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Outstanding. Thank you.
Always enjoy your stuff Rick.
I really like this piece. It echoes perfectly what Trump said last night, and the tone in which he said it. “We can not have another Schumer-Pelosi puppet. Vote for Roy Moore. Do it.”
No matter how the MSM today will ridicule this, he was just saying: the guy is on our side.
But: Doug Jones is no Messiah.
It saddens me to agree with this sentiment.
Here here @rickpoach, nicely stated, and here, here Donald Trump. For a man who supposedly says all the wrong things in all the wrong ways, he sure manages to do all the right things, and mostly in the right way.
This. Voting for Moore is an adult choice in recognition of the fallen state of man and the need for a savior — which definitely won’t be found in government, let alone among Democrats, let alone Doug Jones. Ptui.
However, it’s a lot more than a thumb in the eye. It’s choosing to concern yourself with policy votes that best reflect your values, even if they come through a flawed vehicle like Roy Moore. This is what grown-ups do — make discerning choices under imperfect conditions.
And, btw, this Catholic isn’t the least offended. In fact, I think you’re making the case for the wisdom of the Good Friday liturgy. Kids (and leftists) aren’t expected to “get it.” Just remember, you’re always welcome home, brother. The lights are always on.
Thank you, Boss.
Thank you, Judge.
Indeed. Thanks for reading, Hypatia.
I understand completely. Thanks for reading, Steve.
Thank you, cdor.
Thanks, WC. If Francis the Marxist ever leaves, I might consider it.
Thanks for reading.
If one candidate may have done something vile thirty-odd years ago, and the other has announced the intention to continue doing something vile into the future, scratching one’s chin as to the proper course of action does seem to be overthinking things a tad.
Agreed. Thanks for reading, Percival.
I agree with the stated sentiment: beautifully said! What saddens me is that the edited version – see above, describes exactly how I, my friends, and many of my then compatriots felt when I was growing up some 40-50 years ago in one of the “workers’ paradise” countries. Not quite forty years ago I left that “paradise” never believing that it would ever end, and, yet, one day it did, sooner than I could have possibly imagined. But the virus never died, it just moved to a new and a receptive host(s)…
Thank you, Ruthenian.
It still surprises me that the opinions of those who lived it are always dismissed by the Marxist faithful (it’s not just a virus, it’s a religion). And the acknowledgement of that dismissal is exactly what I am referring to in the third of my three aphorisms: Some people need to touch the stove (i.e.: some people need to experience Communism firsthand before they’ll ever really ‘get it’.)
Thanks for reading.
Oh, he’s going… we just have to outlast him. Besides, nobody should come or go because of the pope. We come for the fullness of the Truth — because it’s Home and Family. It’s kind of like the mafia (by virtue of your baptism) — nobody leaves the Family. ;-)
That’s my wife’s opinion as well, and I understand what both of you mean. But, in my heart, I believe that he is a Marxist, and I can not give my endorsement, not even a tacit one, and certainly not a monetary one, to an organization that is trending Marxist.
Don’t worry, my wife is steadfast in trying to wear me down.
I don’t think he’s a Marxist. I think he is a romantic(!) Catholic who takes the concept of the Social Gospel uncritically. And I don’t have a problem with that, because I know his ideas are not fundamental doctrinal teachings supported by papal infallibility. What hurts is the secularists take his statements as gospel!
Sort of like how David Brooks and other alleged center right intellectuals are used as clubs to beat garden variety conservatives.
Dostoyevsky’s somewhat paraphrased saying about loving humanity but hating human beings is a perfect description of Marxists in general. Humanity never objects to their designs, but even though enough human beings did, they can always be dismissed (hated) as not representing humanity.
OK! I’ll bite! What is your second of the three aphorisms?
You can read about both the second and the third here on Ricochet.
And it’s always “humanity” in the abstract, an abstract which actually mean “whatever is in accord with our current utopian fever dream.”
“Humanity,” however, when used by them never means in accord with actual human nature. Marxists despise human nature, and so, necessarily, they despise actual humans.
And some people need to bring the heat…
Interesting argument, Rick.
Thank you for the links @rickpoach. Through the second aphorism link I found your 2016 post where you listed your aphorisms. What caught my eye was the list of six types of Democrats. What they all seem to have in common is that they think of themselves as educated, perhaps highly educated, or dare I say intellectual.
I was born a little over a decade after the end of WW II, perhaps owing my existence to death of Stalin – it took couple years after his death for things to get somewhat better, giving folks some hope for a better future with the baby boom in the block following afterwards. I did not experience the horrors of post-war strengthening of the people’s power, but that was something that was seared my parent’s generation memory. When I became of age when I could be trusted, I heard some of the stories. For most part common workers were not enthused about the new system. (Peasants were more receptive, as they received land taken from the large landowners. Of course they soon changed their minds when the state started taking this land back to start collective farms, but that is another story.) But a fairly large number of members of the surviving intellectual classes had embraced the new system; how many out of true conviction and how many out of fear is hard to say. Many opposed either emigrated, never came back from abroad where they escaped during the war, were liquidated, or stayed silent. Quite a few writers and poets put their pens in the service of the new system. (After the block dissolved, many of these were somewhat embarrassed by people reminding them of their slanted literary works and poetry. Of course being word smiths, many blamed youthful idealism or naivete with the following being an example: “Unfortunately I succumbed to [the temptation of seeing the world through the Communist ideology]. Quite a few years have passed since those times but I still remember all the phases of this experience: from joyful faith in the fact that with the help of doctrine I could see the world more clearly and more broadly – to the discovery that that which I was seeing so clearly and broadly was not at all the real world any more but an artificial construction hiding it.”) Fair enough! Many eventually turned away, and did great service for the cause of freedom. I do not want beat up on their “youth indiscretions,” after all St. Paul had a bad start as well, and we are all sinners. What I find curious is that it is “the sophisticated” that often fall first for these toxic ideologies. This quote attributed to Churchill, Disraeli and many others “If you aren’t a liberal when you’re young, you have no heart, but if you aren’t a middle-aged conservative, you have no head” blames it all on age. Really? Is that all? So, how do you make them touch the stove without burning us all in the process?
A few thoughts:
Extremely intelligent people are also more likely to join cults, from what I have heard. Maybe we should start factoring this into our collective psyche; maybe those who abhor “populism” could consider this. Those of us with average IQs are not necessarily wrong to be suspicious of those who are smarter than we are, especially considering the often disastrous results of their leadership.
Agreed! Then, how about issuing to everyone Richelieu’s letter to Milady with the following slight modification and letting them vote their conscience in the privacy of the polling booth without passing judgments on the morality/practicality of people that may vote differently?
“
It is by my order andfor the good of the state that the bearer of this has done what he has done.”On the accusations against Moore, I’ll state (again): Deviants gotta deviate. They are under the spell of a compulsion. I find it hard to believe that a political lightning rod would ride out 38 years under scrutiny without another, credible, more recent (let’s say the last 10, maybe 15 years) accusation coming to the fore.
I write quite a bit of political satire poetry which I do not post here on Ricochet. The very first piece of satirical verse I ever wrote was a parody of Soviet Realism. I’ll have to see if I can dig it up for you.
You can’t make them touch the stove, you can only try to avoid them until they do. And when they do, there’s nothing saying that they won’t have a second or third go (as Marxists always do), because they just didn’t touch the stove correctly last time.