Some of the readers' comments said just about exactly what you said.
After all, American is a majority Christian country. You'd expect  Christian
candidates for office. If this was India you'd expect Hindus seeking  
office,
and so on. For that matter, not too many Confucians or Buddhists  running
for office in Israel.
 
My only gripe, to call it that, is that so far no Lutheran has made  it
to the WH. Otherwise there has just about been at least one of every  
Christian
denomination. And if a Jew ever ran for the presidency,  fine with  me,
at least if he ( she ) isn't a hard core Lefty.
 
You know, about Romney and  Mormonism, maybe the problem
with him is that he isn't Mormon enough. Some of his values issues
positions are very un-Mormon. Think he walks the line between
Mormon and Jack Mormon.
 
Observations for today
 
Billy
 
---------------------------------------
 
 
 
1/7/2012 7:52:00 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected]  
writes:

Needless to say, I don't understand their thinking.  All Christians know 
that Jesus was a Jew. I don't get the cause for alarm.  Rick Santorum is NOT 
Jerry Falwell reborn. 

David

  _   
 
“A society that does  not recognize that each individual has values of his 
own which he is entitled  to follow can have no respect for the dignity of 
the individual and cannot  really know freedom.”—Fredrich August von Hayek  



On 1/7/2012 1:06 PM,  [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  



Jerusalem Post
 
 
 
Jewish groups  slam Santorum for 'Jesus' comment 
By HILARY LEILA  KRIEGER, JPOST CORRESPONDENT 
01/07/2012  18:37 

US Republican  presidential candidate criticized as "religiously 
exclusionist" for saying,  "We always need a Jesus candidate." 
 

 
 
BOSTON -- Jewish  groups slammed Republican presidential candidate Rick 
Santorum Friday for  telling listeners of a Boston radio show that "We always 
need a Jesus guy"  in the campaign.

Santorum, formerly a Pennsylvania senator and the _second-place winner_ 
(http://www.jpost.com/VideoArticles/Video/Article.aspx?id=252133)  of the Iowa  
caucus, made the remark Thursday after being asked about a listener's  
comment that, "We don't need a Jesus guy this election. We need an economics  
guy this election."






Santorum continued, "Do you stand up and say, 'God bless America?'  Do you 
mean it? Are you just saying it? The idea that we don't need someone  with a 
moral compass, is that what we've come to? Is that what the  Republican 
party is? No, it isn't."

The candidate, who then went on  to campaign in New Hampshire, which will 
hold its first-in-the-nation  primary on Tuesday, reportedly repeated the 
conversation later in the day,  relating that he had said, "We always need a 
Jesus candidate."


Anti-Defamation League Abraham Foxman told The Jerusalem Post that 
Santorum's remarks  were "totally inappropriate. It's crossing the line."

He added, "It says to Jews, to Muslims, to Buddists, to non-believers,  
you're not part of this country."

"I think the average Jew hears it  as religiously exclusionist," National 
Jewish Democratic Council President  David Harris said, though he added that 
he didn't think Santorum had meant  it that way.

"It helps remind American Jews of the yawning gap  between them and today's 
Republican party," continued Harris, whose partisan  organization backs US 
President Barack Obama.

But Foxman pointed out  that Democrats had also invoked Jesus in their 
campaigns in past elections,  and noted Santorum has not been the only 
candidate 
in this election cycle to  bring Christianity into the public conversation.

The Santorum  campaign did not respond to requests for comment. However, at 
a later event,  he reportedly clarified his statement. 

"I said we always need a  Jesus candidate," he was quoted as saying. "I 
don't mean necessarily that we  always need a Christian, but we need someone 
who believes in something more  than themselves." 
 
------------------------------------------------------
 
Selected Comments :
 
 
If this is all  Jewish people have to worry about from a "President, 
Santorum", then they'll  be doing fine. Or if you like, we could keep Fuhrer 
Obama 
another four years  and have all his alliances with enemies of Judaism 
endure. 

 
---
 
 
These people are  morons, including Mr Foxman. I am Jewish and I don't see 
anything wrong in  what Santorum said. It's his figure of speech. He said 
what he said and I  still believe he accepts me as an equal fellow American. 
These Jewish groups  too often speak just to speak in order to earn their fat 
check salaries. Mr  Foxman should pull his his foot out of his mouth. We 
have no better friends  among Americans. Evangelical Christians are unlike 
Catholics our greatest  friends in United States.
 
---
 
 
Hey, Abe Foxman,  when Obama went to Turkey, and Egypt and proclaimed that 
the USA was a  Muslim country, did that cross the line with you, or were you 
okay with it,  because you're a liberal before you're a Jew? 

 
---
 
 
Where were these  liberal Jewish morons when we found out Obama's 
"spiritual guide" was an  anti-Semite and black separatist? Where were these 
liberal 
Jewish morons  when Obama gave a speech in Cairo falling in line with the 
Islamists? 
 
---
 
 
These aren't  ''Jewish'' groups - they're Democrat shills.

America is a Christian  country so why shouldn't a candidate talk about 
Jesus?  

Jews  who support Obama are fools, uninformed, gullible, or they just don't 
care  much about their Jewishness. 



--  




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