Brandon @ Crucible Of Thought Profile picture
Aug 23, 2024 19 tweets 5 min read Read on X
I don't typically "post angry," but I'm angry, and this deserves a response. After Tim Walz's VP acceptance speech last night at the DNC 2024, where his teenage son Gus was shown crying and shouting with pride over his dad's nomination, a certain ugliness ensued. /1🧵 Image
2/ Unsurprisingly, pundits across the Trump far-right camp launched a flood of hate and ridicule against Gus and his emotional display. Witness these absolutely horrid posts by the likes of Ann Coulter and other right wing influencers.


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3/ Maybe Ann et al didn't know that Gus was diagnosed as a teen with nonverbal learning disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and anxiety. But that doesn't matter - their idea that Gus is so weird because of the specific way he loves his dad so unashamedly,
4/ that it deserved a tweet seen by millions of followers, as a way to mock his Democrat dad's family? Sick, sick, sick, sick, sick.

Truly sick.
5/ We just saw, exposed for all to see, the true heart of someone who will do literally anything to attack their political opponents. What a difference from the love and acceptance and joy and cheer that I saw on full display from beginning to end of the DNC speeches last night.
6/ Yes, Gus's reaction immediately struck me as "otherness" also: but I've been spending time with plenty of divergent people lately, in missional contexts which tend to be full of people who just don't fit the mold of most typical people. But I've realized: they're people too.
7/ So ridiculing Gus was the farthest thing from my mind. I wish I could say the display didn't make me uncomfortable - it did - but not to ridicule him.

And unfortunately, I guessed right away, as did many other folks, that it was going to result in ridicule from the far right.
8/ And so the empathetic people immediately started posting "We're gonna have to stand up for Gus, guys."

Sorry to say, our guess was correct. And that says a lot about how certain elements of our political discourse have devolved.
9/ So here's my appeal to you: if you find yourself reacting with ridicule or repulsion at someone who's just not quite the same as most of us, BE CURIOUS about that reaction. What is it inside you reacting that way? Maybe it's to someone neurodivergent like Tim Walz's son Gus.
10/ Maybe it's like Kamala's tatted-up stepdaughter Ella. Maybe it's a person with Down Syndrome. Maybe it's someone who violates that old-school polite dress code. Maybe it's a confusingly androgynous person that just doesn't fit a comfortable gender binary.
11/ Maybe it's the flamboyant gay person. Maybe it's a couple - or throuple - that doesn't meet your morals for a relationship. And lest I sound too one-sided - maybe it's a guy wearing a right wing slur on their hat? Or carrying a rifle? Or an FJB shirt? Or a street preacher?
12/ The details don't really matter - I'm talking about *anyone* you encounter that makes you instantly and distinctly uncomfortable.

When you sense yourself reacting like that, it is the perfect time to query yourself, and a real opportunity to grow a little bit.
13/ So in that moment, ask yourself with genuine curiosity why that reaction just happened. Was it fear? Was it anger about violated norms? Wonder about your sense of discomfort in the presence of "otherness." Wonder about what inside you maybe feels unsafe in that moment.
14/ Wonder about how God thinks about that person. Think about how Jesus constantly interacted with "the other," always with deep care and compassion. Ask the Holy Spirit if that reaction is unrighteous, and invite change into your heart. How can you bring peace and wholeness?
15/ And then, invite the Holy Spirit to reframe your thinking. Give God your unqualified, unambiguous "yes" to change whatever is unholy in your immediate reactions to otherness.

Because I know this about God: God answers our own prayers to change ourselves.
16/ While prayers to change others or change our situation often seem to go unanswered, I'm pretty sure that the one kind of prayer that always gets answered is prayer to change ourselves - even if the answer isn't what we thought it would be.
17/ The one consistent call from Jesus, and John the Baptist while leading the way for Jesus, was "repent" - change your thinking. It was rarely "stop sinning." God seems to have a special response to those who seek God's own heart, who seek to see and love others like Jesus did.
18/ In this moment, Gus Walz is today's example of "otherness," of just not being the prototypical human we expect. Tomorrow it will be someone else. It might be someone we know, but usually not. Doesn't matter; we must stand in the gap. Don't let them be shamefully "othered."
19/ We can all do better. The best way to change our world is to start seeing each other just like God sees them: with love, with compassion, with respect, with care, with dignity. Let's do this. Let's set the example. THAT will change the world far faster than who's elected.

