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meinmachine
6th January 2006, 12:57 PM
Here is the final paragraph of James Randi's latest newsletter. You can see the whole thing (and I reccomend you do) at www.randi.org It is refering to the tragedy in West Virginia.


"And I must note here that when the first news came out on the NBC-TV Today Show about the disaster, the governor of West Virginia began his comments with “Here in West Virginia, we believe in miracles, and we’re praying for the miners.” When the first report was made that all 13 had survived, people were quick to attribute it to God. One miner's young wife, 27, clutching her baby girl, said, "It just shows you enough prayers went out. It's a miracle." And, President Bush said, “We send our prayers…” On that same program, there was an item about a woman who’d won a huge lottery prize. The first words out of her mouth were, “God has answered my prayers!” Forgive me for not grasping the situation here: are we to believe that God ignored all the prayers for the trapped miners because He was busy arranging for that woman’s lottery number to be chosen? And to the young mother: do you suppose there weren’t quite enough prayers, or your husband would still be alive, and is that the miracle you cite? God allowed the miners to die because the pleas for mercy directed at Him weren’t properly phrased, while the lottery winner’s prayers were better formulated? Just what are this deity’s priorities?

Maybe He doesn’t care, at all.

Maybe He isn’t there… "
Amen Brother Randi, Amen!

dogzilla
6th January 2006, 02:00 PM
Maybe He doesn’t care, at all.

Maybe He isn’t there… "
Amen Brother Randi, Amen!

Maybe humans should just take responsibility for themselves and their choices and stop blaming Satan for everything that's bad and stop giving credit to God for things people did.

free thinker
7th January 2006, 09:41 PM
Maybe humans should just take responsibility for themselves and their choices and stop blaming Satan for everything that's bad and stop giving credit to God for things people did.


That would require them to think Zilla. Americans are very averse to that activity.

ft