Category Archives: Jot’s Political Rants

America, Then and Now…or Why a Libertarian Candidate Will Never Be Elected as President

English: Peter F. Rothermel's "Patrick He...

English: Peter F. Rothermel’s “Patrick Henry Before the Virginia House of Burgesses”, a painting of Patrick Henry’s “If this be treason, make the most of it!” speech against the Stamp Act of 1765 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

The American mindset on March 23, 1775: Give me liberty, or give me death. – Patrick Henry

 

The American mindset on November 6, 2012: Give me slavery, and give me debt. But don’t, just don’t make me have to do anything that is hard to do, makes me uncomfortable, or have to sacrifice my fun. Liberty is way too hard and comes at too great of a personal cost. 

 

Sweden’s Ministry of Love

I started reading 1984 yesterday and later I viewed the Youtube video below. It’s amazing how closely these two things correspond to each other. I think as I continue to read 1984 I shall think of Sweden whenever the Ministry of Love and their Thought Police are mentioned in the book.

Here is Wikipedia’s description of the Ministry of Love in George Orwell’s book:

The Ministry of Love enforces loyalty and love of Big Brother through fear, a repressive apparatus, and brainwashing. The Ministry of Love building has no windows and is surrounded by barbed wire entanglements, steel doors, hidden machine gun nests, and guards armed with “jointed truncheons”. Referred to as “The place where there is no darkness,” its interior lights are never turned off. Its importance is played down by the Party, but its function is well known and it is arguably the most important ministry, controlling the will of the population. The Thought Police is part of Miniluv.

The system of the ideas presented in 1984 are being played out in the real world in the country of Sweden:

My Favorite Quotes of All Time

My favorite quotes fall into two categories: faith and government and that pretty much explains how my brain operates. I think a lot about God and His laws, and then I think about man and his laws, how the two converge and how far away they can be from each other. Here are some of my favorite quotes of all time and why they are favorites:

“To be right with God has often meant to be in trouble with men” — A.W. Tozer

Jesus forewarned his followers that the world would hate them because they hated Him. I like the Tozer quote because I’ve experienced this firsthand. I was growing closer to my Lord, I was practicing obedience to His word, and it got me into trouble with men, or more specifically, women in this case. Looking back, it was so worth the trouble it caused me at the time. Being right with God is far better.

“The shocking possibility that dumb people don’t exist in sufficient numbers to warrant the millions of careers devoted to tending them will seem incredible to you.” – John Taylor Gatto, in The Underground History of American Education

Thus begins Gatto in his book. This book has opened up my eyes to the Progressive movement more so than any other resource I have come across since. I read this long before the current Progressive Obama administration came into power and everything that Obama and the new Marxist generation have proposed was thoroughly treated in Gatto’s history of the public school system. The public school system has long been the launching platform for the Progressive movement. 

“If we continue to send our children to Caesar for their education we need to stop being surprised when they come home as Romans.” – Voddie Baucham

Voddie must have read Gatto’s book too. I’m kidding! No, Voddie simply reads God’s word and believes what it says about child rearing.

“We don’t need no thought control.” Pink Floyd, in Another Brick in the Wall part II

The song that kept playing in my mind as I read Gatto’s book.

“A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have.” -Thomas Jefferson

That is an apt definition of the U.S. government which is growing larger and more overbearing toward its citizens every day.

“Multitudes desire to be saved from hell (the natural instinct of self-preservation) who are quite unwilling to be saved from sin.” – A.W. Pink

Sadly, this could aptly describe a multitude of people attending churches across America today.

And so there they are, some of my favorite quotes of all time.

Friends of Domenic Johansson

Sweden seems to have one of the cruelest and overreaching governments in the world today. The story of Domenic Johansson is heartbreaking. Please read his and his parents story and act on their behalf by letting others know what the Swedish authorities have done to this family. Friends of Domenic Johansson.

So Long Salt

I just finished reading Ben Domenech’s article on The Coming War on Bacon and it looks like I’ll be stocking up on salt for the future. Who knows? That may be the only currency available in the days to come with our skyrocketing national debt. My mother was telling me today that she learned that Alexander the Great used salt for currency when he was out trying to conquer the world.

Domenech states:

The nanny state faction has no part of choice — I remember listening to a Republican-appointed Surgeon General rant about the dangers of soda pop — but is unanimous in its belief that citizens are too stupid to take care of themselves.

This is what happens when the bureaucracy gets out of control, angry at being ignored for decades by normal citizens with better things to do. We now have a government that isn’t content to just issue recommendations for how you should live. It’s going to make you live that way, whether you want to or not.

Not only does our government think we are too stupid to think and make choices for ourselves, government schools and Hollywood script writers have been conditioning society to think this way for at least fifty years. Personally I think the modern progressive movement can trace its roots back to the election of Abe Lincoln, since his election was financed largely by disenfranchised European Marxists. Others will point to FDR. At any rate it has been in the making for a very long time.

I’ve heard a lot of talk about gold being a wise investment at the moment. Can you eat gold? I think an investment in salt might be better. It is mult-purpose since it has curative and antiseptic qualities as well as making food taste better. Next time I order from my food co-op I think I’ll get a 50 lb. bag of salt. Instead of being the little old lady hoarding cash in her mattress I’ll fill mine with salt.

