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Why Do They Hate America?

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  • E Ed Gadziemski

    I've been curious about the motivation of some of the "hate America first" crowd on CP like Red and Stan. They despise the very things that make the United States a great nation: freedom, tolerance, interoperability, etc. The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws. They also believe the landed gentry should control the means of (agrarian, of course) production and capital, and that there should be no national military. After all, the framers of US Constitution never envisioned nor wanted a permanent standing Army. What's up with the attitude, America-haters?

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Marcus J Smith
    wrote on last edited by
    #2

    Ed Gadziemski wrote:

    I've been curious about the motivation of some of the "hate America first" crowd on CP like Red and Stan. They despise the very things that make the United States a great nation: freedom, tolerance, interoperability, etc.

    That is because the Conservatives are all about states' rights.


    CleaKO

    "Now, a man would have opened both gates, driven through and not bothered to close either gate." - Marc Clifton (The Lounge)

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    • E Ed Gadziemski

      I've been curious about the motivation of some of the "hate America first" crowd on CP like Red and Stan. They despise the very things that make the United States a great nation: freedom, tolerance, interoperability, etc. The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws. They also believe the landed gentry should control the means of (agrarian, of course) production and capital, and that there should be no national military. After all, the framers of US Constitution never envisioned nor wanted a permanent standing Army. What's up with the attitude, America-haters?

      L Offline
      L Offline
      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #3

      Ed Gadziemski wrote:

      The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws.

      Ummmmm.... the US founding fathers did want each state to have a certain level of independence. Don't believe it? Crack a history book. :rolleyes: What's the point of local and state governments if not to tailor local and state law?? :confused:

      "I'm a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it." - Thomas Jefferson

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      • E Ed Gadziemski

        I've been curious about the motivation of some of the "hate America first" crowd on CP like Red and Stan. They despise the very things that make the United States a great nation: freedom, tolerance, interoperability, etc. The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws. They also believe the landed gentry should control the means of (agrarian, of course) production and capital, and that there should be no national military. After all, the framers of US Constitution never envisioned nor wanted a permanent standing Army. What's up with the attitude, America-haters?

        R Offline
        R Offline
        Red Stateler
        wrote on last edited by
        #4

        Ed Gadziemski wrote:

        The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws.

        Yeah, that's called Federalism. Go figure.

        Ed Gadziemski wrote:

        that there should be no national military. After all, the framers of US Constitution never envisioned nor wanted a permanent standing Army.

        From Article 1, Section 8: "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common defense" 3rd Amendment: "No soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law." Section 8 gives Congress the authority to provide for defense. The 3rd Amendment implies a standing army as there would be troops "in time of peace". Plus there has been a standing military since the Revolutionary War (i.e. Navy).

        Ed Gadziemski wrote:

        They despise the very things that make the United States a great nation: freedom, tolerance, interoperability, etc.

        Freedom as defined by your interpretation of the 14th Amendment is anarchy, which is contrary to every single principle of government set forth by virtually everybody in the colonies.

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        • L Lost User

          Ed Gadziemski wrote:

          The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws.

          Ummmmm.... the US founding fathers did want each state to have a certain level of independence. Don't believe it? Crack a history book. :rolleyes: What's the point of local and state governments if not to tailor local and state law?? :confused:

          "I'm a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it." - Thomas Jefferson

          E Offline
          E Offline
          Ed Gadziemski
          wrote on last edited by
          #5

          Mike Mullikin wrote:

          the US founding fathers did want each state to have a certain level of independence

          Of course.

          Mike Mullikin wrote:

          What's the point of local and state governments if not to tailor local and state law?/blockquote> Not at the expense of national unity and purpose. For example, if the federal government had not exercised iron-handed enforcement of the commerce clause, we'd be a third-rate nobody. But the hate-America-firsters claim the feds have no right to interfere with state and local control.

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          • E Ed Gadziemski

            I've been curious about the motivation of some of the "hate America first" crowd on CP like Red and Stan. They despise the very things that make the United States a great nation: freedom, tolerance, interoperability, etc. The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws. They also believe the landed gentry should control the means of (agrarian, of course) production and capital, and that there should be no national military. After all, the framers of US Constitution never envisioned nor wanted a permanent standing Army. What's up with the attitude, America-haters?

