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Democrats Prefer Fantasy to Reality
Townhall.com ^ | November 21, 2015 | Jeff Crouere

Posted on 11/21/2015 10:50:03 AM PST by Kaslin

Last Saturday night, 8.5 million Americans had the misfortune to watch three dangerously out of touch liberals debate the major issues of the day during the Democratic Party's presidential debate. It was another example of how Democrats prefer the fantasy of their liberal beliefs to the true reality we are facing as a nation.

In the immediate aftermath of the Paris terrorist attacks, much of the debate focused on how to respond to the threat from ISIS. Unfortunately, the Democratic presidential candidates are captives of political correctness and refuse to label the threat accurately. They agree with President Obama that the term "radical Islam" is offensive to law abiding Muslims. They prefer the innocuous and inaccurate term "extremism" to identify the string of terrorist attacks being inflicted across the globe.

In Paris, the day before the fantasy land debate, eight Islamic terrorists affiliated with ISIS targeted innocent people, killing 129 and wounding 352. It was a horrific attack on not just the country of France, but on all of Western civilization. It was only the latest in a long string of attacks that have been going on for decades, but started to intensify in the aftermath of the Iranian revolution of 1979.

The deadliest event occurred on September 11, 2001, when 19 Islamic terrorists killed almost 3,000 innocent people in our country. Since that horrible day, there have been thousands of terrorist attacks by jihadists who are committed to the violent overthrow of Western nations and the expansion of an Islamic caliphate.

Despite the lack of terror attacks from people of other faiths, Barack Obama and the Democratic presidential candidates prefer the fiction of labeling these incidents as examples of unspecified "extremism." It makes them feel good, but does nothing to solve the actual problem the civilized world is facing.

To make matters worse, Democrats want to allow more Syrian refugees into our country, even though the vetting process is suspect. This will exacerbate the problem, but the liberal Democrats are more concerned about sounding tolerant and inclusive. In fact, the President is committed to welcoming 100,000 more Syrian refugees to the United States in each of the next two years, despite the evidence from Paris that Syrian refugees participated in the horrific terrorist attacks. In fact, the ringleader of the Paris attacks used the migrant crisis to enter France and commit jihad.

Thankfully, 31 Governors have now demanded that no Syrian refugees be sent to their states. While their authority on this issue is limited, at least they have started a national conversation. Now, pro-amnesty Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan is advocating a "pause" in the influx of Syrian refugees. Ryan's change of heart is another indication of how serious this problem has become.

While Americans know the threat from radical Islam, delusional Democrats like Obama, Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton are still maintaining their belief that our most serious threat is from climate change. This belief is shared by almost all liberal intellectuals, such as columnist Paul Krugman, who states that "Terrorism can't and won't destroy our civilization, but global warming could and might."

Krugman and his fellow liberals are dangerously wrong and their adherence to this environmental religion could eventually lead to the death of many innocent people. Last month, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius noted that not only is "climate change is a threat to peace" but it is also a major reason for the terror attacks in the world. Hopefully, after the events of last weekend, Fabius has had a change of heart.

In Paris, the terrorists were not shouting their support of measures to address climate change. Instead, they were expressing solidarity with Syria and ISIS and yelling "Allahu Akbar."

The terrorists were telling the world all we need to know about the threat we face. Unfortunately, President Obama, the Democratic presidential candidates and left wing political leaders in Europe and this country refuse to listen. Let's pray that their constituents awaken them to the danger or vote them out of office before it is too late.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: demonrat

1 posted on 11/21/2015 10:50:03 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
We must remember that is these so-called "progressive" politicians and their political and bureaucratic allies who have "dumbed down" generations of American citizens by failing to teach them the "ideas of liberty" and the factual history which surrounded the formation of the Republic.

Fortunately, for the world, during its first 200 years, Americans understood more about the ideas which had predominated the founding of their nation. As a result, they were better able to defend those ideas from attacks from within and without.

