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Top Evangelical Leader Calls Anti-Gay Nashville Statement ‘An Expression of Love’

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Albert Mohler says he and his fellow evangelicals have “been called upon to clarify … and specify what the Bible teaches about human sexuality, marriage, and what it means to be made male and female.”

One of America’s top evangelical leaders is calling a new anti-LGBT policy statement signed by 150 notable Christian far right conservatives “an expression of love.” Albert Mohler, the President of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and a highly-influential Christian evangelical leader, made his remarks in a Washington Post op-ed on published Sunday. 

The Nashville Statement draws a line in the sand against LGBT people, especially against those who are married to persons of the same-sex, and against transgender people.

“WE DENY that God has designed marriage to be a homosexual, polygamous, or polyamorous relationship,” one portion of the Nashville Statement, which is structured with affirmations and condemnations, says.

“WE DENY that any affections, desires, or commitments ever justify sexual intercourse before or outside marriage; nor do they justify any form of sexual immorality,” says another.

“WE DENY that adopting a homosexual or transgender self-conception is consistent with God’s holy purposes in creation and redemption,” reads one of the more offensive ones.

“WE AFFIRM that it is sinful to approve of homosexual immorality or transgenderism and that such approval constitutes an essential departure from Christian faithfulness and witness,” reads another.

Mohler, however, insists these are not words of hate, but of love.

“This past week I was part of an effort that put America’s theological and moral fault lines fully in view,” Mohler writes in the Post. “I was a signer of something called the Nashville Statement, a document adopted by a group of evangelical Christians seeking to reaffirm traditional Christian values on sexuality.”

He says “the vitriol in response to our document showed why such clarification is necessary.”

Without considering why so many Americans and people around the world are angry, upset, hurt, disgusted, or have just decided that the Christian right has lost any credibility it may once have had, Mohler does exercises the very un-Christian response and defends his work.

One of the most intense lines of criticism was that we, signers of the document, dismiss the pain and suffering of those who live outside those historic Biblical sexual norms. That we weren’t acknowledging the rejection they feel in the church and were making their sins appear more significant than our own,” Mohler admits. 

He also does not address why same-sex marriage, gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people are his targets, along with those who support the right of a woman to choose to have an abortion.

Why not speak to divorce? Inequality? Immigration? Economic challenges? 

Why not speak to the historic Hurricane Harvey, which Mohler’s group was apparently unaware was ravaging Texas and Louisiana as they were releasing their statement attacking LGBT people.

In releasing the Nashville Statement, we in fact are acting out of love and concern for people who are increasingly confused about what God has clarified in Holy Scripture,” Mohler says.

In other words, he’s doing what evangelical Christians have been doing for decades: calling LGBT people sinners while claiming their “truth,” aka hate and condemnation, is love.

Jesus would disagree with them.

Mohler actually believes that he and his “generation of Christians” have “been called upon to clarify…and specify what the Bible teaches about human sexuality, marriage, and what it means to be made male and female.”

If you’re thinking it’s strange that with millions of Americans in Texas and Louisiana under water right now, millions of Americans facing possible loss of health care coverage thanks to the president and his GOP Congress, millions of Americans waking up each and every morning not knowing where breakfast is coming from – if it comes at all – millions of Americans working in jobs that don’t pay them a living wage, millions of Americans being forced to work two, three, four or more jobs just to keep their families fed, and millions of Americans affected by suicide and gun deaths each year, why this generation of Christians has been called upon to clarify and specify what the Bible teaches about human sexuality, marriage, and what it means to be made male and female – and not to focus on and help fix the real problems our society faces.

If Albert Mohler and his Christian evangelical friends believe this is their calling – to chastise good, hard-working LGBTQ Americans – so be it.

But they should know this: Americans increasingly see them and their ilk not as Christians, but as extremists, bigots, haters, and the word they truly fear the most: irrelevant.

For more on Mohler, here’s an interview with him from 2014:

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Trump Explains ‘Dumb’ Has a ‘B’

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President Donald Trump thrilled his supporters in New York on Friday as he shared how he came up with his latest nickname for Democrats — his explanation included a spelling lesson.

“Blue means Dumocrat,” the president said. “That’s a new name I came up with.”

“I was, I was thinking about this character we have in the House. His name is Hakeem Jeffries,” Trump said to boos from the audience.

“And he’s a low IQ person, very low IQ.”

“And I watched what he was saying, and what the horrible things he was saying, and I said, ‘He’s a dumb guy.’ I said, Wait a minute, he’s a Dumocrat. That’s how I got the name,” Trump excitedly said.

“You take the ‘e’ out, you don’t use the ‘b’. A lot of people don’t know ‘dumb’ has a ‘b’ in it, actually. You don’t need it. You discard the ‘b.’

“But you take the ‘e’ out, and you replace it with a ‘u.'”

“They are Dumocrats. You know why? ‘Cause their policies are dumb. Their policies are very dumb. All of their policies.”

Critics mocked the president.

