I think it’s fair, based on Bryan Fischer’s latest piece, to go ahead and label him a White Supremacist.
In all the discussions about the European settlement of the New World, one feature has been conspicuously absent: the role that the superstition, savagery and sexual immorality of native Americans played in making them morally disqualified from sovereign control of American soil.
Bryan Fischer got up and said, “I’ve been writing about gays every day for a year, time to spend a little time writing about another group I hate: American Indians!”
International legal scholars have always recognized that sovereign control of land is legitimately transferred in at least three ways: settlement, purchase, and conquest. Europeans have to this day a legitimate claim on American soil for all three of those reasons.
Which is why Bryan supports immediately selling the Louisiana Purchase back to France!
They established permanent settlements on the land, moving gradually from east to west, while Indian tribes remained relentlessly nomadic.
The Trail of Tears never would have happened if those damn Injuns had just stayed still!
But another factor has rarely been discussed, and that is the moral factor.
In the ancient tradition of the Hebrews, God made it clear to Abraham that the land of Canaan was promised to his descendants. But he told Abraham the transfer of land to his heirs could not happen for 400 years, for one simple reason: “[T]he iniquity of the Amorites is not yet complete” (Gen. 15:16).
The Amorites, or Canaanite peoples, practiced one moral abomination after another, whether it was incest, adultery, sexual immorality, homosexuality, bestiality or child sacrifice, and God finally said “Enough!”
And the ancient tradition of the Hebrews is of ultimate relevance to modern day Alabammy, which was promised to white people in Europe via a text message from God. You can look it up.
The native American tribes at the time of the European settlement and founding of the United States were, virtually without exception, steeped in the basest forms of superstition, had been guilty of savagery in warfare for hundreds of years, and practiced the most debased forms of sexuality.
Bryan Fischer’s fundamentalist Christian superstition, of course, is better than the Native Americans’ superstition, and his ancestors’ warfare and genocide was The Good Kind, you see, because it reinforced Bryan’s prejudices.
The native American tribes ultimately resisted the appeal of Christian Europeans to leave behind their superstition and occult practices for the light of Christianity and civilization. They in the end resisted every attempt to “Christianize the Savages of the Wilderness,” to use George Washington’s phrase.
They rejected Washington’s direct counsel to the Delaware chiefs in 1779, “You do well to wish to learn our arts and ways of life, and above all, the religion of Jesus Christ.”
And when white people tell you there’s a better way, you damn well better listen!
Is this to say the same holds true for native American tribes today? In many respects, the answer is of course no. But in some senses, the answer is yes. Many of the tribal reservations today remain mired in poverty and alcoholism because many native Americans continue to cling to the darkness of indigenous superstition instead of coming into the light of Christianity and assimilating into Christian culture.
The continued presence of native American superstition was on full display at the memorial service for the victims of the Tucson shooter, when the “invocation” (such as it was) was offered by a native American who sought inspiration from the “Seven Directions,” including “Father Sky” and “Mother Earth,” rather than the God of the Bible.
Many of the fundamentalist churches today remain mired in self-righteous stupidity and a frayed tether to reality because many fundamentalist Christians continue to cling to the darkness of indigenous [to the Middle East] superstition instead of coming into the light of rational thinking and assimilating into modern culture. The continued presence of fundamentalist Christian superstition is on full display every time I open up my Google Reader and am regaled with tales of fundamentalist Christian belief being used to hurt and prey upon women, children, gay people, racial minorities, all under the guise of “family values.”
Sadly, this column will likely generate a firestorm of nuclear proportions among wingers on the left rather than the thoughtful reflection the thesis deserves.
If a bunch of intelligent people collectively saying “Gah, what a moron, and seemingly quite a racist too,” constitutes a “firestorm of nuclear proportions,” well then okay.
Even worse, the reaction will likely obscure the sobering lesson for today. America in 2011 is as guilty of “abominations” as the native American tribes we replaced. We have the blood of 53 million babies on our hands through abortion. We have normalized sexual immorality, adultery, and homosexuality, all horrors in the eyes of God, and are witnessing a surge in incest, pedophilia and even bestiality in our midst.