            L Offline
            L Offline
            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #6

            Who needs a standing military when we have militias like this one ready to defend America from the russians/aliens/ATF. http://www.michiganmilitia.com/SMVM/field_reports/feb2006/squad_1.jpg

            There is no heaven, there is no hell, except here on Earth. - Anton LaVey

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            • E Ed Gadziemski

              Mike Mullikin wrote:

              the US founding fathers did want each state to have a certain level of independence

              Of course.

              Mike Mullikin wrote:

              What's the point of local and state governments if not to tailor local and state law?/blockquote> Not at the expense of national unity and purpose. For example, if the federal government had not exercised iron-handed enforcement of the commerce clause, we'd be a third-rate nobody. But the hate-America-firsters claim the feds have no right to interfere with state and local control.

              L Offline
              L Offline
              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #7

              Ed Gadziemski wrote:

              the hate-America-firsters

              When you use this kind of silly name calling I tend to ignore any rational dialog that follows.

              "I'm a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it." - Thomas Jefferson

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              • E Ed Gadziemski

                I've been curious about the motivation of some of the "hate America first" crowd on CP like Red and Stan. They despise the very things that make the United States a great nation: freedom, tolerance, interoperability, etc. The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws. They also believe the landed gentry should control the means of (agrarian, of course) production and capital, and that there should be no national military. After all, the framers of US Constitution never envisioned nor wanted a permanent standing Army. What's up with the attitude, America-haters?

                R Offline
                R Offline
                Reagan Conservative
                wrote on last edited by
                #8

                They (Stan and Red) are sick and tired of the left hijacking the Constitution to fit their own purposes and desires. We have liberal judges making law instead of interpreting law. It is for the Legislative Branch to create the laws and for the Executive Branch to enforce the laws. The 14th Amenedment has been used to by-pass the the Bill of Rights. Liberals take the viewpoint tht if the Constitution says you can't do it, then it's lawful to do it. The conservatives, on the other hand, insist that if the Constitution does not extend the power to do something, then it is not lawful. Unfortuneatly, the balance has tilted in the liberals direction every since the 14th Amendment came into being, IMHO. Conservatives would like to see the INTENT of the Founding Fathers carried out. That is as much a part of constitutional law as the Constitution itself. You see, it is not the conservatives that find fault with the USA --- it's the liberals who always blame the US for all sorts of things, and frankly, we conservatives are sick and tired of liberals running down this country every chance they get. So let's throw the question back at you, Ed --- why do you hate America so much that you can only find fault and nothing good (unless it's something a Democrat does or says)?

                John P.

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                • L Lost User

                  Ed Gadziemski wrote:

                  the hate-America-firsters

                  When you use this kind of silly name calling I tend to ignore any rational dialog that follows.

                  "I'm a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it." - Thomas Jefferson

                  E Offline
                  E Offline
                  Ed Gadziemski
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #9

                  Mike Mullikin wrote:

                  When you use this kind of silly name calling I tend to ignore any rational dialog that follows

                  I don't blame you. I did the same when I heard talk of armed revolution if "far-left-winger Nancy Pelosi (from !@#$# San Francisco)" was elected Speaker of the House.

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                  • L Lost User

                    Ed Gadziemski wrote:

                    the hate-America-firsters

                    When you use this kind of silly name calling I tend to ignore any rational dialog that follows.

                    "I'm a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it." - Thomas Jefferson

                    E Offline
                    E Offline
                    Ed Gadziemski
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #10

                    Mike Mullikin wrote:

                    silly name calling

                    Guess I've been listening to too much Rush and Ann lately.

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • E Ed Gadziemski

                      I've been curious about the motivation of some of the "hate America first" crowd on CP like Red and Stan. They despise the very things that make the United States a great nation: freedom, tolerance, interoperability, etc. The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws. They also believe the landed gentry should control the means of (agrarian, of course) production and capital, and that there should be no national military. After all, the framers of US Constitution never envisioned nor wanted a permanent standing Army. What's up with the attitude, America-haters?

                      S Offline
                      S Offline
                      Stan Shannon
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #11

                      As I said below... I freely and happily admit that I absolutely hate what the forces of socialism have done to America via the 14th amendment. But then, in my lexicon, hate is not nessarily a bad word. Some things deserve to be hated. People such as yourself, Ed, have completely destroyed the government that every single American soldier fought to defend from 1776 until 1945. Your side of the political debate has made a mockery of every single principle Americans fought and died and sacrificed for for nearly 200 years. You want us to be nothing more than another little european style social welfare state. I do so very much hate your version of what this country is supposed to be, and you hate mine. Where does that leave us?

