Celebrity News...
  1. Shaken George Clooney
  2. Lisa Marie Presley's twin joy
  3. Jennifer Lopez renews vows
  4. Ringo Starr's fan mail deadline
Entertainment...
  1. Pete Doherty's drug video
  2. MTV Europe host Katy Perry
  3. Sharon Osbourne's Kidman rant
  4. Demi Moore directs daughter
Latest Music...
  1. Ironik’s New Single Stay With Me
  2. The Best Of Creedence Clearwater Revival
  3. Black Kids New Album Partie Traumatic
  4. Paul Heaton New Album The Cross Eyed Rambler
Movie Reviews...
  1. Katyn
  2. Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired
  3. The Heckler
  4. Cinema's Action Women


Female First Forum Forum Index
Bush & co milking Katrina misery
Goto page Previous  1, 2  
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Female First Forum Forum Index -> Politics
Author Message
Nefarious
FemaleFirst Chatter (200+ Posts)


Joined: 26 Dec 2006
Posts: 206


PostPosted: Mon Jan 01, 2007 5:35 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ok - it was a bit fluffy - let's see if I can make myself more coherent.

As a westerner, even if you don't belong to a religion, Christian stories have been popularized through the media, through movies, documentaries, etc. Time and again we've faced the speculation of 'is this the end of the world'? We've all heard stories of cult members that have killed themselves because they thought the end of the world was nigh. We've heard stories about Soddom and Gomorragh, Noah's Flood - acts of retribution against humanity by a displeased god. We've heard about revelations - pestilence, earthquakes, a third of the fish dying in the seas, the third world war centered in the middle east, etc - all being omens of the end times.

My theory is that even if you don't subscribe to a religion, putting together things like the war in middle east, bird flu, the earthquakes in Sumatra, the storms, etc can make even non-religious people jumpy and question 'what if this is the end of times?' This is because a) all of the information they have processed about revelation 'primes' their mind to make connections between world events and the prophesized end times, coupled with b) the 'what if' factor - namely 'what if God is really there and I haven't done the right thing and I get screwed for eternity?'

I don't know if that makes it any more clear.
Back to top
Guest







PostPosted: Mon Jan 01, 2007 3:13 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Nefarious wrote:
Ok - it was a bit fluffy - let's see if I can make myself more coherent.

As a westerner, even if you don't belong to a religion, Christian stories have been popularized through the media, through movies, documentaries, etc. Time and again we've faced the speculation of 'is this the end of the world'? We've all heard stories of cult members that have killed themselves because they thought the end of the world was nigh. We've heard stories about Soddom and Gomorragh, Noah's Flood - acts of retribution against humanity by a displeased god. We've heard about revelations - pestilence, earthquakes, a third of the fish dying in the seas, the third world war centered in the middle east, etc - all being omens of the end times.

My theory is that even if you don't subscribe to a religion, putting together things like the war in middle east, bird flu, the earthquakes in Sumatra, the storms, etc can make even non-religious people jumpy and question 'what if this is the end of times?' This is because a) all of the information they have processed about revelation 'primes' their mind to make connections between world events and the prophesized end times, coupled with b) the 'what if' factor - namely 'what if God is really there and I haven't done the right thing and I get screwed for eternity?'

I don't know if that makes it any more clear.


The wacko incident was a complete fix. Geeze Very Happy
Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Female First Forum Forum Index -> Politics All times are GMT
Goto page Previous  1, 2
Page 2 of 2

 


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group
terms and conditions Latest Posts


---