That noted theologian, Erick Erickson, still seeking face-time on MSM, decided that he’d weigh in on Mayor Pete Buttigieg and hate on the differences among Christian sects.
Anyway, what Erick Erickson took from the Buttigieg article is that Buttigieg -- A GAY, HAVE YOU HEARD HE IS A GAY? -- thinks all this stuff Jesus didn't talk about is cool, so he obviously thinks fucking goats is OK, right? (Sadly, Erick, we don't think President Buttigieg would be giving conservative bloggers from the cousin-fucking counties of Georgia hall passes for goatfucking. Sorry!)
What follows the misspelled word in Erickson's headline -- it's "bestiality," you pimpled nutsack! -- is a bunch of poorly thought out arguments about why Jesus IS TOO really mad about gays and 'bortions and gay-bortions too.
[...]
Our point is that shitty comments about Episcopal churches are conservative Christian inside jokes about how they're not real churches for real Christians, and they started mostly when the Episcopal church was the first major denomination to leave behind the God Hates Fags lifestyle in a meaningful way, forcing so-called Bible-believin' Christians to abandon it in search of places where they really shit on the queers, and also if the music could be a little less complicated, that would be cool, too!
Laura Ingraham alluded to this in her asshole column about Buttigieg this week. Erickson comes right out and says it, because he's got the table manners of a person who is currently fucking a goat.
www.wonkette.com/...
One might think that the most obvious place to look for less partisan but still right-leaning figures would be among “Never Trump” Republicans. After all, who better to help bridge the left and the right than people who would have ordinarily voted for the GOP candidate but made the decision not to support Donald Trump?
One person who’s benefited from the push to pop ideological bubbles is conservative commentator Erick Erickson. Erickson, who edits the website The Resurgent, has also had stints as a contributor at both CNN and Fox News in recent years. Like many other “Never Trump” conservatives, such as New York Times opinion columnist Bret Stephens or The Daily Wire’s Ben Shapiro, Erickson’s profile has arguably risen in the wake of Trump’s election. If you were to base your opinions of him entirely on his appearances in mainstream news outlets, you might even find him reasonable (if perhaps still a little out of your comfort zone).
[...]
But Erickson isn’t moderate. He has argued that gay men should expect to be assaulted in bars if their appearance makes others uncomfortable, defended Roy Moore voters for sticking with their candidate despite “damning” evidence that suggested he preyed on teenage girls, uncritically spread a conspiracy theory about Parkland survivor David Hogg, and later labeled Hogg a “high school bully.”
[...]
Not only are Erickson’s views far from moderate, but his penchant for signal-boosting rumors and conspiracy theories has done much more to confuse the public than to inform it. This isn’t meant as a criticism of his political views, his personal life, or even his bombastic approach to media; it’s a criticism of the sanitized way he’s presented by mainstream outlets that provide him with a platform.
www.mediamatters.org/...