Very true. Churchgoers can spread it among themselves and the protesters can do likewise. The point is it needs to stop. The virus doesn't give a fuck if you're conservative, liberal, or moderate.Social distancing protocols in effect for churches but not "protests." Actually that's more hypocritical than ironic.
Social distancing protocols in effect for churches but not "protests." Actually that's more hypocritical than ironic.
How is equating two separate things that are covered by the First Amendment a logical fallacy?
In My Own Shoes: It’s not always wrong to drink the Kool-Aid
- By Rona Mann
- Feb 29, 2020
It got a bad rap, and you really can’t say it was unfounded. Mass suicide can alter people’s opinions, you know?
Kool-Aid was always a harmless, overly-sweet drink that appealed to kids, was sold from their lemonade stands, and was an inexpensive way for cost-conscious moms to fill pitchers for just pennies. But then Jim Jones came along and changed the way we thought of Kool-Aid.
For those who might remember, or would like to forget, Jim Jones was a self-professed faith healer, ordained minister, and cult leader of the People’s Temple. He started as far back as the ’50s in Indiana, but most people did not ever hear his name until November of 1978 when he persuaded his followers at their commune in Jonestown, Guyana, to drink cyanide-laced Kool-Aid. The mass suicide took 918 lives, 304 of whom were innocent children.
...
what a great time to remember Jonestown.
Sorry his son is sick, though it illustrates how people change their tune when things hit close to home:
Sesame Place isn't even safe: https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/nat...me-place-worker-in-face-mask-dispute/2574882/