Tag Archives: cost-the-school

Video: Ground Zero Mosque Supporter: ‘Get Over’ 9/11

Recently Eyeblast went to New York City to interview people on the street about the Ground Zero mosque. One of the people we interviewed was a Muslim supporter of the mosque who tells Americans they need to “get over” 9/11. For more information on this interview and for other Eyeblast interviews on the Ground Zero mosque make sure you visit this post .

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Video: Ground Zero Mosque Supporter: ‘Get Over’ 9/11

Roger Ebert: Palin Uses ‘Coded’ Tweets, Employs ‘Mein Kampf’ Tactics on Twitter

In a passionate and politically-charged post on his blog, Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert wrote that Glenn Beck is a “zealot” who makes “daily insinuations” that President Obama is a secret Muslim and that Sarah Palin uses “Mein Kampf” tactics and “coded words” on Twitter. “One buried motive for the attacks on Park51 is exploitation of the insane belief of 20% of Americans that President Obama is a Muslim,” wrote Ebert in the Aug. 19 blog post. “Zealots like Glenn Beck, with his almost daily insinuations about the Muslim grandfather Obama never knew and the father he met only once, are encouraging this mistaken belief.” Ebert also slammed Sarah Palin, writing that “her tweets are mine fields of coded words; for her, ‘patriot’ is defined as, ‘those who agree with me.’ When she says ‘Americans,’ it is not inclusive.” The film critic posted a screen shot of two of Palin’s recent Tweets that defended radio host Dr. Laura Schlessinger for using racial slurs on the air. “These two [Tweets] must have been carefully composed in advance to be tweeted within 60 seconds of each other,” Ebert speculated, noting that “by using the evocative word ‘shackles’ [Palin] associates Dr. Laura’s use of the N-word with the suffering of slaves.” But then Ebert took an even more bizarre turn, writing that “By implying Dr. Laura was silenced by ‘Constitutional obstructionists,’ [Palin] employs the methodology of the Big Lie, defined in Mein Kampf as an untruth so colossal that ‘no one would believe that others could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously.'” Ebert also called out Fox News, Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh for “distorting” the Bill of Rights “as an everyday practice.” However, in the same paragraph Ebert had a few kind words for Fox News host Bill O’Reilly. “[T]o his credit, [O’Reilly] doesn’t indulge in this,” the film critic wrote.

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Roger Ebert: Palin Uses ‘Coded’ Tweets, Employs ‘Mein Kampf’ Tactics on Twitter

Time Celebrates Methodist Seminary’s Move to Train Imams and Rabbis Too

For centuries, theological seminaries minted trained and licensed ministers of their respective religious traditions. They took seriously their creedal and confessional commitments to their respective faiths and denominations. While comparative theology may have been taught, it was with a view to understand and critically evaluate them as rival truth claims, not equally valid truthful claims. But those dark, backwards days may be behind us if Claremont School of Theology successfully paves the way. Or at least that’s the sentiment conveyed in Time magazine writer Elizabeth Dias’s August 22 article, “Training Pastors, Rabbis, and Imams Together.” Dias’s 10-paragraph-long August 22 article portrayed Claremont president Jerry Campbell as a “classic American” entrepreneur who took a novel approach to the school’s “low enrollment and in-the-red” balance sheet: “end isolated clerical training” by “bring[ing] toegether Claremont, the Islamic Center of Southern California (ICSC) and the Academy for Jewish Religion California.” Of course, religious training deals in matters of eternal verities, not marketplace commodities, so that sort of approach is unwise, religious conservatives would argue. Yet Dias excluded any dissent from her examination into the newly inclusive Methodist seminary.  Indeed, Dias’s word choice in the following passage seems to hint conservative critics are opposed to religious tolerance (emphasis mine): To be sure, Claremont’s push to desegregate religious education has encountered its share of roadblocks . The most notable to date occurred in January when questions about Claremont’s commitment to Christian education nearly cost the school its funding and sanction from the United Methodist Church. After a five-month investigation, Campbell prevailed. “We explained clearly to the [Methodist] review team that in fact our United Methodist character continues intact throughout this program,” he said. ” We intend to be the Christian partner in this endeavor, and so we are not changing our United Methodist character essentially in any way.” But how can a Christian seminary grant divinity degrees to persons of religious traditions that it views as false religions? And if Claremont views other religious traditions as equally valid, wouldn’t that by definition be a denial of the truth claims of Christian Scripture, which holds forth Jesus Christ as the only “name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). A thorough religion reporter would explore these questions; sadly Dias failed to do just that.

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Time Celebrates Methodist Seminary’s Move to Train Imams and Rabbis Too