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From
Allen B. West:
I find it rather odd that so many are seeking to lay blame on President
Trump for what happened in Charlottesville. And there are some voices
out there who want to blame all white people, and all Republicans. How
odd that when it was the New Black Panther Party outside a voting
precinct in Philadelphia in black fatigues and with clubs, nothing was
said. As a matter of fact, they weren’t even prosecuted for voter
intimidation. And when it was the riots in Ferguson and Baltimore fueled
by media false narratives and a presidential administration’s rhetoric,
there was no blame laid on Barack Obama. It appears to me that there is
a blatant hypocrisy when an individual commits a horrible crime, such
as in Charleston, South Carolina, and a collective group of people are
to be held accountable.
But, when there’s an Islamic terror attack people say, “we cannot
rush to judgment” or “this is not indicative of all Muslims”…to wit I
agree, but why not call the enemy for what it is” militant Islamic
terrorism or jihadism? Why must some be browbeaten into condemning the
actions of a few, yet we have others who have fully admitted their
support to groups calling for a “resistance?” And where were the voices
to condemn the violence in Washington DC on Inauguration Day, or even at
UC-Berkeley…or the violence committed against those who support the
current president or hold beliefs aligned with Constitutional
conservatism?
If we want to condemn groups such as the neo-Nazis and others,
then we must also condemn groups such as BLM and Antifa. And we need to
stop the cherrypicking, as they all should be investigated. Let’s end
this absurdity of trying to connect the Republican Party with the Ku
Klux Klan, since it was a creation of the Democrat Party. And I seem to
recall Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia, infamously known as a grand
wizard of the Klan, lauded over at his memorial by Barack Obama, Bill
and Hillary Clinton. It was Senator Byrd who was vehemently against the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, but it was Republican Senator Everett Dirksen
who supported its passage. (Read more.)
From
Matt Walsh:
Their idiocy is overshadowed only by their moral depravity. The one
thing they lack more than jobs and girlfriends is a semi-coherent
understanding of history. How many of these neo-Nazi punks even realize
that Hitler would have marched them to the gas chambers right alongside
the black and Jewish Americans they despise? How many of them had
grandfathers and great grandfathers who stormed the beaches to defeat
the very movement they now wish to resurrect? Part of me hopes their
grandfathers are dead so they don’t have to witness what’s become of
their families. Part of me hopes they’re alive so they can take their
canes and swat these brats across the head. I don’t condone violence,
unless it’s a WWII vet delivering a grandfatherly whooping to his vile,
ungrateful Nazi grandson.
It would be very difficult to go too far in criticizing the sorts of
“men” who rallied this weekend. I am forced to put the word “men” in
quotes because they are only men in the most literal sense. In any other
sense, they are cowardly, pathetic little boys desperate for attention.
I am not interested in hearing, as I have heard from some people, that
these imbeciles were “driven” to this point because of all the racism
and hatred on the Left. There is racism and hatred on the Left — a lot
of it, and we’ll get to that in a second — but that does not even begin
to excuse them.
I have said for years that Leftists ought to be able to express their
disapproval of a police shooting without burning down a convenience
store. That really is not a high bar to hurdle. In the same way, these
people ought to be able to protest racial double standards or
Confederate statue removals without becoming actual Nazis. To answer
racism or perceived racism by becoming racist is about the dumbest and
most indefensible response possible. This applies to the racists on both
sides of the fence. Both feel they are justified in acting this way
because people on the other side are acting this way. I am so tired of
that demented, third grade logic that I could vomit. If you want to be
the good guy, you need to be better. If you have no desire to be better,
then you are just as rotten as whatever evil or perceived evil you
purport to oppose. (Read more.)
From
The Federalist:
Violence against Republicans and anyone deemed a “racist” by the Left
has gone mainstream. Now, with actual racists showing up and violence
ensuing, Antifa and its supporters in the Democratic Party feel even
more justified attacking everyone they’ve judged as a fascist, and many
in America are tolerating it or at least deflecting blame onto
Republicans.
Fueling this are liberals who have been infecting America with the
idea that our country is intrinsically racist—a notion Obama
perpetuated. It’s in our DNA, he said. We are racist even if we don’t
know we’re racist. We’re not judged by our actions or personal guilt,
but by those who have determined our collective guilt because of past
injustices, our conservative beliefs, politics, and associations. We are
the real danger, not anti-fascists who are actually engaging in
violence in their ongoing war with the radical Right. (Read more.)
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2 comments:
Recently a TV commentator remarked that Trump was the most divisive president ever, then quickly added, so was Obama, George W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, Lyndon Johnson, etc. I recall the Vietnam War protests when 4 students were killed by the National Guard on the Campus of Kent State University. There were constant violent protests on college campuses everywhere, young people camped outside the White House chanting "Hey, Hey, LBJ, how many kids did you kill today!" He never recovered and died a broken man. Even the peaceful Puritans in the Massachusetts Bay Colony ended up succumbing to ugly acts convicting and giving the death penalty of drowning to many innocent women of all ages. Events got so out of hand that a negotiator, Cotton Mather, arrived to restore sanity. This is a great country, better than most, and hopefully the good will outweigh the sad and bad parts of our story.
Excellent points, as always, julygirl! Thanks!!
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