Politics and Religion

Is the Republican Party a Satanic cult?confused_smile
willywonka4u 22 Reviews 2750 reads
posted

Around the year 2000 (just before Bush went into office) the GOP changed their logo. It was only a slight change, not that anyone would ever notice.

Currently, that logo looks like this.

http://www.goplogo.com/images/gop_rgb_rkqw.jpg

What's strange about this, is the stars. Unlike the American flag, which has it's 5 pointed stars point upright, the GOP logo's stars are upside down.

The 5 pointed star is an interesting symbol, and it has been used by cultures all over the world, even dated back to the ancient Egyptians.

The 5 pointed star also came to represent different ideas. Divinci demonstrated the 5 pointed star's representation of mankind, which is part of the reason why we see stars on so many nation's flags.

http://victorian.fortunecity.com/palette/187/divinci-man.jpg

The 5 pointed star has even been used to embody Jesus Christ himself.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentagram#Christianity

However, turning the 5 point star has another meaning. It is The Sigil of Baphomet, the symbol for anti-man, or anti-Christ. And has traditionally been used as a symbol for the Satanic Church, as a representation of the goat's head.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e6/Pentagram_with_one_point_down_%28de_Guaita%29.jpg

And even LaVeyan Satanists use 3 upside down stars to symbolize the rejection of the holy Trinity, as well as the value of the number 6.

Three upside down stars....6-6-6.

...why do you think they called it "The Mark of the BEAST" anyway?

-- Modified on 11/23/2009 2:37:47 PM

wait_for_it1386 reads


Somebody needs to get a life.....LOL

If only I thought you were joking.....It's terrible when it comes to this.......Good luck to ya!!!!!!!

THE REPUBLICANS EVIL PLAN
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A154BmAkryQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlYG3tO41SU&NR=1

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IzbVNXNW35k&NR=1

REPUBLICANS HEALTH CARE PLAN!!!!!

Republicans in Congress are slated to unveil their health care reform plan on Wednesday, a proposal that relies heavily on private mechanisms, contains no individual mandate, and offers tax incentives for families and individuals to help pay for coverage.

Titled "The Patients' Choice Act of 2009," the plan will be introduced by U.S. Senators Tom Coburn, (R-OK) and Richard Burr (R-NC) and U.S. Representatives Paul Ryan (R-WI) and Devin Nunes (R-CA) at 11 a.m. The focus of the proposal -- an advanced copy of which was obtained by the Huffington Post -- is to push for a "guaranteed choice of coverage" in the private market through federal-state partnerships know as State Health Insurance Exchanges.

Individuals, the authors write, will have a "one-stop marketplace" to choose plans in the exchange, including the option of keeping their employer coverage and/or existing insurer. "Participating insurers," meanwhile, would be required to "offer coverage to any individual -- regardless of patient age or health history" though there is no mandate for an individual to purchase that insurance.

Where the plan seems likely to run into strong opposition is in its efforts to drastically move the insurance market away from employer-based or publicly operated plans. As championed by John McCain during the presidential campaign, The Patients' Choice Act of 2009 effectively ends tax breaks for employers who provide health coverage to their workers, choosing instead to give a $5,710 tax cut to families and a $2,290 cut to individuals to help them pay for health insurance coverage. Critics insist that this system would end up costing both business and consumers more over the long term. And some objective analysts have agreed. After all, families are currently paying approximately $12,300 a year for health care today.

The notion that guaranteed choice can be achieved under the private market is also predicated on several debated notions. The first is that an effective enforcement mechanism can be put in place requiring private insurers to offer coverage. The authors call for the creation of a non-profit, independent board "to penalize companies that cherry-pick health patients." The second concern is that the market itself might consolidate. The latter is already promising to be a big problem, a Democratic critic of the plan notes, as studies show the HMO and Preferred Provider Organization industries to be "highly-concentrated, or anti-competitive, in 96% of metropolitan areas."

There are, finally, some budgetary concerns with the Republican proposal. The authors call for investing in chronic disease prevention for problematic, long-term illnesses -- including providing $50 million annually for increased vaccine availability. They pledge major administrative improvements in Medicaid and Medicare as well. And they promise to ensure compensation for injured patients by encouraging legal reforms. All of this will require spending, and eliminating the tax exclusions for employer coverage can only get them so far.





http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A154BmAkryQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlYG3tO41SU&NR=1

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IzbVNXNW35k&NR=1

SeeYouInHell964 reads

After all, they are nothing more than an evil  collection of sodomites, liars, cheats, thieves, adulterers, crooks, drunks, heretics, lunatics and other soul-less creatures than belong with me in hell.  

I figured that converting them to Republicans makes it much easier for me to find them and collect them all come Judgment Day.

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