Scotchfaster's Profile
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scotchfaster Free
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Recent Comments
- over 9 years ago on The Comic Strip That Has A Finale Every Day
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over 10 years ago
on Super-Fun-Pak Comix
âThe Origin of Languageâ
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over 10 years ago
on Tom the Dancing Bug
Brilliant!
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over 10 years ago
on Super-Fun-Pak Comix
But literally, this is the last strip. And every strip before that was the last strip. Was that ulterior joke? Am I Captain Obvious? Anyway, it was a great run.
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over 14 years ago
on Tom the Dancing Bug
I donât claim to know Jesus better than the apostles did, Iâm just saying that their second-hand accounts paint a mixed picture of the man. âLove your neighbor as yourselfâ is a nice sentiment, but teaching that anger puts you on the road to eternal damnation is kind of screwed up, donât you think?
I mean, donât get angry with me for my comments, or your God might torture you for all time. Am I reading this wrong?
With statements such as âThe Scripture cannot be brokenâ (John 10:35) and âUntil Heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or stroke shall pass away from the law, until all is accomplishedâ (Matthew 5:18) and âDo not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophetsâ (Mathew 5:17), Jesus seemed to be endorsing, say, Exodus 22:20 that âwhoever sacrifices to any god other than the LORD must be destroyedâ?
Why donât you have an open mind to the divinity of Hercules, or the fact that there are striking parallels between their stories, and that one might have colored the other? Or to ask yourself why Christians follow Exodus 20:1-17 (the ten commandments), while chosing to ignore Exodus 21:20-21, on which this fine comic is based?
âWhen a man strikes his male or female slave with a rod so hard that the slave dies under his hand, he shall be punished. If, however, the slave survives for a day or two, he is not to be punished, since the slave is his own property.â
I think the attitude that many Christians have towards their Bible is the same as their attitudes towards their own bodies: itâs all holy and a divine creation, even the nasty bits which weâll pretend donât exist most of the time.
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over 14 years ago
on Tom the Dancing Bug
I personally have no idea who Jesus was and what he said. All I have are some really old, selectively edited and somewhat contradictory second-hand accounts. I agree, he seemed like a real nice guy in his Sermon on the Mount (apart from this bit: âwhosoever is angry with his brother without a cause, shall be in danger of the judgmentâŚshall be in danger of hell-fire.â)
As far as Jesus rejecting Leviticus, it seemed that he did implicitly, if not explicitly, in John 8, in where he is reported to have said âlet he who is without sin cast the first stone.â (At which an old woman threw a stone and soon the crowd goes went with the stone throwing, whereupon he turned to the woman and said âthanks a lot, Mom!â Jesus wept.)
I really donât know what Jesus believed. Iâm much more curious about what Christians believe. Itâs my belief that every last one of them cherry-picks from the Bible. For starters, the Ten Commandments are a cornerstone of Christian faith, right? Well, they appear in Exodus, right next to Leviticus. If these commandments are to be followed by modern Christians, why not the teachings of Leviticus? Even if Jesus was soft on adultery, thereâs no reason to think he rejected the teaching that shellfish is an abdomination.
Most Christians donât seem to acknowledge that they cherry-pick from the Bible, so theyâre alarmed by passages in the Koran that seem to exhort Muslims to kill non-Muslims. Do these Christians know that their Bible also advises in Exodus 22:20 that âwhoever sacrifices to any god other than the LORD must be destroyedâ? Fortunately, the vast majority of Muslims (over a billion of them) cherry-pick just as Christians and Jews do.
Lastly, I donât believe that Paul made it ALL up. But where the miracles are concerned, I find it significant that the Romans of Jesusâ time already believed in a demigod, born of god and woman, who performed miracles such as going to the underworld and returning, and who was elevated to full God status after his mortal death. Of course, Iâm speaking of Hercules. If you cross Hercules with the Jewish concept of the Messiah, you have something close to Christianity.
Paul, who was trying to build a brand new religion, was in my mind playing to his audience.
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about 15 years ago
on Tom the Dancing Bug
Doug DeanâŚbought into the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac blame game hook, line and sinker, didnât ya? Next youâll blame them minorities for, say, bankrupting Iceland.
âFederal Reserve Board data show that more than 84 percent of the subprime mortgages in 2006 were issued by private lending institutionsâŚâ http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/53802.html
The âhapless banksâ were entirely in on the scheme. Whatâs more, they pushed it hard - making serious $ from charging points on bad mortgages, and then selling them as âmortgage-backed securities,â which was essentially bad paper that they got rated as high yield, low-risk investments through some hocus pocus.
Freddie/Fannie may be somewhat questionable, but their mission was to increase home ownership, not to perpetrate actual, criminal, Enron-style outright FRAUD on the worldâs markets.
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almost 16 years ago
on Tom the Dancing Bug
âtoxic assets and the current economy is the result of government intervention not capitalism.â
This is a conservative talking point that has no basis in fact.
More than 84 percent of the subprime mortgages in 2006 were issued by private lending institutions, according to Federal Reserve Board data. http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/53802.html
Whatâs more, the government had nothing to do with the scam artists who packaged up subprime mortgages into A rated securities, or the banks who failed because they did not keep enough cash on hand.
The toxic assets are the result of greed, plain and simple. Lenders were making mad cash on points whenever they issued a mortgage, and then would pass the risk on to greater fools. It worked for a while.
The only solution is more regulation of the financial markets. And yeah, I do think the government should try to buy the toxic assets (weâll end up paying for the damage one way or another), but I think we should be getting a much better price for them than we are.
Great, great cartoon.
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almost 16 years ago
on Tom the Dancing Bug
This is a great, scary, funny strip.
I have a friend in the mortgage business and asked him what the hell was going on here. He said that basically banks were getting rich off of charging points. Investors loved it and were rewarding the banks for massive short term profits.
And now that everythingâs falling apart, the government cleans up after the mess with our tax dollarsâŚgiving it to the same morons who got us into this mess. Except maybe theyâre not morons after all.
SighâŚI like Obama, but heâs just treading water here. IMO we need to nationalize these failed businesses that are âtoo big to failâ and provide accountability, not throw money at them.
I canât believe this is the last strip.