ajax18 wrote:Do you pretty much lump all the GOP into the same category of Trump or even me? Where would you put Mitt Romney on that spectrum?
It is beyond obvious that the majority of what comes out of GOP politicians' mouths is not just "stretching the truth" (what we're generally used to with politicians historically), but make it a habit of telling outright lies. If you are paying attention to what is happening, you know that the GOP has no integrity. If any Democrat acted like Trump, every damned GOP congressman would be flipping out. If you were honest, you'd admit that. If they were honest, they'd admit that. None of them do. Therefore, they lack integrity. It's obvious.
You know I'm not really sure shaming people is very Christlike. Think about parents who use shame and guilt as a method to keep their children adhering to Mormonism. It seems to have created more resentment than spiritual progress. To me this is a shame because for every stick in the gospel there are a million carrots. Rarely when I read near death experience books to people describe Jesus as condemning and judgmental. I'm afraid shame is just an example of our failure as human beings to demonstrate to people why the morally right choice was in their best interests as well. People don't care about how much you know unless they know you care about them. Love really is much more powerful as a motivational force than shame and guilt.
Shame only works if you buy into the underlying premise at some level. The LDS don't have tremendous power to do this, because they aren't shaming from a common-sense point of view. They're trying to shame people based on nonsensical BS, so it backfires; it only causes resentment for most people.
Shaming works when you speak truth, because truth is the most compelling to people with integrity.