She's hot so they give her a show and she spews hypocritical hate speech and talking points. All the while denying what she said. When she goes on other shows she can't back any of it up in an in person argument.
I mean, to be fair, many of those "kill"s are part of "don't kill"s. You're going to have to meet her negating phrase with another negating phrase to come closer to a fair comparison.
But ultimately, the amount of times a word or phrase is written is going to depend on which version of the Bible you're using, so it's pretty poor reasoning to use that as a measure in the first place. Nice thought, though. Way to try and find positive meanings everywhere.
Are you sure bc the Bible tells you to kill nonbelievers, kill gays, kill people who believe in a different god, kill women who speak against their husband, kill women who have been raped if their rapist doesn't want to buy them, kill those who cut their hair, kill slaves, etc etc, it tells you to kill a whole bunch my dude
Well the Old Testament does, but when Jesus arrives, he tells everyone the love is the “greatest command” and not to kill the aforementioned populations.
It's because she's hot and because she's so damn stupid, she radiates confidence while spewing bullshit that everyone WANTS to believe, even if they don't quite feel that it's right.
Re: "The bible tells you to kill gays and unbelievers," have you actually read the relevant section of the bible, or just the talking points summary of people who are anti-Christian or anti-Jewish? There are some parts that pertain to people at that time, but it's clear how they only apply to you if you're a Hebrew from 4000 years ago and live in a Hebrew community. There are also many New Testament examples of Jesus showing how the better route is not by old Hebrew law, for example, the woman caught in adultery where He said, "Let he who,is without sin cast the first stone." People who never read the book often have real strong opinions on it, and the fact they're unfounded doesn't decrease their vehemence.
Secondly, what if "don't be afraid" is part of a phrase like "Don't be afraid of the Hittites because the lava is going to be much worse, and even if you survive that Satan is coming for ya'."
But ultimately, the amount of times a word or phrase is written is going to depend on which version of the Bible you're using, so it's pretty poor reasoning to use that as a measure in the first place. Nice thought, though. Way to try and find positive meanings everywhere.
Even the tweet in the post up here shows it.
Secondly, what if "don't be afraid" is part of a phrase like "Don't be afraid of the Hittites because the lava is going to be much worse, and even if you survive that Satan is coming for ya'."