When Worldviews Collide Who Wins?

I read a very well articulated article from American Vision this morning titled The Socialization of Education. They made some very good points, none of which I could improve on and so my blog this morning is not going to address how socialist ideology has been creeping into government schools over the years.

Something else occurred to me when I read this article, something I have been wondering about. The section quotes Allan Bloom which follows:

Every educational system has a moral goal that it tries to attain and that informs its curriculum. It wants to produce a certain kind of human being. This intention is more or less explicit, more or less a result of reflection; but even the neutral subjects, like reading and writing and arithmetic, take their place in a vision of the educated person. In some nations the goal was the pious person, in others the warlike, in others the industrious. Always important is the political regime, which needs citizens who are in accord with its fundamental principle. Aristocracies want gentlemen, oligarchies men who respect and pursue money, and democracies lovers of equality. Democratic education, whether it admits it or not, wants and needs to produce men and women who have the tastes, knowledge, and character supportive of a democratic regime. Over the history of our republic, there have obviously been changes of opinion as to what kind of man is best for our regime… This education has evolved in the last half-century from the education of democratic man to the education of the democratic personality.

The palpable difference between these two can easily be found in the changed understanding of what it means to be an American. The old view was that, by recognizing and accepting man’s natural rights, men found a fundamental basis of unity and sameness. Class, race, religion, national origin or culture all disappear or become dim when bathed in the light of natural rights, which give men common interests and make them truly brothers. The immigrant had to put behind him the claims of the Old World in favor of a new and easily acquired education. This did not necessarily mean abandoning old daily habits or religions, but it did mean subordinating them to new principles. There was a tendency, if not a necessity, to homogenize nature itself.

The recent education of openness has rejected all that. It pays no attention to natural rights or the historical origins of our regime, which are now thought to have been essentially flawed and regressive. It is progressive and forward-looking. It does not demand fundamental agreement or the abandonment of old or new beliefs in favor of the natural ones. It is open to all kinds of men, all kinds of life-styles, all ideologies. There is no enemy other than the man who is not open to everything. But when there are no shared goals or vision of the public good, is the social contract any longer possible?

It is the last paragraph the caught my attention in particular. Again, it says, “It is progressive and forward-looking. It does not demand fundamental agreement or the abandonment of old or new beliefs in favor of the natural ones. It is open to all kinds of men, all kinds of life-styles, all ideologies.”

I found it interesting when Eric Holder seemed unable to say the words, “Radical Islam” a short while ago. I realize now that he was simply being a strict adherent to his ideology. To quote Bloom again, “There is no enemy other than the man who is not open to everything.” Holder has to be open to everything and so do his cohorts in the Obama administration and those entrenched in the government school system from Kindergarten to PhDs in the University level.

I think this Progressive/Liberal/Socialist/Marxist (whatever term you like…it’s a democracy so you choose) ideology will eventually run headlong into an ideology that is not so accommodating to it. In the United States we’re used to accommodating many ideologies, some more so than others. It think one such ideology is Radical Islam; the very word Holder is unable to utter. If this happens and it seems inevitable to me, what will the response of the Progressives be?

Psychology and history attest to what usually happens when a person with a weak disposition encounters a bully. If you can’t run from the bully you attempt to join him in his efforts. This is the classic response depicted so well in the movie Christmas story. Who can forget the ugly bully in that movie and his diminutive toady who egged him on in his bullying. I think that may have to be the response of the Progressives when Radical Islam makes its aggressive move for power in the U.S.

That is why I’m glad I live in a crater.

Get It Right! Legalist Not Racist

I have a daily routine I follow. I pour a cup of freshly brewed coffee which my son has prepared. (I’ll miss that kid when he leaves home. But not just because he makes a wonderful cup of coffee.)

Next I read my Bible and work on my memory passage. After that I check Facebook, Twitter, and email. If I find myself starting my morning off in a grumpy mood you can usually bet it has something to do with Facebook. So why do I keep coming back to it? One Facebook friend says that FB is like the song Hotel California – You can check out any time you like but you can never leave. I think there is some truth in her statement.

This morning as I checked FB I found out that according to one “friend” I am a racist. This actually caused my heart to seem to skip a beat for a moment. I was outraged by the accusation although my “friend” who posted it didn’t post it on my wall. I simply read her news feed which stated that she liked a page that snarkily stated, “I would rather have immigrants living here than racists.”

My first reaction after the heart skipping moment was anger, followed by a few snarky comments that I would like to have replied back to that. I restrained myself however. I’m sure my liking of several conservative pages has been wearisome to her ever since she friended me.

Like Eric Holder I also have not read the Arizona law that is in heated dispute at the moment. I rely on others, journalists mainly, to interpret the basic contents of the document for me. If I was a resident of Arizona I would read it myself but I’m far removed from that place. I do have an opinion on the subject. I think immigrants should go through proper and legal immigration channels. That does not make me a racist, a legalist perhaps but that is far removed from racism.

The racist card seems to be the Progressives favorite accusation these days. If you don’t like socialism they call you a racist. If you favor legal channels for immigration they call you a racist. If you favor the Constitution over their ideals they say it is outdated and written by racists. It is getting rather old and tiring.

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