tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post7714695671033145270..comments2024-03-18T08:02:51.154-07:00Comments on Had Enough Therapy?: Don't Just Feel: Do SomethingStuart Schneidermanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12784043736879991769noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post-20526274605152770432016-07-16T20:24:24.886-07:002016-07-16T20:24:24.886-07:00https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4W8xjEFWrHghttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4W8xjEFWrHgAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post-33024597940046046272016-07-15T13:19:20.260-07:002016-07-15T13:19:20.260-07:00Stuart: We are projecting weakness. We pride ourse...Stuart: We are projecting weakness. We pride ourselves on our tolerance. We do not understand that being on the moral high ground makes us targets. The terrorists watch it and cheer. They believe that they are winning. It’s their best recruiting tool.<br /><br />Its a curious idea, projecting weakness. The reality is we are weak and vulnerable. We have soft fleshy bodies that don't trivially survive violent attacks.<br /><br />And I don't know why being on the moral high ground makes us targets.<br /><br />If all the terrorist have to do is keep killing innocent people to win, then we're definitely doomed since there's no way to protect ourselves from violence except by enabling our own governments to do whatever it takes to keep us safe, which probably will be more constraining for the majority than their personal dangers by terrorists or criminals.<br /><br />I suppose there will always confused young men who can't see a positive path in life and feel powerless will say "Hey, that's cool! I wish I could murder 70 random people too." <br /><br />Stuart's new motto works for all would be criminals and terrorists too "Don't Just Feel [hatred]: Do Something!"Ares Olympushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09726811306826601686noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post-30702368724948770452016-07-15T12:48:24.234-07:002016-07-15T12:48:24.234-07:00https://youtu.be/y-7j4WVTgWc?t=1h37m
I thought th...https://youtu.be/y-7j4WVTgWc?t=1h37m<br /><br />I thought the French got out of Algeria and Africa to get away from the mayhem. But they’ve been importing Algeria and Africa into France to further the mayhem.<br /><br />France used to rule much of the world, but the world told the French to GO HOME. Thus, French Imperialism came to an end.<br /><br />But the French aren’t satisfied with France as France. Too small, too provincial, too ‘racist’(according to stupid PC).<br /><br />So, the French decided to their nation into a mini-world, a grand-nation that resembles an empire of various peoples.<br />The result is predictable as empires are inherently unstable.<br />The Old French Empire ended in violence and war, and the new France-as-reconstituted-mini-empire will also spiral into mayhem, violence, and chaos, especially as the French Left(that controls media and academia) instruct immigrant kids to hate white people and blame the West for all the evils in the world. (Also, those immigrant youths are raised on American anti-white rap culture.)bubblegumnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post-49774901819005981982016-07-15T11:12:29.593-07:002016-07-15T11:12:29.593-07:00We live in a toxically sentimental age, where we a...We live in a toxically sentimental age, where we attack people who take initiative. We think certainty is weak, stupid, brutish, closed. That's wrong. Confident people take initiative, because they know what they believe in. Dogmatic tolerance is believing in nothing. It's nihilism's ugly twin. Abel and Cain.<br /><br />President Obama is a perfect example of this. He views terrorism as a law enforcement problem. He cannot see any of this being tied to a larger cause or the actions of a larger, coordinated network. This is exceptionally dangerous. As Stephen Coughlin has pointed out in his "Red Pill" briefs, terrorist actions are consistent with Islamic Law and the concept of jihad. They are not just matters of interpretation, they are spelled out in the Koran. Whether a believer chooses to act in this way is his/her own choice. The fact is that some are acting in this regard, and they are being weaponized and coordinated by ideologues who are using accepted scholarly exegesis. This is all propagated by the Muslim Brotherhood and its secondary organizations, who we naively call "moderate." This is a war. Driving a truck through a Bastille Day celebration is an act of war, because it is inherently political. The mechanism needn't be savage or military-like. It's the result that counts. We are at war and in an Article 5 situation.<br /><br />When we do not prosecute war with the resolve it deserves, we weaken ourselves, elongate conflicts and waste resources. It sounds nice, but it's dangerous. The "moral high ground" is OUR moral high ground, not theirs. Saying we're better than them with moral certitude is like trying to read Shakespeare to monoglot aboriginals in the Amazon rain forest. This is the consequence of not having moral certitude... after all, we've been told everything is relative. Someone smashing your body with a semi truck is not relative. It's real. Multiculturalism has no answer to those who seek to impose cultural supremacy.<br /><br />As I've said before, tolerance is a substitute for love. I'm not saying we love our enemies, though we can, as sometimes the most loving thing to do is get conflict over with as soon as possible. We ought not tolerate barbarity. We must replace tolerance with our love for ourselves, our families, and our country. That's how we win. But we can't win pretending to care. We have to believe in something bigger than silly academic concepts like whether we exist and asking vacuous questions like "Whose values?" <br /><br />Our values. Now. Game on.Ignatius Acton Chesterton OCDhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18222603717128565302noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post-58456384226579216342016-07-15T08:47:04.380-07:002016-07-15T08:47:04.380-07:00Hopkins's article demonstrates the existential...Hopkins's article demonstrates the existential need to own up to what we are facing: Islamic jihad on steroids.<br />Why do we have to keep relearning the rule that papering over cracks in the wall eventually finds us with a house falling down around us?<br />Avoiding, and out-right suppressing, the source of the attacks on the West (and within the Muslim world as well) did nothing to stop them at a time when reasonable steps could be taken.<br />Now we only have extreme options left.<br />That is not the fault of the Cassandras (aka Islamophobes), except insofar as too many of them didn't want to speak out loudly enough or support those who were, for fear of their own safety and reputations.<br /><br />Cultural dislocations work on the same techtonic principle as earthquakes: lack of constant correction in faults builds up into devastating shifts.<br />Or, if you prefer, the analogy to tipping points is relevant. "The Straw That Broke the Camel's Back" expresses very well the idea that the people will always eventually reach the point where they will not accept one more iota of elite subversion (in this era, multiculti posturing) when lives are being destroyed.AesopFanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08136804368672830018noreply@blogger.com