[–] GranimalSnake 1 point 0 points 1 point (+1|-1) ago
Outstanding! I'll read it tonight.
[–] Liberty1776 [S] 1 point -1 points 0 points (+0|-1) ago
Thank you so much Patriot!
[–] GranimalSnake 1 point 1 point 2 points (+2|-1) ago
Absolutely... I've skimmed through the first 75%, very well written.
I'll go back through it again tomorrow. This is a great share.
[–] AmericanVictory 1 point -1 points 0 points (+0|-1) ago
Thank you for your hard work and dedication, Patriot. Will read, and will post any impressions. Sounds like a great tool for red-pilling libtards!
[–] Liberty1776 [S] 1 point 0 points 1 point (+1|-1) ago
Thank you so much Patriot. I want you to know I appreciate anyone who will read it and give their critique, good or bad. So, in light of this, I hope it does have some information that you can use. God Bless You!
[–] lemon11 ago
What's right and good? If 1965 were right and good, it would have come centuries earlier, wouldn't it? What's racist, then?
[–] Liberty1776 [S] 1 point 0 points 1 point (+1|-1) ago
I understand what your saying. Allow me to define what I believe is right and good and why it took so long to get there and why we may not be there yet.
I believe it is the goal of every man to have a life that is his own. Where he can choose for HIMSELF what he wants to achieve or how he goes about achieving it. This is, of course, without detriment of harm to his fellow man. The Founding Fathers had created a new paradigm with the creation of the United States of America. They has started a nation with the credo that every man has the God given right to "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness". Now, was that achieved when the constitution was signed? Of course not. There were till 200,000+ men who were in chains and would remain so for another 80+years. Then another good and right thing happened. The Emancipation Proclamation was signed which ended slavery. But were those men now truly free to decide their own destinies? No. There was one party that kept them in chains, but then stopped them from deciding their futures by denying them their Constitutional right to vote. Then the Voting Rights Act and Civil Rights Act was passed in 1965. Were those men free then? They had the right to vote, their freedom was not impinged, they had no more chains. But I would argue that they were no more free of the "plantation" in their MINDS then the slaves were back one-hundred years ago. The Democrat party had not only given the blacks of this country more Federally-funded "chains" in the form of welfare, public housing, Medicaid and food-stamps but also made any success they achieved seem "less than" with the advent of Affirmative Action and quotas.
So, while we can argue what is right and good, until we achieve the very basic goal of every man being able to live the life he can and achieve what he will with NO government interference, we will never have what the Founders foresaw.
[–] lemon11 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Actually, I was referring to the immigration act. If accepting a bunch of people who don't share our values was so good, why wasn't it implemented earlier? Because it isn't good, it's destructive to the fabric of society. And all those things happening around that time simply enhanced that all over the West.