Old_Zircon - 2017-11-18
Apparently polls show something like an 8 point rise in popularity among male voters in his district since the allegations surfaced.
|
Meerkat - 2017-11-18 In Birmingham they love molesters
They say Roy Moore has "minor" flaws
Just 'coz he gets his jollies
Groping teen girls through their bras
|
Meerkat - 2017-11-18 (Doodle doodle doodle doodle doo)
|
|
Oscar Wildcat - 2017-11-18 Southern Girls had to give him head,
Just remember what your D.A. said.
Southern man gonna come at last,
now your past is coming fast.
Southern Man.
|
Anaxagoras - 2017-11-18
Just when I thought I couldn't despise the South anymore.
Jesus Christ, we *so* shouldn't have fought the Civil War.
|
M-DEEM - 2017-11-18
That one dude's been eating alot of soy
|
Binro the Heretic - 2017-11-18
The biggest problem with most people in my home state (And probably other parts of the South, too.) Is they keep imaginary tally books in their heads for themselves & everyone else.
Every entry in this book has two columns; "Good" & "Bad." They have arbitrary rules for determining what is "good" and what is "bad." Doing a "bad" thing that can somehow be interpreted as doing "good" counts as "good."
Being homosexual is "bad." persecuting homosexuals is "good." Because homosexuality is "sinful" but trying to torture people into denying their homosexuality "saves" them from sin. Women using birth control is "bad." Shooting a doctor who performs abortions is "good." Because it's "sinful" to deny potential babies potential life but murdering a doctor potentially "saves" potential lives. (Even when most of that doctor's work results in actual real lives being saved.)
And their own entry in the tally book is treated like a bank balance. "Good" marks are deposits. "Bad" marks are withdrawals. If they make enough deposits, they're entitled to make some withdrawals. In case you're wondering, yes, this is EXACTLY why church is more popular down South. They view the appearance of being highly religious as big deposits.
And they walk around with these tally books floating in their mind, adding points to the "Good" & "Bad" columns for themselves & everyone else. As long as they feel their own "Good" column has more points than their "Bad" column, they feel they are "good" people. However, if anyone else gets even a single tick in their "Bad" column, they are "bad" people.
Sometimes, they pretend to forgive "bad" people. They only do this with people they consider to be their "equals", however, and they don't really forgive them. In the back of their mind, they are now superior to that person because that other person is "bad."
The real problems arise when someone they have elevated to a position of power has been caught being bad. Although they would never admit it, they do feel some sense of guilt & responsibility when a religious leader or politician they supported is caught doing awful things. In their minds, it counts as a mark in their own personal "Bad" column. It's an involuntary withdrawal and they can't stand it.
So they refuse to accept the person they put in power is "bad" because that makes them "bad." That's why they fiercely defend scumbags like Moore, Trump, etc. in the face of overwhelming evidence against them.
"They can't be bad people because I'm not a bad person."
|
|
|
Cena_mark - 2017-11-19 It's hilarious how Catholic all that sounds. It's like hating gays is an indulgence for him.
|
|
Binro the Heretic - 2017-11-19 FUN FACT: A lot of serial killers operate on this "morality."
"I helped five old ladies with their groceries, that means I can chop up a coed and drive her parts around in my trunk."
|
|
Cena_mark - 2017-11-18
Man on the street segments like this usually require many interviews and just keeping the good ones, in this case I wouldn't doubt the Daily Show just went with the first handful of idiots they found.
|
|
Cena_mark - 2017-11-19 Alabama is the Maine of the South.
|
Cena_mark - 2017-11-18
It's funny how Catholic that sounds.
|
Marlon Brawndo - 2017-11-19
Alabama
|
Register or login To Post a Comment |