Paul doesn't allow for the slightest bit of "interpretation". He drives home his point over and over again, that we should treat any and all rulers as God's very own appointees to whatever office they hold, be it governor, king, emperor, president, prime minister, secretary general, or Führer. No "if's", "and's" or "but's" !
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"Therefore, the equalitarians and their Abolitionist allies are quite wrong in their particular conception of 'all men being equal.'
As Christians we must also reject the idea that each person is an independent integer whose place in society can be reckoned without regard to his family
heritage, family history, religion, economic status, personal abilities,
language, nationality, etc. These things are considered important at various
places in the Bible, so we should acknowledge their value as well.
. . (regarding) the legal and moral state of affairs in
America after 130 years of Abolitionist rule. People no longer define
righteousness or unrighteousness in terms of God's law. Instead, a new code of
law called civil rights, or human rights, is the standard by which
behavior is defined. Anyone who refuses to conform is persecuted as wicked,
vile, immoral, and evil.
Thus the present-day Abolitionists charge their enemies with the same
indictments as did their predecessors against the antebellum slave owner. This
is because their perspective has never changed. They believe in equality as
though it will singularly usher in the Millennium. They further hold to the
deification of democracy as that political order best suited to promote a world
of peace in which there are no classes, no national divisions, and no inherent
authority.
As F.W. Schnitzler has stated,
'Democracy in America, too, has been twisted and shaped to suit the purposes of the myth-makers. The "secularization of history" has
stripped America of its religious history and leaves us believing that
democracy alone is to be credited for the blessings this nation has enjoyed.
Democracy, in and of itself, however, is a valueless form of government. It
does not imply, suggest, or impart moral, ethical, or religious values,
blessings, or benefits. It merely proposes a political process or procedure
whereby the actual feelings and demands of the majority can be determined and
satisfied, whether right or wrong.'
Despite the pleading of the self-righteous equalitarians, we need to remain steadfast in our assertions that God has ordained order, authority, submission
thereunto, class, nationality, language, station, and several other divisions
among the peoples of the world. These matters guide our lives. Abolitionists
continue to deny the existence of any of the God-ordained divisions in the
world. Their creed of "unity, brotherhood, and equality" is sounded throughout
the earth. Yet, in this they stand in rebellion toward the God who created them
and ordained the manner in which the earth is to function.
It is imperative that the Southern (i.e. Conservative Christian) people stand against Abolitionism, democracy, and equalitarianism. We must interpret life in the manner God has
interpreted for us in the Bible. Our forefathers died for that interpretation of
life. And it is to be our guiding light as we enter the 21st century and prepare
for our independent nationhood.
Conclusion.
We Southerners (i.e. white Christian Conservatives) have have been bequeathed a theological and philosophical heritage that is a marvel to the rest of the world. We are nonetheless a weak people at present because, as a people, we have not walked in the ways of our
God. False doctrine and mischievous heresies permeate the South. It remains, however, that of the things for which we ought to repent, none of them are to be found in the charges of the Abolitionists - from the 1860s or the 1990s.
Southerners who are not (Conservative) Christians need to repent of their sins, accept Christ as their Savior and Lord, and determine to follow in the (enslavement) ways of the God of their fathers, the God of the Bible.
We Southerners who are Christians need to re-double our efforts at
helping others of our number to live righteous lives, become informed concerning
the truth, thereby enabling them to render aid to others.
The forces of Humanism are strong, but our God is far stronger. There can be no doubt that the Humanists of today, who permeate our land, are totally
motivated to stamp out every vestige of the Christian religion from our society.
Nonetheless, we need not fear them because there is no power in the universe
which can rival the anger of Almighty God. Once He turns on our enemies, they
will be crushed. He will help us in this way, but we must first walk according
to His commands, trust Him for our personal and national sustenance, while
endeavoring to point others towards Him and His kingship over the earth.
Thomas 'Stonewall' Jackson, whose memory is still revered in the South, was a Christian man who I do not believe would disagree with one word written in this
report. The same could be said of Robert E. Lee, General Nathan Bedford Forest, (founder of the K K K)
and, going back even further, George Washington and James Madison.
Within these
pages I have laid out to the best of my ability, the ideals which made America
great and made the Confederacy the object of respect the world over. We are the
sons and daughters of the Confederacy. It is our duty to carry forward, not only
the memory, but also the ideology, of our forefathers. The ideas contained
herein are our blueprint.
In the mid-1990s, pro-Southern groups are beginning to spring up all over our
nation. We stand, not at the end of history, as some have suggested, but we have
been placed at the crossroads of history. The success of our war against the
forces of evil will set the stage for the next 500 years of Western chronology.
