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LCDR Joshua Gillespie
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This has NOTHING to do with "racism", "police brutality", or "privilege"... so can we cut the crap and call a spade a spade now? These people are Marxists... and they're trying to destroy our country.
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Capt Gregory Prickett
Capt Gregory Prickett
4 y
LCDR Joshua Gillespie - Sure, blacks make up a large part of the Chicago population. And they are killed in numbers disproportionate to their population. You say they are 32% of the Chicago population, fine, I'll accept that as likely be accurate. From 2013 to 2018, there were 76 people killed by Chicago PD. Of those, 56 were black, 13 were Hispanic, 5 were other/unknown, and 2 were white. The black and white populations were about the same, statistically, the number killed by police should be about the same.
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Capt Gregory Prickett
Capt Gregory Prickett
4 y
LCDR Joshua Gillespie - You said that "Sexuality and marriage are sacred acts."

Wiccans think the same thing, but I doubt that you would accept their view.

Sex has nothing to do with a sacred act, it is a biological function. Marriage is a societal construct, not religious. Some sects of Christianity promote polygamy. Some state that men can have concubines. All of that is supported by the Bible, unless one is going to be a bishop.
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LCDR Joshua Gillespie
LCDR Joshua Gillespie
4 y
Capt Gregory Prickett - With respect, your suggesting that the propensity to commit violent crime is equal based strictly on ethnicity. That simply isn't so; the proclivity to commit crime is based on a multitude of factors... from economic status and education, to the concentration of organized crime and gang operations within a specific community. In that regard, I'm certain the statistics would also support the notion that within the city of Chicago, there is a disproportionate number of African-Americans living at or below poverty levels, being afforded inferior opportunities at education, and living in communities dominated by gangs and organized crime entities. It's one of the few points often suggested in the debate on equality that I'll "buy into" that these factors directly contribute to increased levels and severity of crime. We have police shootings here in rural Tennessee as well... care to guess the ethnicity of the last three such "headline" incidents here in my local area? They were all Caucasian, and one was an off-duty corrections officer. In two of these cases, the suspect had a weapon... in the third, the man was allegedly shot while unarmed simply for trying to flee. My review of each incident would lead me to believe that in the first two, the shootings were justified... and in the third, the officer involved acted inappropriately due to a lack of training and a toxic department culture. What do I infer from all of this? Simply that the larger the population, and the larger the incidence of violent crime... the higher the likelihood of police shootings. Some will be justified, and some will not. I cannot infer anything "racially motivated" or "endemic" from these facts.
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LCDR Joshua Gillespie
LCDR Joshua Gillespie
4 y
Capt Gregory Prickett - Having known several "Wiccans" and "Neo-Pagans" closely (including having been romantically involved with one some years passed), I absolutely agree that they share a "spiritual" view on the subject of sexuality. Anachronisms and inaccurate perceptions of ancient pagan beliefs aside... I've found that almost universally, such people are looking for a form of escapism; usually "escaping" prior toxic relationships, abuse, or in at least one case I'm intimately familiar with... repressive "cult" experiences had under the guise of Christianity. In that sense, you might say I have a great of "sympathy" for those who have been victimized by people or organizations using sexuality as a form of control. Of those I've known personally... the ONLY one's to have found any peace were those who ultimately settled for more conventional relationships and marriages.

Obviously, I cannot "prove" sex to be a "sacred" act... but I still believe it to be so. However, I will agree that the impetus is procreation (as well as forging the bond between a couple towards mutual survival). I'll also readily admit that much of our "modern" understanding of marriage is a "social construct" adapted for our times. That neither makes such "constructs" negative, or devoid of spiritual importance.

There is and has always been much debate within the Abrahamic faith communities regarding things such as polygamy and extramarital sex in context of Scripture as yes... King David, Solomon, and others are detailed as having multiple wives and "concubines". My personal sense of it is that if David had as many as 600 such "wives", he was either spending a large part of his time engaged in intercourse every day at a relatively advanced age... or many of these women rarely even saw the King, let alone shared a bed with him. That said, I'm certain each was provided the things traditionally demanded of a husband, and afforded respect as a member of David's household. This, in exchange for power and wealth....not "sex".... was probably the purpose of such polygamous unions. During a time and in a culture where males not only dominated society... but were dying at a higher rate due to an almost constant state of warfare; it makes "sense" that females would "need" greater forms of social security than relying on "romance" and a single, monogamous marriage for life. To the best of my knowledge, there is no scriptural reference discounting or condemning these practices prior to the New Testament... and even THEN, it's largely implied monogamy is a choice reserved for those whose ecumenical leadership demands more of their time outside their own family.

Ultimately, while I would not choose it for myself, neither will I condemn polygamy out of hand. From what I witnessed first-hand in Afghanistan, it is not as "common" as one might expect, and where it is found... there appears to be as many examples of it being a "positive", and there are for it being a "negative". What I believe God condemns isn't the fact a man may procreate with multiple females... but the fact that in our modern times, this is normally motivated by lust or empowered by empty and meaningless notions of dominance.
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
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Now protesters don't get enough attention or support, so they go to harass regular people going about their lives.
No doubt, there were likely a lot of folks in that church sympathetic or supportive of their protests. Yet when you act a fool, your support evaporates.
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Capt Gregory Prickett
Capt Gregory Prickett
4 y
1SG (Join to see) - Oh, I get it. The church is full of "good people". How do you feel about Pastor Koletas? Are you OK with him proclaiming that blacks are cursed by god?
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
1SG (Join to see)
4 y
Capt Gregory Prickett - Don't know him.
But our faith is very specific on how we should treat those who do us wrong.
And it is also specific about how curses uttered in God's name are judged.

I'm not sure why you are casting about looking for examples of people doing wrong in order to distract from the actions in this specific situation. You know, the subject of the thread.
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Capt Gregory Prickett
Capt Gregory Prickett
4 y
1SG (Join to see) - I'm asking if the actions that you are condemning here should be condemned when Christians do it.
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
1SG (Join to see)
4 y
Capt Gregory Prickett - "Other people do it too" is a specious and weak argument.
Wrong is wrong.

The thing is, given the history of abortion in America, those protesters should be on the same team as the pro-life people, as the African American community has been very disproportionally impacted by the practice.
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