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Pastimes : Let's Talk About Our Feelings!!!

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To: Tom Clarke who wrote (67658)12/21/1999 6:05:00 AM
From: nihil  Read Replies (1) of 108807
 
There is a severe definitional problem. Many heretics were burned at the order of the RC Church and many of them were also accused of witchcraft. Joan of Arc is the most famous of them (and the most innocent). The Protestant mobs mostly burned old women who had supernumery nipples and other witch marks. They seldom bothered with theology. In England, for instance, heretics were burned and witches were usually hanged (as in Salem, Mass). Of course, Jean Calvin was a blood-thirsty tyrant and had Michael Servetus burned for non resident heresy.
In my opinion, there is not a shred of difference between the Catholics and Protestants. Neither had any truth in them. They were cruel, irrational, hateful tyrants. Were all of them burned to cinders it would only be retributive justice. While I've always admired Archbishop Cranmer as a guileful, slinking, submissive piece of stink whose sycophancy led him to the pyre, and Sir (St) Thomas More for his rigid unbending tricky principles that led him to the block, both of them had condemned witches and heretics to death, and neither of them (with their master) was worth the shot and powder required to blow them to hell.
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