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Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Franklin Graham isn't even half the man his father was, and Billy wasn't much of one in the first place.

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COMMENTS: 
*  Let me know when Frankie votes for someone that isn't the GOP nominee in a general election. Until then, this is little more than bluster in an attempt to increase his fundraising to further fund his opulent lifestyle.
*  This proves the point that it isn't about the fetus as no federal funding goes towards abortion but is actually about denying low-income women access to vital healthcare services such as cancer screening, reproductive planning, and general women's healthcare but hey they can still claim there is no war against women.
*  Apparently young Graham will be leading the American version of the Taliban, and moving further away from the ideals of Christianity.
*  Good for him. If we're lucky he will organize a new political party. He can take all the evangelicals with him, and they all can all sink into political oblivion.
*  There is a big difference between Christians and Evangelicals. Mainline Christians and Catholics are much more likely to vote Democratic than Evangelicals.
    *  Exactly.  I detest the fact that the Evangelicals have hijacked the "Christian" label, leaving us mainline Protestants and Catholics lumped in with them by default.  Please never say "Christians" in reference to these people. Say "Christian Taliban" or "Religious Conservative Evangelicals" or just "fake Christians". Because that's what they are.  There's virtually no "Christ" in the Evangelical "Christians".
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Evangelist Franklin Graham quits the Republican Party over Planned Parenthood funding
By David Gibson, December 22, 2015

Evangelist Franklin Graham has announced he is abandoning the Republican Party in disgust over the move by the GOP-led Congress last week to pass a budget that Graham said was “wasteful” and provided funding for Planned Parenthood, which he compared to the Nazis.

Graham has previously said he has no faith in any political party, but his apparent renunciation of his Republican affiliation is an indication of anger on the right and the strong interest many disaffected evangelicals have shown in populist outsiders like Donald Trump.

Graham himself has expressed admiration for Trump, the surprise frontrunner in the Republican presidential field, and has voiced support for some of Trump’s more controversial positions — such as his call to ban Muslims from the U.S. — which have drawn condemnation from more mainstream evangelical leaders.

The federal government provides $528 million in funding for Planned Parenthood — about 40 percent of the organization’s annual budget — primarily through payments to Medicaid for health services for low-income Americans. Federal law prohibits funding of most abortions and Planned Parenthood separates federal taxpayer dollars from those used to provide abortions.

Social conservatives have long fought to strip taxpayer funding from Planned Parenthood, and, after the release of a series of undercover videos by anti-abortion activists earlier this year, those calls ramped up to a fever pitch.

Activists said the undercover videos show Planned Parenthood officials negotiating the sale of fetal organs — which they called “baby parts” — for profit to medical researchers; making money off such organs or tissue could be illegal and unethical. Planned Parenthood denied that it was profiting from the sale and said it was quitting the practice.

In the wake of that white-hot controversy, there was wide expectation that with Republicans in control of both the House and Senate Congress would eliminate funding for 2016. Some conservatives in the GOP threatened to shutdown the government if that wasn’t done.

But the shooting massacre at a Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood clinic late last month by a lone gunman, Robert Lewis Dear, who proclaimed himself “a warrior for the babies,” seemed to change the calculus and congressional leaders last week reached a deal that averted a shutdown and funds the government through September of next year.

The deal also funds Planned Parenthood at previous levels — a development that has enraged many on the religious right, including Graham, son of the renowned evangelist Billy Graham.

“This is an example of why I have resigned from the Republican Party and declared myself Independent. I have no hope in the Republican Party, the Democratic Party, or Tea Party to do what is best for America,” the younger Graham declared on Facebook on Monday.

“Seeing and hearing Planned Parenthood talk nonchalantly about selling baby parts from aborted fetuses with utter disregard for human life is reminiscent of Joseph Mengele and the Nazi concentration camps!” Graham wrote. “That should’ve been all that was needed to turn off the faucet for their funding.”

Graham drew immediate support on social media but how much sway he carries with voters is debatable.

Billy Graham, who is 97, infirm and largely incommunicado, over the years came to rue his involvement with politics, saying it drew the focus from his evangelism.

But his son has not been hesitant to offer his opinion of politicians and in particular hot-button electoral issues of interest to social conservatives. In fact, in denouncing the Republican Party this week, Graham made a pitch for the prayer rallies he will hold in every state next year, starting in Iowa in January shortly before the crucial first presidential primary.

The rallies, as Graham says, aim to “challenge Christians to live out their faith at home, in public and at the ballot box.”

Graham has said that if more evangelical voters turn out it could prove the difference in national and local elections, a point also made by Republican candidates.
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