Ray9
Diamond Member
- Jul 19, 2016
- 2,707
- 4,472
- 1,970
- Banned
- #1
Rudyard Kipling told us a long time ago that when the world goes stupid we do not have to join it. Permanent Washington rigged a presidential election in broad daylight and many people just stood by and accepted it because they have been convinced by the powers that be that though the act was wrong and corrupt, the result was morally right.
They were told that a citizen that comes from the private sector and not only challenges Washington but exposes it as a malignant swindle it is a traitor to the goodness of an insular, elite aristocracy. Washington is replete with Harvard and Yale educated politicians that apparently had no choice but to step in and act in the best interest of people not smart enough to decide their own fates with a vote.
We all saw what we saw regardless of what they told us we did not see. We learned about despotism in school many years ago before schools became propaganda ministries for the status quo that feeds them. We watched as intelligence agencies created to deal with foreign enemies were converted to political tools to spy on and falsely accuse a US president of treachery against the people with altered and doctored FISA reports. We saw what we saw, not what they told us we saw.
We had to witness the jack-leg election outcome that expounds the ridiculous notion that a man that can barely speak in complete sentences got more votes than any human in the history of the human race. The prescribed hatred served to the people in the poison pill of propaganda caused many to lose their heads. We have kept ours in the midst of what seems like endless kangaroo court impeachments.
Now reality comes to town. A great pandemic is on us while Washington throws out the welcome mat for replacement Americans marching across porous borders. People are dying in their cars while Washington’s Climate Czar crams frozen wind power and solar energy down their throats. We are living in a time where politicized science has once again become religion.
There have always been fools, we do not have to join the foolishness. The toxic proof that is in the pudding of Washington will kill our democracy if we let it.
We need to keep our heads; we need to listen to Kipling.
They were told that a citizen that comes from the private sector and not only challenges Washington but exposes it as a malignant swindle it is a traitor to the goodness of an insular, elite aristocracy. Washington is replete with Harvard and Yale educated politicians that apparently had no choice but to step in and act in the best interest of people not smart enough to decide their own fates with a vote.
We all saw what we saw regardless of what they told us we did not see. We learned about despotism in school many years ago before schools became propaganda ministries for the status quo that feeds them. We watched as intelligence agencies created to deal with foreign enemies were converted to political tools to spy on and falsely accuse a US president of treachery against the people with altered and doctored FISA reports. We saw what we saw, not what they told us we saw.
We had to witness the jack-leg election outcome that expounds the ridiculous notion that a man that can barely speak in complete sentences got more votes than any human in the history of the human race. The prescribed hatred served to the people in the poison pill of propaganda caused many to lose their heads. We have kept ours in the midst of what seems like endless kangaroo court impeachments.
Now reality comes to town. A great pandemic is on us while Washington throws out the welcome mat for replacement Americans marching across porous borders. People are dying in their cars while Washington’s Climate Czar crams frozen wind power and solar energy down their throats. We are living in a time where politicized science has once again become religion.
There have always been fools, we do not have to join the foolishness. The toxic proof that is in the pudding of Washington will kill our democracy if we let it.
We need to keep our heads; we need to listen to Kipling.