On 9/20/13 11:01 AM, iBoaterer wrote:
In article ,
says...
On Thu, 19 Sep 2013 13:55:22 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:
On Thu, 19 Sep 2013 10:26:35 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:
I remember a sociology class in college (one of those many liberal art
courses) in which a fellow student said that if Jews hated Christians
the way Christians hated Jews, Doctors Salk and Sabin would have figured
out a way to withhold their anti-polio vaccine from Gentiles. But, of
course, Salk and Sabin didn't do that. Good businessman that Salk was
(Jewish, you know), he didn't patent his vaccine.
===
Saying that Christians hate Jews is just as much of a sterotype as
saying that all Jews are good business people, and just as offensive
if not more so.
More so and pretty inaccurate.
I don't know anyone who has a particular dislike of Jews and I know a
lot of bible thumping rednecks.
Harry said it, this was a 50s and perhaps early 60s thing, mostly
among Baptists.
The strange thing is every atheist I know has a Jewish, mixed with
Catholic heritage.
(Mom or Dad converted)
Perhaps it is the idea that you can give up your beliefs and adopt
another religion, simply for love, that makes you question the whole
thing.
I think I am a spiritual guy but I have no brand loyalty and I just
seek the best wisdom from all of them. I certainly do not condemn
anyone for what they believe as long as they don't want to make me
believe it,
In that regard Jews are not really "evangelical".
My daughter even thought she wanted to be Jewish for a while.
made her a Menorah and she fired up all of the candles on the first
day. ;-)
I knew it was tome for a little "shooling". I got one of my Jewish IBM
buddies to explain a lot of the rituals to her.
I have a friend who married into a Jewish family and converted. I've
been to several events (Bar mitzvahs, etc) and always had a great time,
enjoyed the company.
I grew up in a city and at a time when everyone loved the Jewish kids
because there were so many Jews in New Haven, the public schools closed
down on the Jewish High Holidays. The two biggest
cultural/religious/educational/political groups at that time in my
hometown were Jews and Roman Catholics. Easy to figure out why: the city
was a magnet for European immigrants in the late 19th and first half of
the 20th Century because of its industrial economy.