Marcus Lamb has become the latest far right media figure to die from Covid.
Over the course of his life, he stole millions from gullible ppl. He forgot to stay on the manipulator side of the grift at the end, however, like Fox News does, opposing vaccines while mandating them.
People who use religion to steal, cheat, and delude the naive are some of the worst people on this planet.
Marcus Lamb did so much harm during his life. There's no question that he harmed Christianity as well.
I'll highlight a few of the many stupid and dangerous things that Marcus Lamb told his viewers about Covid.
In November of last year, his wife promoted Listerine as a preventative. They were touting mouthwash.
Marcus Lamb and his Daystar network churned out hundreds of hours of anti-vax propaganda, even more than Fox News.
They repeatedly boosted extremist Simone Gold, a January 6 insurrectionist who's made millions selling ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine
Marcus Lamb and his wife, Joni, didn't just promote fake Covid cures, they told people it is a sin to get vaccinated.
They also promoted lies about vaccine magnetism and ludicrous claims that being vaccinated makes you vulnerable to your body being controlled remotely. Watch:
Shortly before his death, Marcus Lamb unwittingly indicted himself as Satan's helper: "If the devil can take people out before they fulfill their destiny & purpose, that's what he wants to do, because he hates God."
You can't get more Satanic than telling ppl vaccines are a sin.
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This @michelleinbklyn column explores whether some left-of-center Americans are less politically engaged bc they might see fascism as inevitable.
I think that could be true, but I'd say more think that w/Trump out of the WH, no effort is needed nytimes.com/2021/11/22/opi…
Neither perspective is the accurate one in my opinion. To borrow the phrase of Stephen Jay Gould, the USA is currently in a "hopeful monster" phrase of social evolution. Lots of positive things have happened in recent years (especially for LGBT people)...
The danger of this moment is that religious and market fundamentalists have begun radicalizing as they see their last chances at democratic power fading.
The only way out is determined leadership to go where the public wants, but in a way that is inclusive...
Hello and welcome new followers! Here's a thread w/some of my writing & shows about right-wing brainwashing.
The most critical aspect is the manipulation of religion. I know because I experienced it first-hand before breaking free: flux.community/matthew-sheffi…
It all began in the 1960s when anti-New Deal reactionaries decided to use fundamentalist superstition/hatred as a leverage point to flip the "Solid South" to GOP.
The voters didn't want far-right economics, but it didn't matter bc of identity politics. flux.community/matthew-sheffi…
GOP consultants learned long ago that the majority of Americans don't want to slash the govt.
But a large enough minority are so full of rage about desegregation/secularism/feminism/LGBT that as long as they kept the focus on those subjects, GOP could win
If Terry McAuliffe goes down in #VAgov election tonight, it shows:
🟧 Trump weakens the GOP. In 2020, Trump lost VA by 10 points. Youngkin publicly (though not privately) avoided Trump.
🟧 Corporate centrism is a loser for Dems, esp w/a GOPer who brands as non-Trumpy
One of the big things to keep an eye on will be turnout in #VAGovernor race. It may come down to a base vs. base race. GOP "critical race" obsession was about firing up its reactionary voters while puzzling everyone else. But McAuliffe played into that w/parent education comment.
We'll see what the final totals are, but here are some stats on the two-party VA topline votes:
2013 (D gov win): 2.08 million
2016 (D prez win): 3.75 million
2017 (D gov win): 2.58 million
2020 (D prez win): 4.38 million
2021 (?): 3.16 million (estimate)
Terrorist propagandists aligned with the Taliban, ISIS, Al Qaeda and other groups have wholesale adopted Christian radical memes. They have hundreds of them now, mixing white nationalist iconography with jihadist slogans and people.
This emerging trend is a mirror of what happened in the West when Christian supremacist groups began coming together in the 1970s, but especially in the 2000s, putting aside sectarian grievances in pursuit of the larger goal of eradicating religious freedom for everyone else.
The fact that Charlie Kirk, the leader of a Christian nationalist youth group, would be asked about when the time would come for right-wingers to begin killing people has been linked to Trump's sore-loser lies about 2020.
Unfortunately, this tradition of violence is much older.