Fox News shows it's ignorance and bigotry again

OMG, this is the WORST thing that the lefties can get their panties in a bunch over Fox news...must be mediamatters hand in it..

Keith Olbermann compared Hume to the jihadist because he had the nerve to mention, RELIGION..wheres the friggin outrage over that..
 
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Did someone expect journalism from fox. LOFL
The dude thinks that' s more hillarious than the christian right network known as fox.

Thanks Hoople
I'd call Britt more a preacher than a journalist
 
Chrissy tingles said about this, wasn't it your mom who told you "never to talk religion in public":palm:
 
OMG, this is the WORST thing that the lefties can get their panties in a bunch over Fox news...must be mediamatters hand in it..

Keith Olbermann compared Hume to the jihadist because he had the nerve to mention, RELIGION..wheres the friggin outrage over that..
No. Olberman compared Hume to a Jihadist because they are both bigots. He's quite right. They are both bigots.
 
Did someone expect journalism from fox. LOFL
The dude thinks that' s more hillarious than the christian right network known as fox.

Thanks Hoople
I'd call Britt more a preacher than a journalist
LOL An excellent point. You are right. No, I don't expect journalism from Fox. I expect right wing propaganda.
 
The Dude is an athiest,
so any fox viewing is most def for comedic value

in all fairness I also watch Olbertool and Maddow for comedy as well

If I need news it's CNN and CNBC
 
So do I....when I watch O'Reilly....which is almost never.
Yea same here. On the one hand you have Fox, a right wing propaganda network for the Brain dead, and on the other you have CNN which has been so dumbed down after Time Warner bought it from Turner that I hardly ever watch it either. Thank God for the Internet!
 
The Dude is an athiest,
so any fox viewing is most def for comedic value

in all fairness I also watch Olbertool and Maddow for comedy as well

If I need news it's CNN and CNBC
I go to the net and get most of my news from the AP, Rueters and UPI. Cable news is more concerned about making a buck by selling cheap mechandise from Wallmart to people with a 6th grade reading level then they are about reporting the news. That's true even of Fox.
 
It makes you wonder. Is Britt Hume as ignorant about Christianity as he is about Buddhism?

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100107/ap_on_re/us_rel_tiger_woods_buddhism
As a Buddhist, we are taught to take the words in the spirit they were offered rather than in the ignorance.

Brit was offering what he felt was a great gift and a reasonable path towards future public acceptance. He didn't do it to make Tiger, or even Buddhists, feel bad and openly admitted that he didn't know if he was right in the statements...

I would thank Brit for giving us a chance to explain a portion of our philosophy to people who ask because of this statement.

Brit was right about one thing. One cannot expect forgiveness in Buddhism to come from a source outside those directly involved, including yourself.
 
As a Buddhist, we are taught to take the words in the spirit they were offered rather than in the ignorance.

Brit was offering what he felt was a great gift and a reasonable path towards future public acceptance. He didn't do it to make Tiger, or even Buddhists, feel bad and openly admitted that he didn't know if he was right in the statements...

I would thank Brit for giving us a chance to explain a portion of our philosophy to people who ask because of this statement.

Brit was right about one thing. One cannot expect forgiveness in Buddhism to come from a source outside those directly involved, including yourself.
A rather diplomatic thing for you to say since Humes comments were openly hostile and critical of Tiger's Buddhist beliefs.
 
here ya go, does qualify as a BIGOT?

The Rise And Rise of Christianism ANDREW SULLIVAN
In a classic parallel with Islamism and in a similar response to modernity's trials, the evangelical fusion of faith with politics is gathering pace, and rapidly re-defining conservatism as a politico-religious movement. A reader writes:

I realize you rarely get to travel in true "teabagger country" but here in rural Mississippi, there is an interesting phenomenon occurring that the Brit Hume brouhaha brings into clearer focus.

If you travel down any road, you will see churches popping up everywhere. I've lived here my entire life, and it used to be that each community had one church, usually Baptist, with a place name. Now they have names like Bread of Life, The Living Water, and By Faith; single-word names like Cornerstone, Compass, and Centricity.


They pop up in the middle of nowhere, in abandoned storefronts, in closed-down factories, in metal buildings put up in the middle of the woods. And everyone has a preacher who is called Brother, or Elder, or Bishop. And all these fundamental churches spend the majority of their time either directly or indirectly involved with local, state, and national politics, involved in the Tea Bagger Movement, the War on Christmas movement, the myriad boycotts of every hue, and posters and ads of every conceivable variety.

