Kyle Mantyla , - Alternet/Right Wing Watch
Stephan: Another data point in the increasingly aggressive trend of the "christian" cult.
Religious Right activist “Coach” Dave Daubenmire declared on his “Pass The Salt Live” webcast this morning that America needs “a more violent Christianity.” He cited President Trump and Greg Gianforte as examples of violent men who are properly “walking in authority.”
“The only thing that is going to save Western civilization is a more aggressive, a more violent Christianity,” he said. (emphasis added)
Playing a clip of Trump shoving aside the prime minister of Montenegro at a recent NATO summit so that he could stand in front of the group of assembled leaders, Daubenmire heaped praise on Trump for showing that “he is large and in charge.”
“Look at him,” Daubenmire screamed gleefully while watching the clip. “They’re all little puppies, ain’t nobody barking at him … He’s walking in authority. He walked to the front and center and they all know it, too, man. He just spanked them all.”
Trump’s behavior is an example for the church, Daubenmire said. “The Lord is showing us a picture of the authority we should be walking in.”
Daubenmire then cited Republican congressional candidate Greg Gianforte’s assault on a reporter the day […]
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Allan Adamson , - Tech Times
Stephan: As a father of a daughter I think it best not to comment.
Credit: Sean Gallup
Researchers of a new study have found that fathers of toddler daughters tend to be more attentive to their children compared with fathers with sons.
Daughters And Sons Treated Differently By Fathers
Jennifer Mascaro, from Emory University in Atlanta, and colleagues monitored the interaction of fathers and their toddler children over a 48-hour period and found a striking difference with the way fathers spoke to and played with their children depending on the child’s gender.
Fathers of girls spend about 60 percent more time attentively responding to their child than those with sons. They also spent about five times more whistling and singing with their daughter and talked more openly about emotions such as sadness.
Fathers of boys, on the other hand, were observed to spend about three times as long daily engaging in rough and tumble play with their children. They also tend to use more words linked to achievement such as “win,” “best,” and “proud.”
The researchers also conducted MRI brain scans on the fathers […]
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