Mojo2
Gold Member
- Oct 28, 2013
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- #21
It makes a certain psychological sense to dehumanize your enemy during wartime, but it doesn't make any sense to dehumanize your own citizens. And, of course, the weak-minded sometimes have a very hard time letting go of this dehumanization long after the war has ended.
The sentiments you criticize serve a very understandable and valid purpose.
Feelings run deep and that's just human nature.
Those who might expect to aggress against America and hope we will immediately love them afterwards need to think twice.
There is a place for residual anger.
Especially when we were the victims of a sneak attack which almost completely crippled our Pacific Fleet.
No one is interested in "dehumanizing" loyal Americans.
But if those who live in America (whether American born or not) are working for the enemy it is common sense to separate those enemies from the loyalists.
That is the problem we have with Muslims and why we should limit the numbers of Muslims we will allow to enter the USA via the legal immigration route.
The more Muslims who come here, the more Mosques they wioll need.
And they will yell and protest and bring legal charges against those who try to surveil the bad Muslims and their activities in these Mosques.