Andrea Widberg; American Thinker "In 2015, David Burge (Iowahawk) posted a now famous tweet describing leftism: "1. Identify a respected institution. 2. Kill it. 3.
Gut it. 4. Wear its carcass as a skin suit, while demanding respect." In that short tweet, he perfectly described what leftism has
done to Judaism and Christianity. And that act of wearing a religion's "carcass as a skin suit, while demanding respect" is the best
caption possible for a video in which a female Presbyterian minister, draped in a Planned Parenthood stole, celebrates her abortion
and abortions generally.
"My parents were not religious. Dad had a snootful of religion being raised in an Orthodox Jewish orphanage in Nazi Germany,
even as his older siblings, both ardent communists, castigated religion as the evil opiate of the people. Mom, meanwhile, was the
daughter of a non-religious Jewish man and an equally non-religious Christian woman. With both having spent some of their
formative years among Jewish socialists in British-mandate Palestine and, later, Israel, organized religion was not high on their list." . . .
. . ."Religious leaders, however, aren't supposed to be ordinary people, at least insofar as moral instruction goes. They are supposed to
teach us those core religious principles and uphold those same principles in their own lives. If they don't agree with religious
principles, they shouldn't become priests, pastors, ministers, or rabbis.
"But that's not how the left operates. Rather than ignoring religious houses of worship and focusing on their own houses of worship
(schools, colleges, TV shows, state houses, etc.), leftists infiltrate traditional religions and eat them from the inside out, wearing
them as the skin suit Iowahawk described.
And with that introduction, I give you Rebecca Todd Peters, dressed in her Planned Parenthood stole, assuring her congregation that
abortion is a religious act and shouting her two abortions.
"Nothing more clearly shows what leftism has done to America because,
when you think about it, human sacrifice is a pagan act. It is the antithesis of both the Jewish ethos and the Christian one: