Posted on 08/16/2016 7:47:16 AM PDT by nikos1121
Edited on 08/16/2016 9:02:55 AM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
Thanks
Police: North Charleston teens charged with robbing, killing good Samaritan
You were right, no pictures needed...
John Derbyshire was fired from National Review for his April 2012 essay “The Talk: Nonblack Version”. One line that offended many people, and which troubled me as well, was
“(10h) Do not act the Good Samaritan to blacks in apparent distress, e.g., on the highway.”
But Derbyshire had a point. People can choose to be Good Samaritans but should know what the risks are.
A parable for our times...
Low life scum still breathing.
We're going for the fourth AH of the thread.
I wasted no time putting their pictures on Facebook.
The victim could have been black. Wouldn’t matter to the feral brothers.
To them, Black is a Culture, not a skin color.
People need to start waking up and see this.
“Teenagers”...hmmm
The curve is steeper than we were led to believe.
No, I’m sticking up for the innocent Amish, who absolutely do not deserve this constant vilification.
That crap has been posted on here thousands of times and it is neither clever nor funny.
NYC high school classes are full of students that look just like this, with the optional sullen facial expression at no extra charge. And out of those mouths, every other sentence is, “Suck my d___k.” “F____ you, b___h.” “Gonna smack you up, b___h.”
Imagine how difficult life is if 99 out of 100 people you meet, go to school with or work with are smarter than you are. And if you live in the inner city you will meet very few who are smarter except when you go to court. Even then...you might not.
Think of Anita Hill........ she was told over and over how smart she was
She went to DC and learned the truth. She was merely mediocre
The effect of what people do with God “in the public square” pales in comparison with the effect of what they do with God in their hearts.
I used to be on the lamenting squad about this until I realized that it reduced faith to politics.
A time like this is a time when evangelists should be particularly bent on showing just how Jesus is good news. “Not going to hell” — believe it or not — is a feeble witness because it sells the kingdom of heaven way short. It could mean anything including a very worldly life for which salvation would not be worth the trouble to God. Did Jesus perform miracles to show “not going to hell” — or did He perform them to show heaven?
So who made you the arbiter of what everyone is sick of?
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