The forces of Humanism, Abolitionism, Democracy, and Equalitarianism, against which the Confederates fought so valiantly, need to be engaged again today. Not
on the field of battle, but in the definitive arena of ideas.
The government in Washington is crumbling morally and fiscally. Still, it
continues to pile wickedness on top of wickedness - by its Civil Rights Act, by
its Voting Rights Act, by its Martin Luther King Day, by its toleration of
violent crime, by its welfare payments which necessitate theft through
tyrannical taxation, by allowing sodomites to parade through the streets and to
sit in high places of governmental power, by allowing and encouraging abortion
on demand, by refusing to protect our borders from the third-world invasion, by
publicly demonizing our Confederate forefathers, by allowing the continual
humiliation and denigration of the Southern people, by continually glorying in
the Abolitionists victories in both the Civil War of the 1860s and the Civil
Rights War of the 1960s, and lastly, by attempting to stamp out our national
existence as Southerners by working to tear our flag off of the flags of the
states where we live.
These sins, and many others must be brought to account. For Washington has been weighed in the balance and found wanting. Its days are numbered.
By the end of this decade I believe that Washington's internal weaknesses -
both moral and financial - will manifest themselves plainly. The entire
Socialist-Humanist experiment which it has undertaken will come crashing down
around its heads. The federal government has promised that it can regulate every
facet of our lives, manage all of our resources, regulate all of our businesses,
decide best how our money is to be spent, and still provide for every person's
basic 'needs.' They can not. That will become painfully obvious when
Washington's debt crisis brings it to its knees. The dollar will become
virtually worthless. Unemployment will skyrocket. And almost no one will be
protected from the anarchy which will then follow.
At that point, the Southern people will still be here, working the Southern
land, speaking that sweet Southern drawl, and prepared to take our rightful
place at the table of nations (i.e. races).
We are not revolutionaries, but we are the true America. We are the loyal
people, not because we are loyal to a government, but because we are loyal to
the ideals upon which America was founded. We represent all that is good about
America, while the government in Washington, and especially the Clinton
Administration, stands for all that is vile and unholy.
Determine that you are going to join in our worthy crusade to re-establish
our nation (i.e. white Southern race) and to be a force for God's righteousness in our land. By working
together, and claiming the blessings of Almighty God upon our efforts, we can
build a legacy which will glorify our God and be something of which our grand children can be proud."
These Conservative Christians do indeed have a legacy. But, why be proud of :
- all of the activities of the many "Christian Knights of the Ku Klux Klan".
- some 2400 African Americans lynched by Bible-belt Christians in the hundred years following the Civil War.
- thousands of white Christian lynchers being celebrated as heroes by their white Christian communities, instead of being convicted of murder in the first degree; (only 49 of these cold-blooded murderers were ever even indicted and only 4 were ever convicted and sentenced.)
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Thesis # 8 = "Civil governments derive their powers from God" :
The Covenant Between God and Civil Governments.
"Dabney argued that ultimately, civil governments derive their powers from God for the protection of the people under their care. After arguing against the
"Social Contract" theory of civil government, Dabney made the following remarks,
'The other theory may be called the Christian. It
traces civil government to the will and providence of God, who, from the
first, created man with social instincts and placed him under social
relations... If asked, whence the obligation to obey the civil magistrate, it
answers: from the will of God, which is the source of all obligation... Hence,
civil government is an ordinance of God; magistrates rule by His providence
and by His command, and are His agents or ministers.'
Dabney also realized that from a human perspective, the political power of the civil government came from the people being governed, and did not reside in the rulers themselves,
. . . 'while we emphatically ascribe the fact of civil
government and the obligation to obey it, to the will of God, we also assert
that in the secondary sense, the government is, potentially, the people. The
original source of the power, the authority and the obligation to obey it, is
God, the human source is not an irresponsible Ruler, but the body of the ruled
themselves, that is, the sovereignty, so far as it is human, resides in the
people, and is held by the rulers, by delegation from them."
[ Pray tell how the above differs from the "Social Contract" theory which Dabney professes to repudiate,]
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Thesis # 9 To OPPOSE slavery is to go against God's Word :
"In any discussion on Confederate theology a position on slavery is of crucial importance. The first problem encountered on the subject is that it is so very
highly charged with emotion from the outset. Virtually everyone begins with the
presupposition that slavery is wrong, evil, vile, and immoral. This leads to no
discussion at all, for if slavery is all of the above, then what point could
there possibly be for discussing it further?
