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Nothing is more destructive of the moral fabric of our country than the idea that anyone alive today is responsible for the sin of racial discrimination done by others in the distant past. The theme here is that the accused party — most often a white person or white people — owe something to descendants who were harmed in the past even though the people who committed the wrongs are long ago dead. It is an absurd, illogical, immoral, and Biblically untethered debate in which Christians have not only taken leave of their senses, they apparently neither read nor understand that Bible.
By Vik KhannaNothing is more destructive of the moral fabric of our country than the idea that anyone alive today is responsible for the sin of racial discrimination done by others in the distant past. The theme here is that the accused party — most often a white person or white people — owe something to descendants who were harmed in the past even though the people who committed the wrongs are long ago dead. It is an absurd, illogical, immoral, and Biblically untethered debate in which Christians have not only taken leave of their senses, they apparently neither read nor understand that Bible.