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Horoscope, Zodiac, whatever it's called.

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abelcainsbrother said:
I like Apologetix and I can use their music to make a point sometimes.

This was not one of those times.
abelcainsbrother said:
They parody secular songs and turn them into Christian songs.

You don't understand what parody is (hint: it deals with comedy or at least comic effect) but at least you understand how creativity-bankrupt Christian music is.
abelcainsbrother said:
I like them it is a way to enjoy the music and get a Christian message and for me to make a point sometimes too.

Whatever floats your boat, dude. But don't think blindly posting links to crappy music is a substitute for actual discourse.

abelcainsbrother said:
The 3 songs I posted have to do with the virgin birth and Virgo declares the virgin birth of Jesus to all the world no matter the language they speak.

I can assert random bull shit, too. Like how Luke 5:11 demonstrates that Christ was the captain of a mighty fleet of warships and did battle against the Atlanteans in a great 100 year war. It makes as much sense as what you're saying.
 
arg-fallbackName="Mugnuts"/>
Christopher Hitchens said:
"In the United States, we exert ourselves to improve high-rise buildings and high-speed jet aircraft . . . and then pathetically refuse to give them floors, or row numbers, that carry the unimportant number thirteen. I know that Pythagoras refuted astrology by the simple means of pointing out that identical twins do not have the same future, I further know that the zodiac was drawn up long before several of the planets in our solar system had been detected, and of course I understand that I could not be "shown" my immediate or long-term future without this disclosure altering the outcome. Thousands of people consult their "stars" in the newspapers every day, and then have unpredicted heart attacks or traffic accidents. (An astrologer of a London tabloid was once fired by means of a letter from his editor which began, "As you will no doubt have foreseen.") In his Minima Moralia, Theodor Adorno identified the interest in stargazing as the consummation of feeble-mindedness."
 
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