A. Considered Biblically.
Therefore, the first order of business is to examine the presupposition that slavery is immoral. For if that is ever found to be fallacious, then the entire
course of American history needs to be rethought.
As with any moral issue, the Christian must begin with the Bible. For this is the ultimate source of our ethical system, as the Bible is nothing less than God
speaking to us. As previously quoted from the Westminster Confession of Faith,
'The whole counsel of God concerning all things
necessary for His own glory, man's salvation, faith and life, is either
expressly set down in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be
deduced from Scripture. . . The supreme judge by which all controversies of
religion are to be determined, and all decrees of councils, opinions of
ancient writers, doctrines of men, and private spirits, are to be examined,
and in whose sentence we are to rest, can be no other but the Holy Spirit
speaking in the Scripture.'
In the preceding section it was shown that slavery was a religious matter, and so we must begin with the Bible to form our opinions about it. For
everything, and this excludes nothing, which the Christian believes to be good
or evil, must be received as such from the Holy Scriptures. All things which man
needs for his life are to be found there. As James Henley Thornwell declared,
'The Bible, and the Bible alone, is her [the Church's]
rule of faith and practice. She can announce what it teaches, enjoin what it
commands, prohibit what it condemns... Beyond the Bible she can never go, and
apart from the Bible she can never speak. To the law and to the testimony, and
to them alone, she must always appeal; and when they are silent it is her duty
to put her hand upon her lips.'
For instance, why is murder wrong? The answer is because God has forbidden it
in His Word. Why are prostitution and adultery immoral? Because they are
forbidden in the Bible. Why is stealing wrong? Because God has forbidden it in
Scripture.
So, what of the institution of domestic slavery? Is it forbidden in
Scripture? Does the Bible speak of it as a vile evil which must be expunged from
the earth by any means necessary? The answer to these questions is simply, "No."
Colossians 4:1 states, "Masters, grant to your slaves justice and fairness,
knowing that you too have a Master in heaven."
Ephesians 6:5 enjoins, "Slaves, be obedient to those who are your master
according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, in the sincerity of your heart,
as to Christ."
In Luke 7 a centurion slaveholder sent his servants to ask Jesus to heal his
slave. Not once did Christ condemn the man for being a master, but after healing
his slave the Lord commended the master for his Christian character with these
words, "I say to you, not even in Israel have I found such great faith."
In Genesis 16:9, we see the angel of the Lord say to a runaway slave, "Return
to your mistress, and submit yourself to her authority."
B. Thornwell's Defense.
The Bible has a great deal to say about the subject of slavery besides these
four verses. None of it, however, pours any contempt upon the institution. Again
quoting Thornwell,
'Certain it is that no direct condemnation of Slavery
can anywhere be found in the Sacred Volume. A social element in all States,
from the dawn of history until the present period, if it be the crying and
damning sin which its enemies represent it to be, it is truly amazing that the
Bible... nowhere gives the slightest caution against this tremendous evil. The
master is nowhere rebuked as a monster of cruelty and tyranny... The manner in
which the relation is spoken of and its duties prescribed... convey the
impression that they [Biblical writers, i. e. prophets, apostles, etc.]
themselves had not the least suspicion that they were dealing with a subject
full of abominations and outrages.'
There were those who argued against slavery on the grounds of compassion with
Biblical maxims such as: do unto others as you would have them do unto
you. In answer to these Thornwell replied,
'The same principle which would make the master
emancipate his servant on the ground of benevolence, would make the rich man
share his estates with his poor neighbor... it is enough for a Christian man
who compares Scripture with Scripture, to know that Slavery is expressly
excepted from the application of this or any other principle in the sweeping
sense of the Abolitionists.'
The fact that a Christian treats another person in the manner in which he would want to be treated does not do away with all offices of authority. This
was, however, the argument of the Abolitionist. For instance, fathers are enjoined in Scripture to use the rod in raising their children. The Abolitionist-type argument against this would logically be, "You shouldn't spank your child, do unto others as you would have them do unto you. You wouldn't want
him to beat you, would you?"
Thornwell saw the spuriousness of such an argument: The words of the golden rule are to be fitted into the social structure of society and are not meant to supplant it.
Dabney also had some good ideas on this logical fallacy of the Abolitionists,
''The whole reasoning of the Abolitionist proceeds on the absurd idea, that any caprice or vain desire we might entertain towards our fellowman, if we were in is place, and he in ours, must be the rule of our conduct towards him, whether the desire would be in itself right or not...
