Thank you.
We are often said to be exaggerating things, but as I read this musty old book, I am shaken by the ‘new version’ being presented ...no forced upon ...the American public.
Yesterday I was at the part where they were discussing the language rules. How only insiders understood what were common place words had very different meanings. I couldn’t help but consider the ever changing climate of political correctness and how using one word today is a crime the next.
Eichmann’s use of what she calls ‘cliches’ as he testifies in his trial and how he viscerally is elated to use these clichés. I can’t help but consider the liberal left and their slogans and memes...their clichés as well.
The history is out there...how do we get modern America to read it?
(I am sorry all the odd punctuation, but darn it I do not know how to fix it?)
I lost my library in a fire a year ago, but I cherished winter time reading ....
None Dare Call It Treason, f'rinstance
I even had 60's radical books (lefty) about what (they wanted) America to become I confess, I don't buy books anymore, nor do I sit down to read like I used to .... the internet is an evil drug ... but there are a ton of youtubes that we can pull up to give us insight about our not too distant past
Here ... Wm F Buckley Jr interviews pre-presidential Ronald Reagan
A vast percentage of the American public hasn't been equipped by their educators, or compelled by their parents to take the utmost advantage of their educational possibilities, to comprehend and digest books like this.