Attention

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent our advertisers

Thursday, January 02, 2020

Activist Group Rips Air Force Base For Selling ‘Jesus Candy’

The Peterson Air Force base in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is being attacked by an activist group offended that “Jesus candy” is sold at the base, saying they have “fought many battles throughout our long years of civil rights activism at PAFB against this wretched, fundamentalist Christian, religious extremist bigotry and prejudice.”

The Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF), which has blasted the Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs before, said it received an email stating, “The base exchange at Peterson Air Force Base is currently selling ‘Jesus’ candy.’ The exchange at the Air Force Academy was also selling ‘Jesus’ candy at Halloween, although I didn’t get any pictures of that.”

The founder and president of MRFF, Mikey Weinstein, informed Crooks and Liars,“Peterson’s selling of for-profit, clearly marked ‘Jesus candy’ at its base exchange (BX) is merely the fundamentalist Christian straw breaking the MRFF clients’ backs. Any pathetically-proffered pretense by the U.S. Air Force at Peterson that Christmas is a mere secular holiday is totally belied and betrayed by this in your face sale of this ‘proselytizing’ candy with the fundamentalist Christian version of its ‘God’s name’ emblazoned on all over the packaging.”

First Liberty Institute lawyer and director of military affairs Mike Berry told Fox News, “This is just the latest publicity stunt by a bunch of activists. A real constitutional expert – or any first-year law student – knows that selling candy canes at Christmas is perfectly legal."

More here

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

If there is candy made by other religions then I am sure the base would have no problem offering them as well as long as the product sold and did not expire unsold!

Anonymous said...

Any Mohammad candy u know the ones that explode in your mouth.)

Anonymous said...

I don't see any issue with this, as long as no one cares if there are Jewish candies, or Muslim, or Satanist candies.. and they are not excluded. I don't see how selling the candies equates to proselytizing. It's akin to having a problem if a libraries religious section only had bibles. Same thing... if they had ONLY bibles then it would be an issue.. but if there were Books of Mormon, the Quo-ran, or the Satanic Tenets were included there would be no issue.