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More from @CrucibleOfThght

Nov 11, 2024
We just watched the American church wearing purple and scarlet, standing in front of the beast she had long feared, and collectively decide, "I really think we can tame that thing." It really is that simple: she wanted power and riches, and the beast offered exactly that. /1🧵 Image
2/ I don't think Revelation is literal prophecy. I don't believe a Rapture is just around the corner. But Revelation is full of really good insight into humanity's relationship between religion and empire, and the principles apply each time those two intersect.
3/ For a few decades now, evangelicals have been slowly and steadily building a coalition, and establishing a rationale for controlling American society. They've indoctrinated their followers into important belief systems. They've found levers that give them power.
Read 24 tweets
Nov 7, 2024
They're already setting up the conditions to remove him from office via the 25th Amendment shortly after he takes office. But it's a long game. If they move too fast, MAGA will revolt. So they have to take it very very slowly and carefully. /1🧵
newyorker.com/magazine/2024/…
2/ So they will start slowwwwly letting his supporters know everything that his opponents know and have been screaming about - but things that were very carefully hidden from MAGA by their echo chamber media. On right wing media, all they see is a perfect demigod.
3/ And just like Roosevelt's paralysis, the truth won't be evident to them for a loooong time to come, if ever. But they've got to do it slowly enough that his MAGA supporters don't realize they were lied to for the last year or more - they can't afford MAGA to feel betrayed.
Read 4 tweets
Nov 6, 2024
3-1/2 years ago, on 1/10/2021, my then-pastor preached a vehement message criticizing us for not listening to the prophetic voices telling us that Trump had won the 2020 election, that we needed to trust God, not our own knowledge. I now see spiritual abuse in that message, /1🧵
2/ a gaslighting of our God-given conscience and deeply rational outrage about the absolute evil we'd just watched consume the Capitol, with God's name on the lips of the rioters. The pastor's insistence that our spiritual fitness was dependent on listening to a chorus
3/ of self-appointed, self-deceived "holy men" whose disconnection from the true voice of God galls me to this day, and led directly to me leaving that church, and soon abandoning evangelicalism. My deep concern, with Trump 2024, is the fresh crystallization of this abuse
Read 12 tweets
Nov 3, 2024
Why I voted for Kamala Harris as a Christian: After four intensive years of rethinking my doctrines and politics, I have concluded that my former right-wing positions on abortion, LGBTQ, racism, 2A, welfare, climate, and immigration were WRONG. Specifically: /1🧵
2/ For months in 2022 I studied abortion intensively, and for my own purposes I wrote a 53-page paper on "A personal framework for the morality of abortion" and in 2024 a 33-page paper on "Studies on the best ways to reduce abortions." Banning abortion is counterproductive; pro-choice, in all its complexity, is (perhaps paradoxically) in fact the best way to reduce abortion. Furthermore, the anti-abortion position is inherently harmful to huge numbers of women and families, and violates many things that pro-life people claim to value. You can find my papers linked here:
crucibleofthought.com/studies-on-the…
3/ In 2022 I studied gay rights and homosexuality and transgender issues at length, and wrote a 36-page paper about my findings. I and concluded that (contrary to evangelical teaching) the Bible does not teach that homosexuality or gay rights are wrong. Furthermore, I concluded that the anti-affirming position results in vast and deep harm to many people, including far too many suiçides and self-harm by people in unsupportive situations. Responses about the personal or societal harm supposedly caused by the gay or trans agenda are utterly unconvincing, and I've found them to be universally mistaken or outright deceptive, not to mention quite unChristian in their use of falsehoods in pursuit of an religious agenda. You can find my paper here:
crucibleofthought.com/coming-out-on-…
Read 12 tweets
Oct 7, 2024
Each time I post something about leaving the Republican Party after voting twice for Trump, I get a ton of questions asking how I could have been so dumb. I get the incredulity; I wonder the same thing. But I think the question is asked in good faith, so here's my answer. /1🧵
2/ First, the short version: I grew up SO Republican that I never thought there was a real honest alternative. And Trump scratched my itch for seeing Christians take over the reins of government. But January 6th broke me: I was unwilling to be associated with that. So, details:
3/ I was born into a VERY Republican extended family. My earliest political memory was attending a 1980 rally and watching candidate Ronald Reagan promote his exciting vision for America, talking about all the amazing things he would do for our nation. It was intoxicating.
Read 20 tweets
Oct 7, 2024
I continue to be flabbergasted by the seemingly gleeful spread of misinformation and outright lies by the right. I was a Republican party-line voter from my very first vote for George HW Bush, straight through to voting twice for Trump (to my DEEP regret). But NEVER AGAIN. /1🧵 Image
2/ All those years, we Republicans told ourselves that WE were the party of truth and law and order and respect for the Constitution. We constantly ridiculed Democrats as liars, hypocrites, who would say anything to buy votes, do anything to steal elections, who hated America.
3/ We Republicans proudly told ourselves that God was on our side, because we were SO devoted to truth and righteousness. We rejected the idea that it was even POSSIBLE to be Christian and a Democrat at the same time, we were so certain that God was with us.
Read 13 tweets

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