                      Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

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                      • R Reagan Conservative

                        They (Stan and Red) are sick and tired of the left hijacking the Constitution to fit their own purposes and desires. We have liberal judges making law instead of interpreting law. It is for the Legislative Branch to create the laws and for the Executive Branch to enforce the laws. The 14th Amenedment has been used to by-pass the the Bill of Rights. Liberals take the viewpoint tht if the Constitution says you can't do it, then it's lawful to do it. The conservatives, on the other hand, insist that if the Constitution does not extend the power to do something, then it is not lawful. Unfortuneatly, the balance has tilted in the liberals direction every since the 14th Amendment came into being, IMHO. Conservatives would like to see the INTENT of the Founding Fathers carried out. That is as much a part of constitutional law as the Constitution itself. You see, it is not the conservatives that find fault with the USA --- it's the liberals who always blame the US for all sorts of things, and frankly, we conservatives are sick and tired of liberals running down this country every chance they get. So let's throw the question back at you, Ed --- why do you hate America so much that you can only find fault and nothing good (unless it's something a Democrat does or says)?

                        John P.

                        E Offline
                        E Offline
                        Ed Gadziemski
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #12

                        jparken wrote:

                        It is for the Legislative Branch to create the laws and for the Executive Branch to enforce the laws.

                        And for the Judicial Branch to interpret the laws.

                        jparken wrote:

                        it's the liberals who always blame the US for all sorts of things, and frankly, we conservatives are sick and tired of liberals running down this country every chance they get

                        It's the conservatives who always blame the US. America is just fine the way it is, and we're sick and tired of conservatives running down his country. It's the way it is because WE THE PEOPLE CHOSE FOR IT TO BE THAT WAY. All we want is for conservatives to quit badmouthing respect for law and respect for human rights and dignity. Hundreds of millions of Americans support those values. Get over it.

                        R S 2 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • E Ed Gadziemski

                          I've been curious about the motivation of some of the "hate America first" crowd on CP like Red and Stan. They despise the very things that make the United States a great nation: freedom, tolerance, interoperability, etc. The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws. They also believe the landed gentry should control the means of (agrarian, of course) production and capital, and that there should be no national military. After all, the framers of US Constitution never envisioned nor wanted a permanent standing Army. What's up with the attitude, America-haters?

                          S Offline
                          S Offline
                          Shog9 0
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #13

                          Ed Gadziemski wrote:

                          The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws.

                          Ha! What poppycock! Of course, the only proper way to run a country is by decree from a large, centralized government, proposed by those groomed for the task and thoroughly vetted by the honorable representatives of Finance and Industry. Why, anything else would run the risk of introducing undesirable influences - those local bumpkins might try just anything. "Democracy" - how absurd! :rolleyes:

                          ----

                          i hope you are feeling sleepy for people not calling you by the same.

                          --BarnaKol on abusive words

                          E 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • S Shog9 0

                            Ed Gadziemski wrote:

                            The way they tell it, the US should be a loose collection of 50 fiefdoms with each fiefdom having its own set of non-interoperable laws.

                            Ha! What poppycock! Of course, the only proper way to run a country is by decree from a large, centralized government, proposed by those groomed for the task and thoroughly vetted by the honorable representatives of Finance and Industry. Why, anything else would run the risk of introducing undesirable influences - those local bumpkins might try just anything. "Democracy" - how absurd! :rolleyes:

                            ----

                            i hope you are feeling sleepy for people not calling you by the same.

                            --BarnaKol on abusive words

                            E Offline
                            E Offline
                            Ed Gadziemski
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #14

                            You forgot the Military wing of the Corporate-Industrial-Military complex.

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                            • E Ed Gadziemski

                              Mike Mullikin wrote:

                              the US founding fathers did want each state to have a certain level of independence

                              Of course.

                              Mike Mullikin wrote:

                              What's the point of local and state governments if not to tailor local and state law?/blockquote> Not at the expense of national unity and purpose. For example, if the federal government had not exercised iron-handed enforcement of the commerce clause, we'd be a third-rate nobody. But the hate-America-firsters claim the feds have no right to interfere with state and local control.

