Posted on 09/16/2016 4:45:38 PM PDT by AmusedBystander
Well, this story is so brutally ironic it will not fit in the Irony folder. You just cannot make this stuff up folks
You might remember a Hispanic political activist named Tony Yapias, who was extremely critical of Donald Trumps assertion that some illegal Mexican aliens were rapists.
Tony Yapias is the director of Proyecto Latino de Utah. Mr. Yapias also coordinated numerous protest events against Donald Trump including a rather violent display in Salt Lake City, Utah. SEE HERE
tony-yapiasThis week Tony Yapias has been arrested for rape. However, not only was Yapias arrested for rape his victim was,
wait for it
, yep, an illegal alien.
(Excerpt) Read more at theconservativetreehouse.com ...
I believe that public hangings could be the deterrent required to make these animals think twice. I like it.
YapAss finally goes down.
He’s been running a game on the whitebread Mormon leadership for about 10 years now, looks like the gig’s up.
Maybe he can sell bootleg tacos in prison.
Even if it isn't a deterrent to the scum, it gets them off the street. We should start calling it abortion of the scum. Get the libs to support the 'choice' to kill the scum.
This is rich. Build the wall.
One of my most important reasons for objecting to illegal immigration was the fact that female illegal immigrants are open to so much abuse. They fear deportation. Yes, I know, but they are lied to by people who want to hold power over them.
Do away with illegal immigration. If you want to come in, get in line.
THAT is the perp..! YUUUUUCK....
but he was not raping the Americans that nobody else would rape, at least
People were also stoned for Sabbath breaking... you really don’t have old time religion till you got that.
Maybe he’ll get punched in the Yapias....
That’s hilarious, I love it!
One man (not “people” in the plural) was stoned for insurrection and rebellion against the authority that ordered Israel to observe the Sabbath only AFTER their having witnessed God’s supernatural intervention first-hand. That man defiantly just ignored the law in a way that essentially dared anyone to do something about it.
God also has a far greater judgment which awaits those for the much more trivial-sounding sin of unbelief.
This guy is being accused by his ex-girlfriend. He gets his day in court first. He stupidly answered reporters’ questions and apparently did not directly answer whether he was guilty, which certainly looks incriminating.
However, this is not a case where he kidnapped someone and raped. Without knowing the details it is foolish to draw too much publicity to it. It is simply ironic at this point.
Wait until he is convicted. Otherwise, he and his girlfriend might get back together and the charges get dropped, for all we know.
Lol..no, im German...we need that word!
The law had been given but no visible violation yet occurred until then. God said categorically what to do. This is law, doing what law does. Why are you surprised or want to change it around?
You’ve got to be kidding me!
The guy is a moron, along with being a rapist and an ILLEGAL.
What's next, a BLM leader who think that police shoots blacks for fun, so he shoots a police officer?
Thank you Perry Mason.
I think you missed the point.
We have had discussions, and I have observed your posts, over the past couple of years. You used to talk in reasonable, logical language. Has something happened to you?
Your post about executing people who violate the Sabbath was kind of out of the blue. I don’t even know whether to interpret it as a cynical anti-death penalty comment or something else. It is the kind of thing I see atheists post to mock the Bible.
Quite a few people had to be removed from society for capital crimes in the Bible. Some were for things our society does not consider capital crimes. For example, in 1 Kings 18 and 22, this was the fate of a significant number of “sodomites”. The US at one time, very briefly, treated homosexuality as a capital crime. I am aware of only once in the Bible where breaking the Sabbath resulted in the death penalty. And I already pointed out the context of this was rebellion.
But the Sabbath was only commanded to Israelites and guests to the land of Israel, while sodomy was proscribed against for ALL people in both Old and New Testaments, both of which prescribe the death penalty as a fitting punishment.
Or, we can compare Sabbath observation to circumcision. The New Testament clearly shows that Gentiles are neither obligated to become Jewish or to get circumcised in order to become Christians / be saved. But circumcision continued to be practiced by Jewish Christians because a Jew becoming Christian did NOT mean forsaking Judaism. Jews remain Jews. Gentiles remain Gentiles. Paul taught to stay in the condition a person is in when he believes on Christ.
Yet circumcision was given to Abraham centuries before the Law was given to Moses. In fact Moses got in trouble with God for not observing this duty with his own children. But circumcision was never commanded to Gentiles (apart from the Gentile nations that descend from Abraham). So circumcision had a broader application than Sabbath observation throughout the Bible, but is specifically identified in the New Testament as not applicable to the Gentile converts to Christ.
On the other hand, the Sabbath was only ever commanded to Israelites and their guests in the land. Nowhere, anywhere in the Bible, is there a general command for Gentiles to observe the Sabbath.
The death penalty IS prescribed in both the Old and New Testaments. The Bible says that human governments do not bear the sword in vain. They are accountable to God to do so justly, but God does give government the power to take life justly.
All people die. After this life we all must give account to God for all we have done, good or bad. Many lives are taken from them unjustly. Many die prematurely, i.e. at a young age. Many righteous and innocent people suffer protracted, painful deaths. But God is just. He rewards the righteous and the unrighteous.
And even the death penalty can be an act of mercy in the larger context of eternity. Those who oppose the death penalty often act as if without it people would go on living forever. We are all under a death sentence, in a manner of speaking. Those who are sentenced to death may have an opportunity to get right with God before they die, while many people have their lives taken from them suddenly without any warning. This is a good reason to not wait to be sure that our lives are right with God. We never know when we will meet the same fate that people share.
But I do not agree with the jovial celebration of people getting the death penalty even when their crimes warrant this. And I do not support the advocacy of criminals getting justice at the hands of other criminals in prison, especially when rape is being advocated. Ultimately, God is the arbiter of justice, not man.
And when God allows a loved one’s life to be cut short, whether justly or unjustly, we can still thank God for the time we have been able to share with that loved one. And, as believers, we have assurance of eternal life and the possibility of being reunited with these loved ones. In some cases we are uncertain whether a loved one ever trusted in Christ. In other cases we can be more confident. But what we must be absolutely certain of is that we ourselves have placed our trust in Christ, or all such hope is lost.
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