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Fox, Islam, Jesus ... Fail.

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by Songbird, Jul 29, 2013.

  1. Greenhorn

    Greenhorn Active Member

    Maddow's middle name is Anne.
     
  2. YankeeFan

    YankeeFan Well-Known Member

    How dare MSNBC put a lesbian on the air. Next, we'll have blacks and Jews on TV.

    Hell, ESPN just hired a gay Jew to work for them. ESPN! And they hired a guy who's gay and Jewish!

    What's the world coming to?
     
  3. 93Devil

    93Devil Well-Known Member

    Have you ever seen me defend MSNBC? Two wrong media outlets do not make a right.
     
  4. PCLoadLetter

    PCLoadLetter Well-Known Member

    How about mindless drivel? Can they take that?
     
  5. champ_kind

    champ_kind Well-Known Member

    have you not seen erin burnett?
     
  6. Mark2010

    Mark2010 Active Member

    Burnett is a moderate or liberal? I've seen her on CNN; haven't analyzed her political slant enough to know.
     
  7. JR

    JR Well-Known Member

    Well, real journalists do.

    No host on CBC television or radio would ever interview an author without reading the book. Nor would any PBS interviewer.

    Not reading the book is a giant failure. But Fox's talking heads aren't journalists.
     
  8. champ_kind

    champ_kind Well-Known Member

    well, she's definitely not an outspoken conservative. and she played field hockey at williams college, so you tell me ;)
     
  9. Songbird

    Songbird Well-Known Member

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Dec 15, 2014
  10. Mark, would you only be happy with teenage girls with cleavage reading the news?
     
  11. YankeeFan

    YankeeFan Well-Known Member

    Interview with the Times:

     
  12. YankeeFan

    YankeeFan Well-Known Member

    Jesus the loving shepherd. Bringer of peace and justice. Teacher of universal morals. Jesus the rabbi. Jesus the philosopher. Jesus the apocalyptic prophet. Jesus the Christ of faith.

    People have constructed many different Jesuses. For at least two centuries, scholars and popular writers have mined the Christian Gospels to “look behind” them, to create a portrait of Jesus, using purely modern methods: the historical Jesus as opposed to the Christ of faith. In his book “Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth,” Reza Aslan follows this long tradition, settling on the hypothesis, also around for hundreds of years, that Jesus was a Jewish zealot, a rebel against Rome and the Romans’ local agents.

    Mr. Aslan’s book has been greeted with unwarranted controversy. Some conservatives seem offended by merely the idea that a Muslim scholar would write a book about Jesus. This should be no more controversial than a Christian scholar’s writing a book about Islam or Muhammad. It happens all the time. Nor is Mr. Aslan’s thesis controversial, at least among scholars of early Christianity.

    According to Mr. Aslan, Jesus was born in Nazareth and grew up a poor laborer. He was a disciple of John the Baptist until John’s arrest. Like John, Jesus preached the imminent arrival of the kingdom of God, which would be an earthly, political state ruled by God or his anointed, a messiah. Jesus never intended to found a church, much less a new religion. He was loyal to the law of Moses as he interpreted it. Jesus opposed not only the Roman overlords, Mr. Aslan writes, but also their representatives in Palestine: “the Temple priests, the wealthy Jewish aristocracy, the Herodian elite.”

    nyti.ms/185RToh
     
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