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The Duty of a True Patriot

Posted by richrobinson 11 years, 10 months ago to The Gulch: General
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I just saw this and liked it.


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  • Posted by johnpe1 11 years, 10 months ago
    I had never heard this, Rich;;; Thank You!!! -- j

    p.s. I know that I am a true patriot, and the feeling
    of powerlessness with only one vote, one phone,
    one computer, one voice -- when others who are
    not patriots have more of the same -- is nauseating.

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  • Posted by strugatsky 11 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    An interesting, almost a unique feature of American education is its compartmentalization. A person can have a very good technical education and yet be completely ignorant of other areas around him. The classical education, especially in liberal arts, included foundations in almost everything that was important in the surrounding world, but that has not been the case in the US in at least 50 years. Thus, people that appear to be educated based on their degrees or the jobs that they do are often simpletons in 90% of the subjects that surround us. Without that classical foundation to analyze the surrounding world, they rely on mass media to fill in the gaps, as that is easier than analysis and thinking. When you add to that narrow knowledge the inability to take care of most things on their own and requiring a specialist for almost everything (not being negative here; just a result of compartmentalization and specialization), many grow up with an ingrained belief that others know better about almost everything that there is to know about. The role of the “others” is best fulfilled by the government since the government preaches its competency to children from the earliest age that they come under its influence (TV, schools) and insists on its supremacy constantly. Thus, the “educated” rarely consider that the “government” is a collection of bureaucrats who often know less about the subject they regulate than anyone else does; but, they have to pretend to be experts because the pretense is their job protection; any challenge to their authority exposes the fraud, so they fight back.
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 11 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    It actually gets worse the more "educated" you are (in general - there's certainly many exceptions). For those without a good amount of real world experience, when they keep book learning, they come to believe that they and those like them (the learned elite) can solve all problems just by thinking about them and dreaming up solutions. They've never had to actually put their ideas to the test and see whether their theory works in practice. Thus, when they finally get the power to enact their ideas and they fail, it cannot be because the idea is fundamentally flawed, it must be that; A) they didn't have enough money, B) they didn't have enough support by the people, C) those evil x's (republicans, tea-partiers, capitalists, entrepreneurs, ...) subverted their efforts, D) if they didn't have enough time and if we only give it more time it will work.

    No, I'll take the dumb over the "educated" any day. At least with the dumb if you bring them evidence they typically will see the truth. The "educated" are beyond seeing reality and can only see what they want to see.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 11 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    It is part of their plan. It seems to be working. Just like a good martial artist, we now need to use their own momentum against them.
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 11 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    That's what the collectivists are counting on. You won't fight to keep something in which you no longer have pride. It's part of their plan.
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  • Posted by katrinam41 11 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Agreed--I am proud to be an American, with all that implies, having nothing at all to do with what this country is becoming, but everything to do with what it SHOULD be.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 11 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Khalling and I had an e-mail chat in the last day about guilt. Many people of faith, particularly Christians, do have guilt complexes more than they should. Khalling correctly reproached me about the difference between guilt and regret. Guilt (at least usually) carries with it an evasive aspect that denies that A = A; this in turn opens up vulnerabilities. One must acknowledge wrongdoing, apologize to any offended parties only for was contrary to one's own values, and move on. Thanks, Khalling.
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