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Ron Way says that Christians often use the bible to justify viewpoints that are racist, anti-LGBTQ, anti-mixed marriage, antisemitic, anti-immigrant, misogynistic, dismissive of the poor and against teaching racial history (“The golden rule, so widely taught, has woeful traction,” Strib Voices, Jan. 26). I know a lot of Christians and I don’t share his opinion.
He uses President Donald Trump’s executive orders as an example of someone using Christianity to justify a hateful viewpoint. But he doesn’t explain how the executive orders constitute hatred for the groups he names.
Way evidently believes that having a different opinion from his progressive viewpoint constitutes hatred. For example, if you are against illegal immigration, you must be racist. If you are against biological males competing against biological females, you are anti-trans. If you are against teaching critical race theory, you are against teaching the true history of race relations in the U.S.
The views that he considers hateful aren’t Christian views, they are conservative views. Conservatives don’t hate minorities, trans people, mixed marriages or any of the other things that he claims they do. Conservatives do prefer different policies than those preferred by progressives. People should be able to have different policy preferences without being labeled haters.
James Brandt, New Brighton
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