“His uncle taught at MIT, but Trump just recently learned there is a b in dumb,” wrote political strategist Jeff Timmer.

Dumbo @realDonaldTrump here is the only one who doesn’t know there’s a b in DUMB,” said former GOP Congresswoman Barbara Comstock.

“It’s impossible to overstate how f— — stupid Trump looks on the world stage,” wrote another online commenter.

 

Image via Reuters 

 

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‘Good Riddance’: Critics Cheer Tulsi Gabbard’s ‘Shocking’ Resignation

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President Donald Trump’s controversial Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, is resigning.

“Unfortunately, I must submit my resignation, effective June 30, 2026,” DNI Gabbard wrote to President Trump, Fox News reports. “My husband, Abraham, has recently been diagnosed with an extremely rare form of bone cancer.”

“During pivotal moments,” NBC News reports, “as Trump deliberated over possible military action or watched live video feeds of operations in Iran or Venezuela, Gabbard was often not in the room, underscoring her outsider status.”

“Gabbard has had a tough tenure being sidelined on Venezuela and Iran. Last month, Trump floated replacing her with Pam Bondi, but some advisers saved her,” reported WIRED’s Hugo Lowell.

President Trump wrote that Gabbard had done an “incredible job,” and “we will miss her,” while Reuters reports that the White House ‌”forced” Gabbard “to ⁠resign ​from her ​post, a person familiar ​with ​the matter said ‌on ⁠Friday.”

The Wall Street Journal’s Dave Brown called Gabbard’s tenure “tumultuous.”

Critics were quick to respond.

“Good riddance. The Iran war has been the biggest display of intelligence incompetence in decades,” wrote U.S. Rep. Shri Thanedar (D-MI).

“Tulsi Gabbard leaves this administration in disgrace after helping Trump drag the country into yet another forever war in the Middle East,” wrote political strategist Mike Nellis. “She built her entire image on opposing these wars, then abandoned that principle the second it became politically inconvenient. That’s her legacy: a complete fraud, completely full of s— — about the one thing people thought she genuinely believed in. Good f— — riddance.”

“Also, is anybody in Congress or the media going to get to the bottom of the whistleblower’s story about Tulsi Gabbard withholding classified intercepted intel for political reasons?” Nellis continued. “What the hell happened there, or are we just going to pretend that didn’t happen?”

“Are we ever going to found out if Tulsi Gabbard broke how many different national security laws by allegedly refusing to hand over investigative documents, or is that just going away now?” asked writer Charlotte Clymer.

Professor and policy analyst Adam Cochran called Gabbard’s resignation “shocking,” and added: “Can’t imagine what they would ask to do that is too out of line for her…”

Associate Professor of Political Science Christopher Clary said Gabbard “will go down as perhaps the most ineffective and incompetent DNI in the short history of that position.”

Image via Reuters 

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The ‘Slow, Boring’ and ‘Easy’ Way to Tax the Rich: Expert

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President Donald Trump managed to effectively raise taxes on the majority of Americans through his tax policies, while handing the richest five percent a tax cut. Now, many Americans want to see the rich pay their fair share — and that could mean increasing their taxes.

The former chief economist of the White House Office of Management and Budget, Professor Zachary Liscow, argues there’s a “slow, boring” yet “easy” way to do so.

“The United States is seeing an increasing concentration of wealth at the very top and a worsening national debt,” Liscow writes in an op-ed at The New York Times. “For many Americans, taxing the rich more is an obvious move.”

He details some of the “novel proposals to curb the many intricate ways the rich make and hide their money,” including a wealth tax, a tax on unrealized gains, and a tax on “loans that billionaires take against their stock.”

But, Liscow warns, while novel, these methods would not raise the substantial amount of money the U.S. needs.

“The boring truth is that Congress can accomplish a lot simply by raising the rates of the taxes already on the books,” Liscow explains.

He examines U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren’s (D-MA) proposal to tax “fortunes above $50 million,” and says there are “serious constitutional and policy arguments for this idea, but the Supreme Court’s current members would probably strike it down.”

There is a billionaire’s tax proposal by U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) that would tax unrealized capital gains, “the appreciation in the paper value of assets such as stocks.” That would likely find a Supreme Court challenge.

There are other tax vehicles, like fixing the “buy, borrow, die” loophole, which would tax loans taken against stock portfolios, but that would likely not raise sufficient funds: “It’s just not where the money is.”

He finds that “the most powerful lever is also the simplest one,” and concludes that “Congress has a simpler, tried-and-true tax policy to choose from: raising the rates.”

Liscow is advocating to restore the “top marginal ordinary income tax rate to its pre-2017 level of 39.6 percent” — where it was before Trump’s first term in office.

“In addition, raising the corporate tax rate from 21 percent toward the 35 percent it had been set at historically would add hundreds of billions in revenue for the government,” he says.

“Raising the rates,” Liscow concludes, “the simple, boring answer — is where the real money lies.”

 

Image: Christopher Penler / Shutterstock.com

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