Bash’s Take On Hussein’s “Clinging To God & Guns” Remark

Briefly, I just wanted to say that this is a very revealing statement about the space between that guy’s ears. I haven’t heard anybody address this angle of Hussein’s remarks. The press really tends to be… magnifying on the offense toward the citizens of Pennsylvania, as they should, but there is also the glaring spectre of Hussein revealing his true colors regarding The Rev. Jeremiah Wright, the United Trinity Church of Christ of Chicago, and Black Liberation Theology.
Here’s what I believe he revealed, besides the obvious…
He said: “And it’s not surprising then they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.”
He proves a few things here:
1. His immaturity as a human being. He may be Harvard educated and all of that, but he seems to be unable to distinguish when he is viewing the world from his own filter, and when he is speaking truth. There is a huge difference. And here he reveals that he cannot distinguish real truth from truth perceived due to one’s world view.
and
2. His adherence to the Rev. Wright’s true beliefs. By speaking out that people form attachments to God and guns out of bitterness and antipathy, he is actually revealing the Black experience in America to the point when the whole “Black Liberation Theology” movement came about in the mid-60’s at the height of the Civil Rights Movement.
and
3. His elitist snobbery. No explanation necessary.
It is a “Black Liberation Theology Church” thing…and I speak of the Black Liberation Theology movement that Hussein’s pastor Wright comes out of, and thusly, Hussein himself. This whole idea that Jesus was a Black man, etc etc…
Now, with the Black Liberation Theology movement in mind, let’s hear the quote: “And it’s not surprising then they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.”
The “Black Liberation Theology” churches sprung up out of bitterness and antipathy toward the white man, and if B. Hussein Obama truly did not believe in the Black Liberation Theology that springs forth from the spirit of his pastor Jeremiah Wright and the congregation of the United Trinity Church of Christ in Chicago, and if he truly didn’t believe all of the statements of Rev. Wright that He said he condemns, then he would never have made the statement he made in Pennsylvania last week.
McCain and Hillary should both be shouting Hallelujah! right now because as the old saying goes: “You have to go through Pennsylvania to live on Pennsylvania Avenue,” and Hussein’s remarks last week pretty much buried his hopes of winning PA.
Let’s just hope other voices with a bigger platform will catch on to this important, glaring flaw in Hussein’s character.





