Originally Posted by Clem
Originally Posted by Remington270
If you listen closely to Steve Rinella, he's not very conservative, or, as far as I can tell openly Christian (He talks about Gods, and cosmos, and the afterlife, but never any specifics). I still like the guy.

Is it wrong to listen to folks with view points that differ from our own? Last time I checked this was called being well-rounded and open-minded. I frequently listen to people with which I strongly disagree.


Originally Posted by IsaacMcCaslin


No kidding. Good luck avoiding everything that isn't in some way owned by a liberal.



Thus the question for many with situations like this about Rinella, just for one example. Some will say it's one of those "hold your nose" things and others will say "Nope, no way, screw them forever."

I enjoy the Rolling Stones. Love listening to Foo Fighters. Green Day's "American Idiot" is pretty stout. Merle Haggard, super.

They're all liberals. Probably are anti-gun. Do you stop listening-reading-watching everything or pick the battles you can fight best in?



Maybe I'm a simple man, but I typically just enjoy things for what they are. If Rinella wrote a book about the benefits of cultural Marxism, I'd probably skip it. But, I wouldn't go and burn my copy of The Scavenger's Guide to Haute Cuisine.