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Glenn Beck: Japan earthquake could be 'message' from God to follow the Ten Commandments
BY MEENA HARTENSTEIN
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Monday, March 14th 2011, 6:17 PM
Drew/AP
Glenn Beck hinted on Monday that the earthquake in Japan is a 'message' of some kind.
Japan's oldest person dies at age 113
$180B price tag put on Japan's disaster
Hots for more U.S. nuclear plants cools
Japanese prime minister calls disaster the biggest since World War II as rescue efforts continue
China surpasses Japan as world's second biggest economy
Ruiz: Immigration critics use lies to demonize
Glenn Beck says Japan's earthquake might be a "message" from God.
"We can't see the connections here," he said on his show Monday. "I'm not saying God is causing earthquakes - well I'm not not saying that either!"
"What God does is God's business," Beck continued. "But I'll tell you this...there's a message being sent. And that is, 'Hey you know that stuff we're doing? Not really working out real well. Maybe we should stop doing some of it.' I'm just saying."
Beck continued trying to make a connection between human behavior and the natural disasters that have wreaked havoc in Japan, even casually mentioning "radical Islam" before revealing what he called "the answer."
"The answer is, buckle up!" he said. "Because it's going to be a bumpy ride."
In light of the disasters that have devastated Japan, the Fox host stressed people should follow the biblical Ten Commandments, or what he referred to as "10 rules of thumb."
"What do you say we start doing those things?" he asked. "Because the things we are doing really suck. And they're not getting better."
Beck isn't the first right-wing pundit to imply that a natural disaster is punishment from God.
In April of 2010, Rush Limbaugh suggested President Obama's health care bill had launched the volcanic ash explosion that crippled Europe.
"You know, a couple of days after the health care bill had been signed into law Obama ran around all over the country saying, 'Hey, you know, I'm looking around. The earth hadn't opened up. There's no Armageddon out there. The birds are still chirping,'" Limbaugh said on his show. "I think the earth has opened up. God may have replied."
BY MEENA HARTENSTEIN
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Monday, March 14th 2011, 6:17 PM
Drew/AP
Glenn Beck hinted on Monday that the earthquake in Japan is a 'message' of some kind.
Japan's oldest person dies at age 113
$180B price tag put on Japan's disaster
Hots for more U.S. nuclear plants cools
Japanese prime minister calls disaster the biggest since World War II as rescue efforts continue
China surpasses Japan as world's second biggest economy
Ruiz: Immigration critics use lies to demonize
Glenn Beck says Japan's earthquake might be a "message" from God.
"We can't see the connections here," he said on his show Monday. "I'm not saying God is causing earthquakes - well I'm not not saying that either!"
"What God does is God's business," Beck continued. "But I'll tell you this...there's a message being sent. And that is, 'Hey you know that stuff we're doing? Not really working out real well. Maybe we should stop doing some of it.' I'm just saying."
Beck continued trying to make a connection between human behavior and the natural disasters that have wreaked havoc in Japan, even casually mentioning "radical Islam" before revealing what he called "the answer."
"The answer is, buckle up!" he said. "Because it's going to be a bumpy ride."
In light of the disasters that have devastated Japan, the Fox host stressed people should follow the biblical Ten Commandments, or what he referred to as "10 rules of thumb."
"What do you say we start doing those things?" he asked. "Because the things we are doing really suck. And they're not getting better."
Beck isn't the first right-wing pundit to imply that a natural disaster is punishment from God.
In April of 2010, Rush Limbaugh suggested President Obama's health care bill had launched the volcanic ash explosion that crippled Europe.
"You know, a couple of days after the health care bill had been signed into law Obama ran around all over the country saying, 'Hey, you know, I'm looking around. The earth hadn't opened up. There's no Armageddon out there. The birds are still chirping,'" Limbaugh said on his show. "I think the earth has opened up. God may have replied."