But can he tell us who wins the Superbowl??

ABSTRUSE

Cirque du Freak
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Pat Robertson predicts 'mass killing'

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. - In what has become an annual tradition of prognostications, religious broadcaster Pat Robertson said Tuesday God has told him that a terrorist attack on the United States would result in "mass killing" late in 2007.

"I'm not necessarily saying it's going to be nuclear," he said during his news-and-talk television show "The 700 Club" on the Christian Broadcasting Network. "The Lord didn't say nuclear. But I do believe it will be something like that."

Robertson said God told him during a recent prayer retreat that major cities and possibly millions of people will be affected by the attack, which should take place sometime after September.

Robertson said God also told him that the U.S. only feigns friendship with Israel and that U.S. policies are pushing Israel toward "national suicide."

Robertson suggested in January 2006 that God punished then-Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon with a stroke for ceding Israeli-controlled land to the Palestinians.

The broadcaster predicted in January 2004 that President Bush would easily win re-election. Bush won 51 percent of the vote that fall, beating Democratic Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts.

In 2005, Robertson predicted that Bush would have victory after victory in his second term. He said Social Security reform proposals would be approved and Bush would nominate conservative judges to federal courts.

Lawmakers confirmed Bush's 2005 nominations of John Roberts and Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court. But the president's Social Security initiative was stalled.

"I have a relatively good track record," he said. "Sometimes I miss."

In May, Robertson said God told him that storms and possibly a tsunami were to crash into America's coastline in 2006. Even though the U.S. was not hit with a tsunami, Robertson on Tuesday cited last spring's heavy rains and flooding in New England as partly fulfilling the prediction.
 
this is one person we don't have room for on our Bandwagon...

Hey, Pat...chose the Ravens...you and Ray oughta get along fine...just don't go to a nightclub with him in his limo...
 
This is a good way to predict the future. Say something vague, and then when, in the normal course of things, something happens, say "See, I told you so."

Bush did not win easily. Although the popular vote was not all that close, a few thousand changed votes in Ohio would have elected Kerry. Obviously, Bush would nominate conservative judges. I will predict there will be storms on America's coastline this year. There are every year, but last year they were actually rather light.
 
I tend to hold religious future predicting on the same level as pagan "magic" use...

...which, truly, is to say "fake".
 
Joe Wordsworth said:
I tend to hold religious future predicting on the same level as pagan "magic" use...

...which, truly, is to say "fake".

If I was the kind to get stroppy about slurs to my religion, I might at that. Magick in paganism is like prayer and to believers, it gets stuff done just as effectively. This kind of vague guessing game isn't in the same league.

The Earl predicts that someone, somewhere will have sex this year. God will become angry at this, as we all know that he doesn't like anyone else having fun and will cause something mildly discomfiting to happen to the participants at some point in their futures.

The Earl
 
TheEarl said:
If I was the kind to get stroppy about slurs to my religion, I might at that. Magick in paganism is like prayer and to believers, it gets stuff done just as effectively. This kind of vague guessing game isn't in the same league.
Hey, whether Harry Potter wand waving, ritualized bad Gaelic, sola scripturae, prayer-beading numerology, hearing the voice of God, or whatever...

...they're in the same league for accuracy weighed to specificity.

It can be "like prayer", but if its still "supernatural future prediction", it's the same league, hoss. Pat Robertson does more than "vague guessing", as evidenced by his being wrong about Bush's landslide victory... and I haven't seen a lot of press on the magical accuracy of covenmistrexx48 on her blog.

I don't usually get a hair about things, but "predicting the future", just rubs me the wrong way. It's so much preying on the fears and hopes of people, and obfuscates further the responsibility people have over their own life.
 
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I sure hope he can perdict it, that way I wont have to sit through the whole damn game!

Who decided that college ball had to be played the two weeks Im off from school?
Every damn night is a bit much, not to mention all New Years day!
C
 
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