Posted on 05/26/2017 11:32:36 PM PDT by OneVike
Today we face a different form of slavery, yet one as dangerous as the one faced in 1854, maybe even more dangerous. All Americans will one day be slaves to a government that controls every aspect of out lives. How? Via a one payer healthcare system. We were betrayed by Chief Justice John Roberts, and I believe we will see him again betray us again one day. We are also witnessing the party began to stop slavery, willingly colluding with the original slave party, the Democrat party, to enslave us all.
We either change it now, or accept the fate we all face. It took four years to get a Republican President after the party was created in 1854, today we already own the White House. What better time to create a new anti-slavery party than now? We can do it if every true America like us are serious. Use the tools of the left. Social media, and deluge talk radio with our desires. It is time to cry out so loud that we drown out the left. Time to over run the left. time to take back our party, by removing each and every Republican in the primary that does not speak out. We have less than one year, we can do it if we are all working together.
And staunch Republicans are still called “Ripon Republicans” after the name of that town. I could join MENSA tomorrow. No thanks. I’ve talked with people who belong.
What Good Can a Handgun Do Against an Army.....?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/2312894/posts
Sadly, my dreams tend to resemble god-awful British science fiction — not that there’s any other kind... but I digress... Yes, the fight is on.
Any new party that is formed will be immediately infiltrated and corrupted by the exact same people who have done the same to the GOP and to the Tea Party.
Post #2 is correct. That is where this is going.
Phew!
My dreams are all like Steven Wrights in SO I MARRIED AN AX MURDERER. Recall he was a pilot and after being aroused by Mike Myers after he fell asleep flying through rough weather, he immediately pronounced, Oh man! I was having the weirdest dream!
With those vivid dreams and your recall, I’d say you are getting enough resistant starch in your diet.
If we could dump every American into a truth machine, we’d probably find that only 20% of the people spouting or following leftist ways are believers. The other 80% (dem or pub both) are wildly misled and misinformed. You might use the word dumb, but I still think they just have no clue.
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Many agree with you, but first we must try creating o new party
Yes, I do believe my dream said it all about my feelings for Mensa.
Amazing how our true feelings have a habit of dominating our dreams.
As is always, but there are ways of eliminating the ones who come late, after the battle is won
Did you ever try to decipher the dream?
Yup.
>> we must try creating o new party
Disagree. The Republican party is our party, not the traitors’ party.
Never concede an ounce of soil.
You met the wrong Mensans. I’ve been a member for more than 30 years and have met many wonderful people (and some colossal jerks). Mensa is one of the joys of my life.
BTTT
Ask a retired or ex-military sniper.
The New Deal, Dean Acheson wrote approvingly in a book called A Democrat Looks At His Party, conceived of the federal government as the whole people organized to do what had to be done. A year later, Mr. (Arthur) Larson wrote A Republican Looks At His Party, and made much the same claim in his book for modern Republicans. The underlying philosophy of the New Republicanism, said Mr. Larson, is that if a job has to be done to meet the needs of the people, and no one else can do it, then it is the proper function of the federal government.Well, we ought to have woken up over a half-century ago, but the machinations of the media and state-controlled socioeconomic and educational machine lulled us back to sleep. Instead of Goldwater becoming POTUS, LBJ did, and the Uniparty continued its dark works. Seems to me that the point is we have to turn to the God who made us, for both safety and direction.
Here we have, by prominent spokesmen of both political parties, an unqualified repudiation of the principle of limited government. There is no reference by either of them to the Constitution, or any attempt to define the legitimate functions of government. The government can do whatever needs to be done; note, too, the implicit but necessary assumption that it is the government itself that determines what needs to be done. We must not, I think, underrate the importance of these statements. They reflect the view of a majority of the leaders of one of our parties, and of a strong minority among the leaders of the other, and they propound the first principle of totalitarianism: that the State is competent to do all things and is limited in what it actually does only by the will of those who control the State. [ ]
Franklin Roosevelts rapid conversion from Constitutionalism to the doctrine of unlimited government is an oft-told story. But I am here concerned not so much by the abandonment of states rights by the national Democratic Party an event that occurred some years ago when that party was captured by the socialist ideologues in and about the labor movement as by the unmistakable tendency of the Republican Party to adopt the same course. [ ] Thus, the cornerstone of the Republic, our chief bulwark against the encroachment (on) individual freedom by Big Government, is fast disappearing under the piling sands of absolutism.
The Republican Party, to be sure, gives lip service to states rights. We often talk about returning to the states their rightful powers; the Administration has even gone so far as to sponsor a federal-state conference on the problem. But deeds are what count, and I regret to say that in actual practice, the Republican Party, like the Democratic Party, summons the coercive power of the federal government whenever national leaders conclude that the states are not performing satisfactorily.
The Conscience of a Conservative (1960), pp. 15, 24-25
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