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David Perdue,TNS đảng Cộng Hòa, "cầu nguyện" cho một chuyện đương nhiên: TT Obama mãn nhiệm kỳ

Subject: ***_sao_lại_phải_dùng_Kinh_T hánh_để_cầu_cho_chuyện_này_?!
From: Mike Wilson
Date: Sat, June 11, 2016 6:02 am

1. TT Obama sắp mãn nhiệm kỳ, và sắp có người thay thế

2. Sao lại phải dùng Kinh Thánh để cầu nguyện cho chuyện đương nhiên ấy ?

3. Ẩn bên trong tâm thức của David Perdue, TNS đảng Cộng Hòa, là sự cay đắng ghét bỏ TT Obama, một kỳ thị ngấm ngầm !

4. Nhưng vin vào cái nạng chống Kinh Cựu Ước để lộ ra dã tâm ấy, là chuyện ngu đần hết chỗ nói !

5. Đừng giả vờ tỏ ra ngoan đạo để dắt người khác đi lạc lối vào cái ngõ cụt !!!

nth-fl

GOP Senator: Pray That Obama's "Days Be Few"
June 10, 2016 10:55 PM
Filed Under: Politics


Georgia Sen. David Perdue (Photo by Jessica McGowan/Getty Images)

MATTHEW DALY
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Republican senator told conservatives Friday they should pray for President Barack Obama and suggested a biblical passage that says, “Let his days be few.”
Georgia Sen. David Perdue told a gathering of religious conservatives that “we need to be very specific about how we pray.” He suggested using Psalms 109:8, which reads: “Let his days be few, and let another have his office.”
As the audience at the Faith & Freedom Coalition’s “Road to Majority” conference laughed and applauded, Perdue said, “In all seriousness, I believe that America is at a moment of crisis.”
The next lines of the Psalm read: “Let his children be fatherless and his wife a widow.”
Kristen Orthman, a spokeswoman for Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid, said Perdue’s comments “left the impression he was praying for the death of President Obama.”
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., followed Perdue on stage “and did not condemn him,” Orthman said. “If Republicans are still wondering why Donald Trump is their nominee, look no further than today’s Faith and Freedom conference,” she said.
Megan Whittemore, a spokeswoman for Perdue, said the senator told the Faith & Freedom audience that, “We are called to pray for our country, for our leaders and for our president (?).”
Perdue “in no way wishes harm toward our president, and everyone in the room understood that,” Whittemore said.
A spokesman for McConnell said the senator was not on stage when Perdue made the comment.
At the White House, spokesman Josh Earnest said that “as Sen. Perdue considers whether an apology is appropriate, there are a variety of other scriptures he might consult.”