"The Bible also says 'If you don't work, you shouldn't eat,' " she countered. She was apparently referring to a verse from Thessalonians that's been getting a lot of play on right-wing Web sites of late. Citing the Bible is a tricky business. It also says you can stone your children to death for showing you disrespect, but I don't know anyone who thinks it's a good idea.
It is clear this woman laid him out flat with her Bible verse, and his only defense was to attack Christianity and God's word.
So, he spends his whole article attacking Conservatives and Christians for framing the debate as Good versus Evil, and then declares Conservatives and Christians as evil and slams them for daring to defend themselves.
I hope the Scranton Times, or whatever flunky news rag he works for, pays him minimum wage. He isn't even worth that.
The author made a false claim, or rather a false inference, about the meaning of Christianity. The woman showed that she knew a thing or two by correcting his error, so then he goes on to attack Christianity in general - which only begs the question of why he opened the subject in the first place.