Ninja Turtles Are Anti-Christian

“Ninjas were assassins, they were mercenaries, they were not good people, they were not heroes”: A panel of Canadian Christians decries the anti-Christian message of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (among other pop-culture proselytizers) in the early-90s propaganda film Not Just Fun and Games.
Unsung_Herosays...

"We have Vanilla Ice, probably one of the most uhh, well at least one of the wealthiest, I was going to say most talented but talented at making money anyway."

Wow, this is from the 90's... In the words of Nationwide insurance commercials, "Life comes at you fast."

ChaosEnginesays...

>> ^dystopianfuturetoday:

As I remember, Bart Simpson said, "Rub-a-dub-dub thanks for the grub"
sigh and Smithers tried to seduce Mr. Burns, not Homer.
Get your Simpson's info straight you idiots!


I think he also said "we paid for this, so thanks for nothing" (paraphrased). It was in the episode where Burns runs for governor.

Anyway, Bart was right

Yogisays...

I love it when I remember The Simpsons being almost universally condemned by Christian groups...then later on being almost universally embraced as a good family show. There's even a group of Christians that dress up like Flanders.

RadHazGsays...

yea... because I saw Splinter and Shredder casting aaaaall kinds of spells.... not. My parents were a lot like this back then. Though they didn't like them supposedly because of the message of believing in yourself when you should really only be believing in god. Talk about missing the point by 10 miles. I think I was eight and even I could smell a flimsy excuse when I saw it.

Auger8says...

Ya I was going to say I don't remember Splinter casting one spell and Bebop wasn't smart enough to spell the word magic let alone use it. He was also carrying a gun though I didn't hear him mention that little factoid.

>> ^RadHazG:

yea... because I saw Splinter and Shredder casting aaaaall kinds of spells.... not. My parents were a lot like this back then. Though they didn't like them supposedly because of the message of believing in yourself when you should really only be believing in god. Talk about missing the point by 10 miles. I think I was eight and even I could smell a flimsy excuse when I saw it.

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