                              P Offline
                              P Offline
                              Patrick Etc
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #15

                              Wow. Code Project really borked that post formatting somehow. Anywho:

                              Ed Gadziemski wrote:

                              For example, if the federal government had not exercised iron-handed enforcement of the commerce clause, we'd be a third-rate nobody. But the hate-America-firsters claim the feds have no right to interfere with state and local control.

                              You've set up a straw-man, Ed. It's not either-or: some powers are appropriate to the Federal government, and others were intended to be left to the states. Speeding limits and ID cards, for example (National ID anyone? Personally I'll be the first rebel to refuse to get one). The founders did this for two reasons. One, they were deeply suspicious of any sort of centralized power. They had seen what absolute rule could do to a government and to a people, and they didn't want a repeat (and make no mistake, that is EXACTLY what we are living under today). Second, they KNEW that society would change, technology would change, and the world would change, and they knew that those changes would be too fast and too many for a solid document like the Constitution to possibly adapt to them all. Thus, they wanted the more lithe, agile governments - state and local governments - to be responsible for issues that the Constitution was ill-equipped to deal with. As Captain Janeway so eloquently put it on a recent re-run of Voyager: "The Federation Charter is a statement of principles, not a practical document." The same is essentially true of our Constitution. It lays down the basic framework; the implementation must be left to the states and to future generations. The founders were deeply afraid that people would take that framework, the Constitution, and look at it as a complete entity. This was one of the reasons for the 400-page Federalist Papers, containing the near-complete volume of thought ever produced by our founders about what they intended for our nation. I have read the book, and it has influenced everything I think about our nation. Sometimes on this board I will come off sounding conservative; others, I will sound very liberal. This is because I am doing my level best to understand what our founders wanted for us, and to live by that tradition - not to live IN the past, but use it as a guide to the future. Frankly, neither political party in this country has that in mind. They BOTH are after things diametrically opposed to a free nation. It makes me sick to my stomach to vote, because I'm always vo

                              E 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • S Stan Shannon

                                As I said below... I freely and happily admit that I absolutely hate what the forces of socialism have done to America via the 14th amendment. But then, in my lexicon, hate is not nessarily a bad word. Some things deserve to be hated. People such as yourself, Ed, have completely destroyed the government that every single American soldier fought to defend from 1776 until 1945. Your side of the political debate has made a mockery of every single principle Americans fought and died and sacrificed for for nearly 200 years. You want us to be nothing more than another little european style social welfare state. I do so very much hate your version of what this country is supposed to be, and you hate mine. Where does that leave us?

                                Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

                                P Offline
                                P Offline
                                Patrick Etc
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #16

                                Stan Shannon wrote:

                                Where does that leave us?

                                That, Stan, is the right question. There's no answer, least not one I can see. Escalation only ever ends one way.


                                Cheers, Patrick

                                S 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • E Ed Gadziemski

                                  jparken wrote:

                                  It is for the Legislative Branch to create the laws and for the Executive Branch to enforce the laws.

                                  And for the Judicial Branch to interpret the laws.

                                  jparken wrote:

                                  it's the liberals who always blame the US for all sorts of things, and frankly, we conservatives are sick and tired of liberals running down this country every chance they get

                                  It's the conservatives who always blame the US. America is just fine the way it is, and we're sick and tired of conservatives running down his country. It's the way it is because WE THE PEOPLE CHOSE FOR IT TO BE THAT WAY. All we want is for conservatives to quit badmouthing respect for law and respect for human rights and dignity. Hundreds of millions of Americans support those values. Get over it.

                                  R Offline
                                  R Offline
                                  Reagan Conservative
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #17

                                  Ed Gadziemski wrote:

                                  respect for law and respect for human rights

                                  If you had ANY respect for law, then you would have to agree that the court system MAKING laws is UNCONSTITUTIONAL! We have respect for human right s as much as anyone. What we don't have respect for is for people like you to claim that ILLEGAL ALIENS have more rights than citizens of this country! So maybe you should "get over it".

                                  John P.

                                  E 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • P Patrick Etc

                                    Wow. Code Project really borked that post formatting somehow. Anywho:

                                    Ed Gadziemski wrote:

                                    For example, if the federal government had not exercised iron-handed enforcement of the commerce clause, we'd be a third-rate nobody. But the hate-America-firsters claim the feds have no right to interfere with state and local control.