On this rule, a parent who, were he a child again, would be wayward and self-indulgent, commits a clear sin in restraining or punishing the waywardness of his child, for this is doing the opposite or what he would wish were he again the child. Judge and sheriff commit a criminal murder in condemning and executing the most atrocious felon; for were they on the gallows themselves, the overmastering love of life would very surely prompt them to desire release.'
Concerning those Christians who were intent on condemning the institution of slavery despite the fact that they had no Biblical basis for such assertions, Thornwell had these words,
'They seem much more like apologists for the defects
and omissions of the Scriptures, than like humble inquirers sitting at the
feet of Jesus to learn His will. They have settled it in their own minds that
Slavery is a sin; then the Bible must condemn it, and they set to work to make
out the case that the Bible has covertly and indirectly done what they feel it
ought to have done.'
Thus from a Biblical point of view, we can find no condemnation of the
institution of slavery, nor, by extension, of the Southern nation (i.e. white Southern race). For although
clear and odious abuses of slaves by their masters did sometimes occur, this
same type of sin is also committed in our present-day society by those holding
authority over others. To reject the institution of slavery on the basis of the
occasional abuses within the institution, would logically require that we
overthrow all authority in every institution because abuses occur within every
institution and within every relationship. We can therefore state
authoritatively that the slander and ridicule which has been heaped upon us
because of slavery has been unbiblical, self-righteous, hypocritical, and
Pharisaical. Regardless of how many people believe that our forefathers were
intrinsically wicked because they owned slaves, those condemnations carry no
moral weight whatsoever! "
Michael Hill, who founded the League of the South in 1988 reflected these views when he wrote to members of his organization in 1998:
"The day of Southern guilt is over - THE SOUTH WAS RIGHT - and let us not forget that salient fact. NO APOLOGIES FOR SLAVERY should be made. In both the Old and New Testaments slavery is sanctioned and regulated according to God's word. Thus, when practiced in accord with Holy Scripture, it is NOT A SIN. Our ancestors were not evil men because they held slaves. This issue is our Achilles Heel, and the only way to deal with it is to confront our accusers boldly and without guilt. After all, what we are really upholding is GOD'S WORD. Let us fear Him, and we'll fear no man."
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Thesis # 10 = The enslaving of non-Christian black Africans by
White European Christians was the best thing
that could have happened to them :
"It has also been alleged that slavery systematically ripped apart black
families and blood ties. This is absurd as the nuclear family was essentially an
unknown element to black society. Again the words of Dabney are pertinent,
'Another charge against us is that our laws abrogated the rights of marriage among slaves, authorized their capricious separation by
masters, and thus consigned them to promiscuous concubinage, like that of
beasts... That is, first, a monstrous perversion of the facts, in that the
Africans never had any marital rights or domestic institutions to be deprived
of. Have men forgotten, that in their native country there was no marriage,
and no marriage law, but the negroes either lived in vagrant concubinage, or
held their plurality of wives as slaves, to be either sold or slain at will?'
Little has changed as the greatest social problem facing African-Americans today is their lack of a family structure. Studies show that about 65 percent of
African-American children are born out of wedlock. And of those who do get married, the divorce rate is twice as high as it is among whites, which is quite high in its own right."
(Narratives of the time) "consistently portray an amazingly, to our modern eyes, benign picture of Southern plantation life. Affection for former masters and mistresses is expressed in terms of unmistakable devotion. Testimony to the good treatment,
and kindness, and gentleness of many so-called heartless slave-owners, abounds.
Many of the old slaves express a wistful desire to get back to the plantation.
Slave life to them, according to their own words, was a life of plenty, of
simple pleasures, of food, and clothes, and good medical care. There is no
pervasive cry of rage and anguish. There is no general expression of bitterness
or outrage. Instead, what you find on page after page are protestations of
affection for a condition that most of us have thought that every slave despised.
Overwhelmingly, there is a positive view of slavery set forth."
"The anger and the rage over slavery in the African-American community has originated since the time of the War Between the States and since the time of
the Great Depression. It is, in fact, a product of the Civil Rights movement.
Similarly to other communist social crusades, the Civil Rights movement has
encouraged a systematic class and ethnic warfare between African-Americans and
Southerners (i.e. white Christian Conservatives), and all of this has been undertaken in the name of justice, equality, and unity."