From: The Works of John Adams, vol. 6 (John Adams)

In the conclusion to Adams's 3 volume Defence of the Constitutions of the U.S. Adams anticipated what he considered to be the great promise of the new American republican experiment in liberty.

"All nations," he said, "from the beginning, have been agitated by the same passions. The principles developed here will go a great way in explaining every phenomenon that occurs in the history of government. The vegetable and animal kingdoms, and those heavenly bodies whose existence and movements we are as yet only permitted faintly to perceive, do not appear to be governed by laws more uniform or certain than those which regulate the moral and political world. Nations move by unalterable rules; and education, discipline, and laws, make the greatest difference in their accomplishments, happiness, and perfection. It is the master artist alone who finishes his building, his picture, or his clock. The present actors on the stage have been too little prepared by their early views, and too much occupied with turbulent scenes, to do more than they have done. Impartial justice will confess that it is astonishing they have been able to do so much. It is for the young to make themselves masters of what their predecessors have been able to comprehend and accomplish but imperfectly.

"A prospect into futurity in America, is like contemplating the heavens through the telescopes of Herschell. Objects stupendous in their magnitudes and motions strike us from all quarters, and fill us with amazement! When we recollect that the wisdom or the folly, the virtue or the vice, the liberty or servitude, of those millions now beheld by us, only as Columbus saw these times in vision, are certainly to be influenced, perhaps decided, by the manners, examples, principles, and political institutions of the present generation, that mind must be hardened into stone that is not melted into reverence and awe. With such affecting scenes before his eyes, is there, can there be, a young American indolent and incurious; surrendered up to dissipation and frivolity; vain of imitating the loosest manners of countries, which can never be made much better or much worse? A profligate American youth must be profligate indeed, and richly merits the scorn of all mankind.

"The world has been too long abused with notions, that climate and soil decide the characters and political institutions of nations. The laws of Solon and the despotism of Mahomet have, at different times, prevailed at Athens; consuls, emperors, and pontiffs have ruled at Rome. Can there be desired a stronger proof, that policy and education are able to triumph over every disadvantage of climate? Mankind have been still more injured by insinuations, that a certain celestial virtue, more than human, has been necessary to preserve liberty. Happiness, whether in despotism or democracy, whether in slavery or liberty, can never be found without virtue. The best republics will be virtuous, and have been so; but we may hazard a conjecture, that the virtues have been the effect of the well ordered constitution, rather than the cause. And, perhaps, it would be impossible to prove that a republic cannot exist even among highwaymen, by setting one rogue to watch another; and the knaves themselves may in time be made honest men by the struggle.

" It is now in our power to bring this work to a conclusion with unexpected dignity. In the course of the last summer, two authorities have appeared, greater than any that have been before quoted, in which the principles we have attempted to defend have been acknowledged.

" The first is, an Ordinance of Congress, of the thirteenth of July, 1787, for the Government of the Territory of the United States, Northwest of the River Ohio.

" The second is, the Report of the Convention at Philadelphia, of the seventeenth of September, 1787.

"The former confederation of the United States was formed upon the model and example of all the confederacies, ancient and modern, in which the federal council was only a diplomatic body. Even the Lycian, which is thought to have been the best, was no more. The magnitude of territory, the population, the wealth and commerce, and especially the rapid growth of the United States, have shown such a government to be inadequate to their wants; and the new system, which seems admirably calculated to unite their interests and affections, and bring them to an uniformity of principles and sentiments, is equally well combined to unite their wills and forces as a single nation. A result of accommodation cannot be supposed to reach the ideas of perfection of any one; but the conception of such an idea, and the deliberate union of so great and various a people in such a plan, is, without all partiality or prejudice, if not the greatest exertion of human understanding, the greatest single effort of national deliberation that the world has ever seen. That it may be improved is not to be doubted, and provision is made for that purpose in the report itself. A people who could conceive, and can adopt it, we need not fear will be able to amend it, when, by experience, its inconveniences and imperfections shall be seen and felt." - John Adams, Excerpt, Defence of the Constitution. . . ."


