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The leader of a small group that ultimately wants to secede from the United States and form a Christian republic is preparing to move to the South Carolina county his organization has picked as a base of operations. Cory Burnell, leader of Christian Exodus, said he is ready to move his family and operations by July from California to Anderson, S.C.. He will be joined by other families already living in the area. His family will join more than a dozen other like-minded families already living there. Burnell hopes to put up and elect candidates for public office who share his agenda. Associated Press

2007-06-15 10:38:25 · 24 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

24 answers

Sounds like a cult. Christians are supposed to influence the world not hide from it.

2007-06-15 10:46:20 · answer #1 · answered by Cee T 6 · 2 0

I hope he has chosen a better location for his Christian State than the Jews did for their Jewish State. Israel's neighbors have caused them no end of trouble - so I hope if Mr. Burnell succeeds, the South Carolinians are a little friendlier than the Palestinians. The historical precedent for seceding from the United States does not look too good either - didn't some southern states try that once? Didn't our federal government get ticked off and kill a few hundred thousand southerners? I wish Mr. Burnell luck, he is gonna need it.

2007-06-15 10:48:51 · answer #2 · answered by z 3 · 0 0

Mr. Barnum said it best, "there is a sucker born every minute."
Cory Burnell sounds more like a con man than a Christian. I must say that I have never met the man and in all fairness, I should give him the benefit of the doubt. He can not live long enough to do what he wants to do. He will not be successful in seceding from the US, but I bet he will make a good living out of the attempt.

2007-06-15 10:45:09 · answer #3 · answered by loufedalis 7 · 1 0

Burnell is going to have to recruit a lot more followers before he is able to elect candidates for public office who share his agenda.

2007-06-15 10:45:13 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

That outfit is simply a branch of the loathsome RRR Cult, albeit a bit more extreme than other lemmings within it.

Just a BIT more extreme, mind you. Since ALL of the RRR Cult is THIS extreme:

The cult of the "Religious" Radical Right is DEFINED by its dedication to hate-agendas that have been threatening the individual liberties of over a hundred million Americans:

(1) They seek to FORCE millions of women who have UNwanted pregnancies to gestate to term against their will. Which is the equivalent of a very REAL, 9-month-long form of RAPE.

(2) They seek to DENY same-sex couples the right to legally marry, despite the fact that Same-Sex Marriage (SSM) is totally harmless, and poses NO threat to anything or anyone. The "Defense of Marriage" acts that they've conned people into passing are a sick JOKE and is recognized by most sensible and intelligent Americans as a LIE. (And fortunately, the RRR is LOSING this war on reasonable freedoms, big-time, as state after state and nation after nation legalizes SSM. And just yesterday (6/14/07), the Massachusetts Legislature sensibly and fairly scrapped an attempt by mindless bigots to pass a state constitutional amendment against SSM).

(3) Most RRR Cult lemmings are ignorant enough to seek to force "Creationism" PSEUDO-science on America's schools, so as to water down our science curriculum with pure bullcrap. It's bullcrap because any God who is intelligent, omniscient, and omnipotent enough to create the whole universe would have had no problem creating the evolutionary process. (Too bad for the RRR cultists' LIMITED-capabilities "god.")

Fortunately for the rest of the world, the RRR Cult barely even exists beyond America's borders. But in America, it is a sociopathic and worthless infestation --

RRR : Society :: 5% arsenic : glass of drinking water.

2007-06-15 11:06:00 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

It sounds good to me as long as they follow the true principles of the Bible and do not get wacky like the Heavens gate cult, David Koresh or Jim Jones. Why do you care? Are you upset that they do not include you? Or maybe you are upset that if they exit the normal society you can't put them down?

2007-06-15 10:45:46 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It is illegal to secede from the United States under the present system of law.

It is a little curious, though, that even though he and his followers are so unhappy with America that they want to secede they aren't unhappy enough to emigrate to another country.....

2007-06-15 10:52:35 · answer #7 · answered by Mathsorcerer 7 · 1 0

My brother-in-law was in some religious compound in South Carolina for two years. I don't know if what you write of is the same group, but I can assure anyone from what my brother-in-law told all of us-stay the hell away from that group. They are certifiable!! Total whack-jobs. They cut you off from ALL contact with the outside world. When my dear mother-in-law died (God bless her soul), they wouldn't let him go to attend her funeral. Fortunately, he told them "Goodbye", and went anyway. They wouldn't let him back on the compound to get any of his personal belongings afterwards. (Twilight Zone music playing).

2007-06-15 10:47:21 · answer #8 · answered by RIFF 5 · 1 0

Let's find a nice island for them somewhere, put them all on it together. Then all we need is the shipping hazard signs and about 5 years.

Should raise the average US IQ by a point or so.

2007-06-15 10:45:24 · answer #9 · answered by Simon T 7 · 0 0

Really? Wow.

I wouldn't call it "share his agenda."

I think it would be "listening to the constituents and voting the way they want you to vote."

You know, the way politicians are supposed to do...represent the people who put them into office.

That is a novel concept nowadays.

2007-06-15 10:46:48 · answer #10 · answered by Brightlight 3 · 0 0

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