                                    You've set up a straw-man, Ed. It's not either-or: some powers are appropriate to the Federal government, and others were intended to be left to the states. Speeding limits and ID cards, for example (National ID anyone? Personally I'll be the first rebel to refuse to get one). The founders did this for two reasons. One, they were deeply suspicious of any sort of centralized power. They had seen what absolute rule could do to a government and to a people, and they didn't want a repeat (and make no mistake, that is EXACTLY what we are living under today). Second, they KNEW that society would change, technology would change, and the world would change, and they knew that those changes would be too fast and too many for a solid document like the Constitution to possibly adapt to them all. Thus, they wanted the more lithe, agile governments - state and local governments - to be responsible for issues that the Constitution was ill-equipped to deal with. As Captain Janeway so eloquently put it on a recent re-run of Voyager: "The Federation Charter is a statement of principles, not a practical document." The same is essentially true of our Constitution. It lays down the basic framework; the implementation must be left to the states and to future generations. The founders were deeply afraid that people would take that framework, the Constitution, and look at it as a complete entity. This was one of the reasons for the 400-page Federalist Papers, containing the near-complete volume of thought ever produced by our founders about what they intended for our nation. I have read the book, and it has influenced everything I think about our nation. Sometimes on this board I will come off sounding conservative; others, I will sound very liberal. This is because I am doing my level best to understand what our founders wanted for us, and to live by that tradition - not to live IN the past, but use it as a guide to the future. Frankly, neither political party in this country has that in mind. They BOTH are after things diametrically opposed to a free nation. It makes me sick to my stomach to vote, because I'm always vo

                                    E Offline
                                    E Offline
                                    Ed Gadziemski
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #18

                                    Patrick Sears wrote:

                                    I have considered running for office simply BECAUSE I am so disillusioned

                                    That, my friend, is the very best reason to run for office.

                                    P 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • R Reagan Conservative

                                      Ed Gadziemski wrote:

                                      respect for law and respect for human rights

                                      If you had ANY respect for law, then you would have to agree that the court system MAKING laws is UNCONSTITUTIONAL! We have respect for human right s as much as anyone. What we don't have respect for is for people like you to claim that ILLEGAL ALIENS have more rights than citizens of this country! So maybe you should "get over it".

                                      John P.

                                      E Offline
                                      E Offline
                                      Ed Gadziemski
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #19

                                      jparken wrote:

                                      people like you to claim that ILLEGAL ALIENS have more rights than citizens of this country

                                      Hmmm, maybe you should check my profile to see where I live before spewing out something like that. We deal with the effects of illegal immigration every day in my neck of the woods. Smugglers killing people and leaving bodies in the desert, illegals cutting through our back yard, depressed wages because of cheap illegal labor, traffic accidents with uninsured illegals who flee the scene, livestock butchered for food, houses broken into and vandalized. It ain't pretty.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • S Stan Shannon

                                        As I said below... I freely and happily admit that I absolutely hate what the forces of socialism have done to America via the 14th amendment. But then, in my lexicon, hate is not nessarily a bad word. Some things deserve to be hated. People such as yourself, Ed, have completely destroyed the government that every single American soldier fought to defend from 1776 until 1945. Your side of the political debate has made a mockery of every single principle Americans fought and died and sacrificed for for nearly 200 years. You want us to be nothing more than another little european style social welfare state. I do so very much hate your version of what this country is supposed to be, and you hate mine. Where does that leave us?

                                        Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

                                        E Offline
                                        E Offline
                                        Ed Gadziemski
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #20

                                        Stan Shannon wrote:

                                        I do so very much hate your version of what this country is supposed to be, and you hate mine. Where does that leave us?

                                        The same place it left the federalists and anti-federalists 230 years ago. We muddle along as best we can and keep the country moving forward despite the whining of those on the opposing side.

                                        S 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • P Patrick Etc

                                          Stan Shannon wrote:

                                          Where does that leave us?

                                          That, Stan, is the right question. There's no answer, least not one I can see. Escalation only ever ends one way.


                                          Cheers, Patrick

                                          S Offline
                                          S Offline
                                          Stan Shannon
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #21

                                          Patrick Sears wrote:

                                          Escalation only ever ends one way.

                                          It past the point of no return a long time ago.

                                          Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about

                                          P 1 Reply Last reply
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