As someone who had become immune to most of it, I can't help but be aware of the way in which religion in this area has been very deeply cheapened. It ceases to occupy a space of personal and public sacredness. It focuses not on the personal, but the political. And I am even beginning to detect this cheapening in acquaintances who I know to be quite religious.

So I think the Brit Hume incident may be very reflective of what is happening here in the South.
http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2010/01/the-rise-and-rise-of-christianism.html
 
I go to the net and get most of my news from the AP, Rueters and UPI. Cable news is more concerned about making a buck by selling cheap mechandise from Wallmart to people with a 6th grade reading level then they are about reporting the news. That's true even of Fox.

Jesus H. Christ would be appalled at this post.
 
A rather diplomatic thing for you to say since Humes comments were openly hostile and critical of Tiger's Buddhist beliefs.

Do you ever really watch Brit Hume, Mott? You'd need a keg of dynamite under his ass to get a hostile reaction out of him.

The only thing demonstrated here is your poorly disguised animus and hatred of anything associated with Fox.

Nothing original. Just the same old tired shit trotted out day in and day out.

Get over it. Fox kicks ass and THAT'S what's killing y'all.

:palm:
 
Omg, I saw what Hume said, he was in no way being HOSTILE towards Buddhism..maybe not having a lot of knowledge about it...but HOSTILE...and now the left is all of a sudden concerned about Religion, what a joke..
 
here ya go, does qualify as a BIGOT?

The Rise And Rise of Christianism ANDREW SULLIVAN
In a classic parallel with Islamism and in a similar response to modernity's trials, the evangelical fusion of faith with politics is gathering pace, and rapidly re-defining conservatism as a politico-religious movement. A reader writes:

I realize you rarely get to travel in true "teabagger country" but here in rural Mississippi, there is an interesting phenomenon occurring that the Brit Hume brouhaha brings into clearer focus.

If you travel down any road, you will see churches popping up everywhere. I've lived here my entire life, and it used to be that each community had one church, usually Baptist, with a place name. Now they have names like Bread of Life, The Living Water, and By Faith; single-word names like Cornerstone, Compass, and Centricity.


They pop up in the middle of nowhere, in abandoned storefronts, in closed-down factories, in metal buildings put up in the middle of the woods. And everyone has a preacher who is called Brother, or Elder, or Bishop. And all these fundamental churches spend the majority of their time either directly or indirectly involved with local, state, and national politics, involved in the Tea Bagger Movement, the War on Christmas movement, the myriad boycotts of every hue, and posters and ads of every conceivable variety.

As someone who had become immune to most of it, I can't help but be aware of the way in which religion in this area has been very deeply cheapened. It ceases to occupy a space of personal and public sacredness. It focuses not on the personal, but the political. And I am even beginning to detect this cheapening in acquaintances who I know to be quite religious.

So I think the Brit Hume incident may be very reflective of what is happening here in the South.
http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2010/01/the-rise-and-rise-of-christianism.html
Reminds me of the time I was in Hoxie, Arkansas and attended Bubba's Bar n Grill and Baptist Church (No joke. There really was such a place, that was in 1998).
 
Omg, I saw what Hume said, he was in no way being HOSTILE towards Buddhism..maybe not having a lot of knowledge about it...but HOSTILE...and now the left is all of a sudden concerned about Religion, what a joke..
Now please explaing to me how this is not a hostile and critical comment of Tiger's Buddhist beliefs?

"I don't think that faith offers the kind of forgiveness and redemption that is offered by the Christian faith," Hume said. "So my message to Tiger would be, "Tiger, turn to the Christian faith and you can make a total recovery and be a great example to the world."

That comment is both ignorant and bigoted. Maybe you should actually try reading/listening to what people actually say (write) before you make your knee jerk wingnut comments.
 
A rather diplomatic thing for you to say since Humes comments were openly hostile and critical of Tiger's Buddhist beliefs.
His statement said, "I don't think..." That isn't openly critical, that is admitting ignorance. He then offered the only path that he could speak on without ignorance.

And I took some time to explain to you what this Buddhist's beliefs say about this type of situation.
 
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