Saturday, January 10, 2015

Bryan Fischer and the Gospel of Genocide

Via WRSA


The Bible instructs us that a dog will inevitably return to his vomit, and a sow will eventually resume wallowing in the mire. In similar fashion, Bryan Fischer of the American Family Association cannot free himself from the habit of making incomprehensibly foolish and brazenly bigoted statements in defense of the quasi-genocidal dispossession of the American Indians.

“The native American tribes at the time of the European settlement and founding of the United States were, virtually without exception, steeped in the basest forms of superstition, had been guilty of savagery in warfare for hundreds of years, and practiced the most debased forms of sexuality,” Fischer asserted in a February 2011 column.

He insists that “the superstition, savagery and sexual immorality of native Americans” left them “morally disqualified from sovereign control of American soil” – which is now properly the possession of Euro-Americans by right of “conquest.”


Since “the Europeans proved superior in battle, taking possession of contested lands through right of conquest,” purchasing Indian lands on mutually beneficial terms was desirable, but not necessary. Violent conquest was a form of redemption, Fisher maintains, given the irremediable wickedness of the red-skinned heathens who populated North America and the virtuousness of the European settlers who were brought here to “Christianize” the indigenous population.

2 comments:

  1. My question about dealing with Good vs. Evil is to bring it to the here and now - War has been declared on our way of life, so what are we going to do about it?
    http://pamelageller.com/atlas_shrugskosher-vs-halal/

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    Replies
    1. what are we going to do about it?

      The latest killings have brought more calls for action, but I'm afraid they will fade until there comes a time when there is a cataclysmic event.

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