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Prospero
10-09-2012, 10:43 AM
Another fruitcake running for office in Arkansas.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/08/charlie-fuqua-arkansas-candidate-death-penalty-rebellious-children_n_1948490.html?utm_hp_ref=fb&src=sp&comm_ref=false

Charlie Fuqua, Arkansas Legislative Candidate, Endorses Death Penalty For Rebellious Children In Book

Charlie Fuqua, the Republican candidate for the Arkansas House of Representatives who called for expelling Muslims from the United States in his book, also wrote in support for instituting the death penalty for "rebellious children."

In "God's Law," Fuqua's 2012 book, the candidate wrote that while parents love their children, a process could be set up to allow for the institution of the death penalty for "rebellious children," according to the Arkansas Times. Fuqua, who is anti-abortion, points out that the course of action involved in sentencing a child to death is described in the Bible and would involve judicial approval. While it is unlikely that many parents would seek to have their children killed by the government, Fuqua wrote, such power would serve as a way to stop rebellious children.

According to the Arkansas Times, Fuqua wrote:

The maintenance of civil order in society rests on the foundation of family discipline. Therefore, a child who disrespects his parents must be permanently removed from society in a way that gives an example to all other children of the importance of respect for parents. The death penalty for rebellious children is not something to be taken lightly. The guidelines for administering the death penalty to rebellious children are given in Deut 21:18-21:
This passage does not give parents blanket authority to kill their children. They must follow the proper procedure in order to have the death penalty executed against their children. I cannot think of one instance in the Scripture where parents had their child put to death. Why is this so? Other than the love Christ has for us, there is no greater love then [sic] that of a parent for their child. The last people who would want to see a child put to death would be the parents of the child. Even so, the Scrpture provides a safe guard to protect children from parents who would wrongly exercise the death penalty against them. Parents are required to bring their children to the gate of the city. The gate of the city was the place where the elders of the city met and made judicial pronouncements. In other words, the parents were required to take their children to a court of law and lay out their case before the proper judicial authority, and let the judicial authority determine if the child should be put to death. I know of many cases of rebellious children, however, I cannot think of one case where I believe that a parent had given up on their child to the point that they would have taken their child to a court of law and asked the court to rule that the child be put to death. Even though this procedure would rarely be used, if it were the law of land, it would give parents authority. Children would know that their parents had authority and it would be a tremendous incentive for children to give proper respect to their parents.

In the same book, Fuqua advocated for expelling Muslims from the U.S., saying it would solve what he described as the "Muslim problem." Fuqua, who has been backed by the state GOP and is seeking a comeback, has found himself under attack by Republicans since his comments surfaced at the same time it was reported that state Rep. Jon Hubbard (R-Jonesboro) endorsed slavery in his book. Fuqua told the Associated Press that he was surprised by the reaction to his writings on Muslims.

"I think my views are fairly well-accepted by most people," Fuqua said to AP.

Fuqua declined to answer questions from The Huffington Post.

"I'm not going to talk to you," he said before hanging up.

On his campaign blog, Fuqua highlights his service on the Children and Families Committee while a member of the Arkansas Legislature in 1997. He also describes liberals and Muslims as the "anti-Christ" and says he believes they are conspiring to create a "bloody revolution."

"There is a strange alliance between the liberal left and the Muslim religion. It may be that since both are the enemies of Christianity, that they both believe that, my enemy's enemy is my friend," Fuqua writes. "However there are several similarities between the two. Both are antichrist in that they both deny that Jesus is God in the flesh of man, and the savior of mankind. They both also hold that their cause should take over the entire world through violent, bloody, revolution."

Willie Escalade
10-09-2012, 01:59 PM
So Kobe said he's going to retire in two years when his contract is up with the Lakers. I'd rather pay attention to THAT news than the bullshit this Charlie Fucka is spewing...

trish
10-09-2012, 05:06 PM
Fuqua addresses a real and growing problem. A awful lot of children today born to meth-addicted parents just don't respect their Moms and Dads. One rebellious boy refused to eat another tater tot. Another selfish young ten year old girl refused to help support the family by selling blowjobs beneath the expressway overpass. Sometimes kids are just revolting and we need to make an example of them. Summer Death Camps for Intransigent Chidren would be a great idea and it would strengthen the whole nation by promoting family values. Wish I lived in Arkansas...I'd give Fuqua a free ass reaming.

Prospero
10-09-2012, 05:08 PM
Now, now Trish... you are being ironic about a man of deeply held (un)- Christian beliefs.

Stavros
10-09-2012, 05:36 PM
Curious that unlike in the US, in Europe there is a long tradition of Christian socialism -Tony Benn and Denis Healey, at polar opposites in the Labour movement, were both motivated by their Christian beliefs to help the poor as part of their work with the Party. In the US there has been an aggressive attempt to disassociate Jesus with the concept of equality, above all with pacifism. If you want a lengthy exposition of the claim that Jesus is a libertarian anarchist whose ministry aims to abolish government, taxes, but not, for example, markets and transactions which set interest rates, you could, if you have the stamina, plough through our very own Jamie Angel's essay in which, additionally, the war on drugs is of course a propesterous sham invented by the beastly state, because Jesus was not against any kind of drug taking, and so on and so on...

http://www.anti-state.com/redford/redford4.html