by Ingrid Schlueter
And to make matters worse he endeared himself to children through the PBS series "Thomas the Tank Engine" and as I stated before, that is evil at its best.
Ingrid Schlueter said:Yesterday I wrote about the passing of George Carlin and his legacy of mainstreaming a lot of moral filth. My critics claimed that I only saw him as a cultural war enemy and that I was too harsh and too outspoken about his gutter humor. What angers me most about men like George Carlin is their contempt for children. When I re-read Carlin’s utter disregard for the well-being of little ones in his audience that night in 1972, and how he wouldn’t have changed a thing had he known children would be there, and how he thought that childhood was the time to introduce this filthiest of language, I feel true indignation. The culture of moral filth touches all of us, and it affected me in a deep way when I was 10-years-old. Because of the filthy moral habits of a man who was a prominent member of the church that ran the school I attended and also a highly visible member of city government in Milwaukee, I might add, I had my innocence completely stolen. I was exposed to pornography on school time, and was too ashamed to tell my parents what was going on. Imagine a child who had been raised in a Christian home and family that didn’t even own a television set because of the garbage on TV even back then, a girl who was still playing with dolls and who was reading Little House on the Prairie books, exposed to that. It was life altering and destructive.
So when I see men like George Carlin who deliberately exposed children to filthy language and gutter talk about sex, it angers me. When I see Christian bloggers celebrating his life because they got a few cheap laughs out of him from some routine or other, it also angers me. Shouldn’t we be righteously angry about the theft of innocence of children? Shouldn’t we as believers live as salt and light in this darkness, rather than embracing the darkness as being more “real” somehow? Jesus reserved some of his harshest language for those who harmed children. He said it was better that a millstone be tied around their necks and that they be cast into the sea. Today He would be labeled as harsh and unloving. Friends, Jesus had it right. We need to speak out against things that hurt children and expose them to evil. A child is so easily hurt and subverted in their thinking about right and wrong. George Carlin not only didn’t care about that, he actually believed that children should be exposed to this filth. God save us from this kind of thinking, and may God give us real, godly men in this hour who are willing to speak up for children who can’t speak for themselves.
And to make matters worse he endeared himself to children through the PBS series "Thomas the Tank Engine" and as I stated before, that is evil at its best.
Making himself approachable for the very young children that watched "Thomas the Tank Engine" as the friendly, even fatherly Conductor, is evil at its best.
Last edited by a moderator: