Chick Tracts
  If you enjoy reading Fundamentalist Christian publications, you'll LOVE Chick tracts.  I stumbled
  across this page when I was looking for manuals about how to pick up chicks.  It turns out this
  page was much more entertaining.

  Here's the concept.  You're a born-again Christian, and you want others to join your path, so they
  don't burn in the fires of hell.  How do you do it?  Do you engage them in intelligent conversation?
  Hell no!  You slip one of these tracts under their door when they're not home.  That way, you
  don't have to do any bothersome thinking to come up with good arguments, and if they challenge
  you on the tract later, you can pretend you don't know where it came from.  Visit this page-- on
  the FairyFaith page rating system, I give it 3 crosses.
    Click HERE to see the Revelation.

  My review of Baby Talk
  This is a fun little tract about the evils of femeles making decisions for themselves.  Click on the above link to
  read this amusing story, then come back for an in-depth analysis.

  This story opens with a pointless story about a slovenly son who brings his lazy wife to live with
  his parents.  Apparently, Jack couldn't stretch out a plot for twenty panels, so he needed some
  filler.  Or maybe this is just to show how shitty Ashley's parents are, who let their adult son walk
  all over them.  Anyway, the next part is where it starts getting fun.  Ashley is going on a date with
  her jackass of a boyfriend, Eric.  She gets pregnant, and asks a "friend" for advice, who then
  leads her to the evil sex ed teacher.  The teacher suggests an abortion.

  Here's what I want to know.  Where was she when her mother had that all-important "don't listen
  to people with evil pointed-down eyebrows" talk?  And what "old fashioned values" is the sex
  ed. teacher going on about?  I don't recall Ashley's parents telling her not to get an abortion.
  Hell, after seeing what they had to put up with their son, you'd think they'd be patting her on the
  back, encouraging her to get the thing.  Hmm.  Maybe if Jack didn't spend the first five panels
  talking about stuff that wasn't in any way related to the point of the story, we could have gotten
  some background on this.

  The next part of the story goes back to Ashley's jerk boyfriend, Eric.  For some reason, he's
  decided to discuss his girlfriend's pregnancy with his bible-beating uncle.  We never get the story
  on why he doesn't live with his parents.  When I asked Uncle Mike later what the story was, he
  said, "I had to take Eric away from his unholy parents.  They actually said to me, 'We love Mike,
  no matter what he does!'  I had to get him away from their Satanic influence."  Anyway,
  concerned about Eric's decision, Uncle Mike takes him to see Mike's fundamentalist Christian
  friend, who he's disguised as a doctor.  But is Eric really dumb enough to fall for this?  We learn
  that he is, when he sits and listens unquestioningly to his Uncle's biblical reading.  Eric then
  realizes that he is a Christian, and as such it is his duty to keep his girlfriend from making
  decisions about her own body.  He catches her just before she gets to the women's clinic.

 Ok, genius, if you didn't want to get an abortion, why did
   you get in the car?  No one had a gun to your head.  This
   panel makes about as much sense as pouring hydrochloric
   acid all over your skin, then saying, "Oh God, I don't want
acid burns.  Help me!"  Ashley and Eric really do make a
good couple; neither of them has the ability to think for
themselves.

    Thanks for those important clarifications (in
         parentheses).  I couldn't have figured that stuff
    out on my own (my brain doesn't function).

  So, of course, the story ends with Eric and Ashley both finding Jesus.  That doesn't change the
  fact that Eric is a jerk.  Apparently, the moral of the story is, "As long as your boyfriend is a
  God-fearing Christian, it doesn't matter if he treats you like garbage!  Oh, and don't make any
  decisions for yourself."  They have the baby, and live miserably ever after.


A Three Cross Rating

  "It made me want to go get an abortion!"-- Curiosity
 


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