Is there a surge of incest, pedophilia and bestiality in Bryan Fischer’s midst? I’d like to stay away from his midst, then, thanks.
Thomas Jefferson wrote at the time of the Founding, “I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that his justice cannot sleep forever.” It is long past time for us once again to tremble for our country.
And then Thomas Jefferson had a cupcake and flipped through his Jefferson Bible, which, if you remember, was a special version he created with all the supernatural aspects removed, leaving only the teachings of Jesus. Bryan Fischer would do well to read it.
The American Family Association has obviously at this point decided to embrace and move toward their status as a hate group. I suppose they had no other choice.










So, I am sure that Bryan Fischer will understand if Muslim fundamentalists one day take his house because they view his brand of morality inferior and insufficiently pious.
I can’t wait for the day this self-righteous pompous a*s gets caught doing what ever it is that he is doing. I don’t think you find people this arrogant and moralizing unless they have more skeletons than a graveyard.
One of the first things the pilgrims (puritans) did when they got to Cape Cod, was to raid the native Americans food storage. From then on they made shady deals to secure more and more land. By the time the second generation pilgrims came of age they sold native Americans into slavery in order to make it easier to take over the North American continent. The book MAYFLOWER reveals lots of things that happened back then that we never learned in school.http://www.amazon.com/Mayflower-Story-Courage-Community-War/dp/0670037605
My God, it’s as if Fischer actively WANTS people to hate him.
It’s a matter of time, before this character gets caught with his pants down.
Oh, I’m so tired of his “christian” b******t !
f**k him AND the horse he rode in on. Native Americans had a very good reason to reject Christianity: when did Christians ever treat them like anything but dirt. I am part Cherokee and when I found out all the dirt on the Christians and the mistreatment and genocide of the Native Americans I left Christianity. Sadly many Cherokees are so assimilated and Christianised it is difficult to find the old teachings.
Well, you have to understand some fundamentalists believe that being hated by People Who Are Not Them is evidence of their Godly Righteousness. The more someone hates you, the more God must love you.
So Fischer’s trying to rig things to make SURE people hate him, so he can convince himself he’s righteous.
It NEVER occurs to him, and never WILL occur to him, that the reason people hate him is that he’s simply an a*****e without a shred of decency.
jesus, what an a*****e.
Obviously it’s Fischer’s Manifest Destiny to be a total a*****e! Why do these fundos always make God sound like a character you’d see on the TV show Criminal Minds? Oh, that’s right, it’s called projection–they’ve made God in THEIR image, not the other way around.
Yeah, his work seems to be born out of a deep pain of some sort.
Whatever pain it was, I doubt it was severe enough.
I love watching people play “my superstition is superior to your superstition,” and “you’re more savage than I am, so I’m morally superior.”
As a non-believer in actual gods, I must say that all gods have been created by humans. And in today’s world there are a multitude of previously created versions to choose from, or you can create a new one. So, you really learn a lot about someone by looking at the characteristics of the gods they have chosen to worship.
Are there people who really agree with the stuff.
.
God is not the problem. It is god’s fan clubs that are the problem.
Ema Nymton
~@:o?
.
Good one, Emma! And so true.
[...] Fischer: Native Americans morally disqualified themselves from the land”, which I criticized here, and which we issued a press release about here, you’ll see that it has been removed. [...]
and this is christianity? or Methodist theology taught at the Dallas Theological Seminary? as far as i’m concern CUSTER died for his sin(s)!
Bryan Fischer is a tool. And not a tool of god like he thinks he is. He is the sledge hammer the devil uses to smash the love and patience that anyone with common sense has. When he dies I will mark the day on my calendar as a holiday celebrate with great joy every year. He is a representer everything that is wrong with Christians and why more people are growing to dislike them. I hope Bryan eats needles and chokes on blood for weeks in horrible pain while suffering a slow death.
[...] motivated not only by anti-gay hatred, but by racism and all other sorts of bigotry. His views on Native Americans and black people come to mind. He is not “the other side” of the gay issue or any [...]