"Despite the facts and the testimony of an array of scholars, the loud,
wild-eyed, half-crazed fictions of African-American leaders and their
Abolitionist fellow-travelers continue to be heard in this land. They speak over
and over about how badly slaves were treated and how wicked our forefathers were
for manhandling them in such a manner, along with how much we owe them for their
trouble. The facts, nonetheless, demonstrate that the most fortunate event in
the history of the Africans now in America occurred on the day an ancestor of
theirs was brought to this land. Never before had they experienced such freedom
or humane treatment at the hands of another human being. Never before had they
been given the opportunity to experience the fruits and joys of Christian
civilization.
Virginia was the first political jurisdiction to outlaw the slave trade. This
was done in 1778. None of the Southern states trafficked in slaves. That business was a Northern business.
The consensus of opinion, in Virginia and the South, was that if a person was
already a slave, and recognized as such by the law of the commonwealth, then it
was perfectly legitimate, and many times compassionate, to purchase said
individual. Our people bought those already enslaved, and this was a benefit for
both parties.
2. The Complicity of Blacks in the Slave Trade.
It needs to be reiterated that the Africans have always been treated most
brutally by other Africans, and this is as true today as ever. The slaves in
America had virtually all been sold to Europeans by Africans. Although, slavery
was outlawed in America in the 1860s, slavery continued to be practiced legally
in Africa until the 1960s, and is still practiced today on that continent,
albeit without statutory sanction."
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Thesis # 11 = The Civil War won't be over until
the true Conservative Christianity of the South triumphs
not just there but throughout the rest of the country :
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"At the time of the War Between the States, the Southern people were a Christian people. We had faults and sins which were widely practiced and needed
vast improvement, but all things considered, our forefathers were a Christian people.
The War Between the States was not merely a quarrel over slavery. There were far deeper philosophical and theological issues at stake of which slavery was
merely one manifestation. Something dark and sinister had occurred in many of
the churches in the North. These churches had repudiated historic Christian
doctrine and had turned to the philosophical and ethical tenants of, first,
Unitarianism, and later, Transcendentalism. Professor Douglas Floyd Kelly writes,
Dabney firmly believed that the War was caused by the French Revolution `Jacobin' principles of New England Unitarian abolitionists and their liberal
congressional `hacks,' who wished to turn the original constitutional republic
with its emphasis on state and local power into a secularized, centralized democratic power.
In some ways we can view the Civil War as America's version of the French Revolution, as from a Humanist impetus, the North waged a bitter and bloody war
on the Christian moral order which existed in the South.
The Northern victory was nothing more nor less than the violent overthrow of the Christian moral order upon which America was founded in 1776.
New England Unitarianism had been greatly influenced by the principles of the French Revolution which identified the ideal of unity with the ideal of
equality. This equalitarianism demanded that the institution of slavery be abolished.
The Bible teaches that creation reflects its Creator . . .
God is One and God is Many. So it is with mankind. There is one mankind who are all of one blood (Acts 17:26, "And He made of one blood, every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth. . ."). However, mankind
has been divided by God Himself into subsets called nations (i.e. races). The ninth, tenth,
and eleventh chapters of Genesis (tower of Babel) tell of this operation taking place. Then,
Deuteronomy 32:8 gives a commentary on what has already happened, "When the Most
High gave the nations their inheritance, when He separated the sons of man, He
set the boundaries of the peoples. . ."
Trinitarians have no compulsion to unify mankind because the God with whom we have unity in Christ is the One who has separated the human race into distinct and differing nations (i.e. races). (Translation : Conservative Christians of the white race aren't interested in promoting justice and equality for all races.)
Unitarians, on the other hand, have no unity with God because they reject the Lord Jesus Christ." [Sadly, Mr. Wheeler has forgotten the commandment against bearing false witness against others, as it is totally false to claim that "Unitarians" all reject the Lord Jesus Christ.] "Thus, their entire scheme of righteousness is bound in their ability to unify mankind. This departure from the Christian faith in many New England churches was the main catalyst for the social conditions which led to the Civil War. By denying the divinity of both Christ and the Holy Spirit, the Unitarians became monistic. This one-sided view of God as a unity only, led them to falsely assume that mankind should be unified as well. This drove them to disavow God's world order as established early in mankind's history. The implication of this in society was quite simple. They needed to replace God's world order of separate peoples and nations (i.e. races) with a new world order of universal government and the unmitigated unity of mankind.
The abolitionist movement was merely the first salvo in the war to destroy God's world order in America. This war continues today. The United Nations is its propagator."
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Notice
This is to remind the reader that we "Liberals Like Christ" are providing most of the material on this page, not because we agree with it, but in order to show our readers where conservatives get the wierd political and/or sociological positions that they embrace and promoite, i.e. wierd theological and/or philosophical ideas.
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Back to the list of Theses |