RT @[email protected]

The Evangelical girls in my class who weren't allowed to read "Harry Potter" because it "had witchcraft" now think they can cure measles with essential oils. Who is in potions class now, Gracelynn?

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/RohitaKadambi/status/1610102472454066176

Rohita Kadambi on Twitter

“The Evangelical girls in my class who weren't allowed to read "Harry Potter" because it "had witchcraft" now think they can cure measles with essential oils. Who is in potions class now, Gracelynn?”

Twitter
@aetiology when a basic tenet of your belief system is that certain knowledge is forbidden and evil, you only cultivate ignorance.
@aetiology This is insanity and the way to poor health.
@aetiology wait until they try claviceps purpurea.

@aetiology Such touting of ignorance offends me. It is my sincere belief that God made the universe operate under rules and methods comprehensible to our minds expressly so we could make use of that knowledge.

To go 'NOPE I have faith I don't need your Science' is...

pure arrogance.

@aetiology Witchcraft is real.

It’s invitation-only. You don’t want to be or know the kind of person who would be invited.

@aetiology I think the mistake is to assume that christianity has some kind of internal consistency. I’m not sure it even attempts to be consistent.