2 posted on 11/21/2015 11:12:12 AM PST by loveliberty2
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To: Kaslin
Actually the headline gives the 'Rats too much credit. Their problem is not only do they prefer fantasy to reality, but they can't tell the difference.

Heck, I prefer fantasy to reality in a lot of instances, but I know the difference and know I have to live in reality.

3 posted on 11/21/2015 11:17:23 AM PST by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know...)
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To: The_Reader_David

The question for all people is: who do you believe in at heart. What the party believed in says, is the basis of your reading of reality.

One can believe in the devil in his various modes. Some of those appear as vauntings of self, other as embracing of various malevolent forces.

One can heartily believe in God, that however bad one is, God wills the love and power to bring every willing one into complete concert with His holiness (with the journey ending in a world that is not this present world).

However, just talking about God doesn’t put oneself in the second category. There is a kind of selfish theism, where life is some sort of indefinite detente between an evilly leaned self and God, and there is no meaningful salvation in the story, only maintenance.

The memes talked about in this place, such as “Rats” and “Liberals” and even “Conservatives” don’t tell us too much; they tell us too little. They are externally observed phenomena.


4 posted on 11/21/2015 11:25:37 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: Kaslin

emotionalistic libtard feelings upset by reality -> desire to escape from reality -> childish fantasies + grandiose delusions of a libtard utopia


5 posted on 11/21/2015 11:28:04 AM PST by mjp ((pro-{God, reality, reason, egoism, individualism, natural rights, limited government, capitalism}))
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To: mjp

When we see fallen men wallowing in sin, an appropriate question for us to ask before God is: is this a lesson I need to take to heart myself so as to discover an opportunity to get right before Thee, by Thy grace, in a way I had not been right before?

It might be, or it might not be. Even if it is to happen in future, it may not yet be time.

One thing fatal to our spiritual progress when we behold such a scene, however, is just to sit or stand and crow. Crowing can blind us to ambushes that can get us to do something analogous to what we crowed we would never do. We can despise bad ideas but we don’t want to start indulging in labels e.g. “libtard” here. Today’s “libtard” may surprise you tomorrow by stepping out of the role you used freezing language to characterize him or her in.


6 posted on 11/21/2015 11:33:41 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: Kaslin

Rand nailed it: you can avoid reality, but you cannot avoid the consequences of avoiding reality.


7 posted on 11/21/2015 11:39:03 AM PST by Night Hides Not (Remember the Alamo! Remember Goliad! Remember Mississippi! My vote is going to Cruz.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

There’s a place in the darkness I use to cling to
That presses harsh hope against time
In the absence of martyrs there’s a presence of thieves
Who only want to rob you blind

They steal away any sense of peace
Though I’m a king, I’m a king on my knees
And I know they are wrong when they say I am strong
As the darkness covers me

So I turn on the light and reveal all the glory
I am not afraid to bear all my weakness
Knowing in meekness, I have a kingdom to gain
Where there is peace and love in the light

In the light, I am not afraid
To let your light shine bright in my life, in my life

There are ghosts from my past who have owned more of my soul
Than I thought I had given away
They linger in closets and under my bed
And in pictures less proudly displayed

A great fool in my life I have been
Have squandered ‘til pallid and thin
Hung my head in shame and refused to take blame
From darkness I know, I’ve let win

Can you hear me? Can you hear me?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yahG_1jQe5E


8 posted on 11/21/2015 11:46:35 AM PST by Zeneta (Thoughts in time and out of season.)
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To: Kaslin

“Terrorism can’t and won’t destroy our civilization, but global warming could and might.”

Cognitive dissonance there. “Could” is not “can”, and “might” is not “will”.

Terrorism can’t and won’t destroy our civilization, not so long as we fight back to defeat it. And we make the price of attempting to pursue terrorism so high it is driven into oblivion.

Any victory also has to have a defeated loser, otherwise it is not a victory. It is only a stalemate, and there can be no victory.

Ever.


9 posted on 11/21/2015 12:14:51 PM PST by alloysteel (Do not argue with trolls. That means they win.)
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