Posted on 12/26/2013 3:29:36 PM PST by NKP_Vet
Throughout its protracted ratings nosedive, cable news network MSNBC has increasingly pandered to the tiny audience of far-left radicals it has retained. Whether by mocking Christianity, labeling all whites as inherent racists, or championing the homosexual lobbys cause, this sham of a news organization has a limited bag of ideological tricks.
In a desperate ploy to keep the Duck Dynasty controversy alive, political analyst Michael Eric Dyson was able to combine each of these disingenuous tactics to skewer the right.
Appearing with host Joy Reid, the fringe pundit expressed some outrageous views of Christian faith that only prove he has no idea what type of love millions of Americans have for their Savior. Responding to Reids leading question regarding the brouhaha over reality star Phil Robertsons biblical comments on homosexuality, Dyson suggested a man expressing his love for Christ seems gay.
The same men who will stand up in a church of all men [and say] I put my God Jesus above all women, I love him more than I love her, he responded in his disjointed, staccato style. Hmmm, do you really? That sounds interestingly homoerotic to people who are outside your religious traditions.
(Excerpt) Read more at westernjournalism.com ...
Only good thing I’ve ever heard about him is he didn’t believe in murdering unborn children. There was a time that Da Reverend Jesse was pro-life, but since the left has been hijacked by the radical feminists and pro-abortion crowd he has went right along with it. And the majority of abortions performed in this country are on young black women. Jesse and Al stay quite on this subject. Both are accomplishes.
I was saying that his sexuality and relationship to Christianity may have been more complicated than people assumed at first glance.
Granted Dyson's an opportunist, looking to get ahead in the world, but when did it become a bright career move for a Black talking head to aggressively support gay marriage and attack his peers over that, let alone make negative comments about Christians and Jesus?
Maybe MSNBC has changed all that, but the first guy to go down that road isn't necessarily typical and may have a few serious kinks or complications.
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