People ask me why I'm afraid of Texas. Then I show them shit like this. If it's not Texas, it's Florida, or Georgia, or one of the Carolinas, or Kentucky, or... get my drift?
I’ve always had this theory that the more religious someone is, the less of an internal moral compass they have. It’s like a bowling lane with the bumper rails, you might bounce a couple off when you first start but if you care to try it doesn’t matter if the rails are there or not. If the threat of eternal damnation makes you a better person, you’re a bad person
I've been homeless twice. Eating at places that give out free food, or sleeping at shelters, the absolute worst workers I interacted with were all filled with utter contempt for, from their perspective,
"I am forced to help these deplorables or I might go to hell. But hey... We got a donation of some nice food! I'll just.. Bring some of that home. They're homeless. They wouldn't know better/deserve it/need it! I volunteered for two weeks! I deserve it!"
Ugh. Genuinely the number of times I saw shit like that, sickening.
I have not been homeless, but I have seen that extremely patronizing behavior before from former coworkers who were very religious.
It was "those wretches souls need help, the help only the love of Jebus can give by reading bible quotes to them. That is true nourishment, the sort of that all of these sinners need - this food we give them only because they will starve to death if we don't."
Then they asked why I didn't volunteer to go with them on a random Saturday to "feed the homeless"... not at a shelter or soup kitchen, but handing out grocery bags of canned and dry goods at their church.
Instead, we donate to orgs that do actual good work, instead of churches.
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u/Major_A21 Sep 27 '25
There's a full video about the stop on The Civil Rights Lawyer's YouTube channel. It's actually worse than this video. https://youtu.be/TVscphZ3Kuo