Posted on 04/22/2019 11:00:35 PM PDT by Kaslin
Sometimes, a few sentences tell you more about a person -- and, more importantly, an ideology -- than a learned thesis. That is the case with tweets from Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama two days ago in response to the mass murder of more than 300 Christians and others in Sri Lanka.
Their tweets are worth serious analysis because they reveal a great deal about the left. Of course, they reveal a great deal about Clinton and Obama, too, but that doesn't interest me.
And that, too, is important. Many Americans -- especially conservatives and "independents" -- are more interested in individual politicians than in political ideologies.
Many conservatives have long been fixated on Clinton -- so much so that probably any other Democrat would have defeated Donald Trump, as conservative anger specifically toward her propelled many people to the polls. Similarly, Republican Never-Trumpers are fixated on Trump rather than policy. They care more about Trump's personal flaws than about the mortal dangers the left poses to America and the West or about the uniquely successful conservative policies Trump promulgates.
And independents all claim to vote "for the person, not the party."
Only leftists understand that one must vote left no matter who the Democrat is, no matter who the Republican opponent is. Leftists are completely interchangeable: There is no ideological difference among the 20 or so Democrats running for president. Mayor Pete Buttigieg is not one degree to the right of Kamala Harris or Elizabeth Warren.
That is why it is important to understand Clinton and Obama's tweets: to understand the left, not to understand her or him.
Here are the tweets:
Obama: "The attacks on tourists and Easter worshippers in Sri Lanka are an attack on humanity. On a day devoted to love, redemption, and renewal, we pray for the victims and stand with the people of Sri Lanka."
Three hours later, Clinton tweeted: "On this holy weekend for many faiths, we must stand united against hatred and violence. I'm praying for everyone affected by today's horrific attacks on Easter worshippers and travelers in Sri Lanka."
As they both spelled "worshipers" the same idiosyncratic way and used the term "Easter worshippers," it is likely they either had the same writers or Clinton copied Obama.
Here's what's critical: Neither used the word "Christians." And in order to avoid doing so, they went so far as to make up a new term -- "Easter worshippers" -- heretofore unknown to any Christian.
When Jews were murdered at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, Clinton mentioned the synagogue in a tweet. But in her post-Sri Lanka tweet, despite the bombing of three churches filled with Christians, Clinton made no mention of church or churches. In a tweet after the massacre of Muslims in New Zealand, she wrote that her heart broke for "the global Muslim community." But in her latest tweet, not a word about Christians or the global Christian community.
Obama similarly wrote in his tweet about New Zealand that he was grieving with "the Muslim community" over the "horrible massacre in the Mosques." But in his tweet about Sri Lanka, there is no mention of Christians or churches.
The reason neither of them mentioned Christians or churches is that the left has essentially forbidden mention of all the anti-Christian murders perpetrated by Muslims in Europe, the Middle East and Africa and of all the Muslim desecration of churches in Europe, Africa and anywhere else. This is part of the same phenomenon -- that I and others have documented -- of British police and politicians covering up six years of rape of 1,400 of English girls by Muslim "grooming gangs" in Rotherham and elsewhere in England.
Essentially, the left's rule is that nothing bad -- no matter how true -- may be said about Muslims or Islam and nothing good -- no matter how true -- may be said of Christians or Christianity.
Clinton's post-New Zealand tweet also included these words: "We must continue to fight the perpetuation and normalization of Islamophobia and racism in all its forms. White supremacist terrorists must be condemned by leaders everywhere. Their murderous hatred must be stopped."
She made sure to condemn "Islamophobia," but she wrote not a word about the far more destructive and widespread hatred of Christians in the Muslim world, seen in Muslims' virtual elimination of the Christian communities in the Middle East, the regular murder and kidnappings of Coptic Christians in Egypt and the murder of Christians in Nigeria. She calls on "leaders everywhere" to condemn "white supremacist terrorists," one of the smallest hate groups on Earth, but never calls on leaders everywhere to condemn Islamist terrorists, the largest hate group on Earth.
These two tweets tell you a lot about Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. But far more importantly, they tell you a lot about the left.
Dennis Prager hits the nail again.
But who told them to use that exact expression?
DNC writers.
Did they both come up with that odd term independently?
Essentially, the left’s rule is that nothing bad — no matter how true — may be said about Muslims or Islam and nothing good — no matter how true — may be said of Christians or Christianity.
********************************************
This is similar to press coverage of black on white (or Asian) assaults/murders... its frequently non-existent, superficial or written in a way that is silent on the races of perp and victim.
I’m just surprised they didn’t end with, “...and Orange Man Bad!”
But, unfortunately he hit the nail with his eye.
Probably why his perception is skewed so far he could only get things half right.
Okay, I'll bite. What part did he get wrong?
Abortion is called Choice as in one person with power decides to murder another person without power.
Only one of the two people involved had the choice whether to commit murder or not.
The Left laughed when they realized that they actually convinced people to call Abortion choice.
Because the same media consultant runs 5 politicians’ socialist networking media accounts?
You mean like a log?
.
Of course, they own the media too.
I suppose the President needed a new way to combat that.
At least it seems Our President has Generals that understand
the battle sphere and the multiple domains it contains.
Including all of us here.
The Battle Sphere has many domains.
All of US are in one.
The Human Social Communications Domain.
In here, you can hear from 4 Star Active Duty US Army
General Robert Brown, with a message for all of US about
that, and about just how YOU as your OWN Army of ONE
could be fighting for and defending Our Country and the World.
(From right where youre sitting.)
The Future of War and how it affects YOU
Multi-Domain Operations
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOTYgcdNrXE
Heres a link to just before General Brown starts talking:
https://youtu.be/qOTYgcdNrXE?t=647
Be sure to note Destins comments about our best weapons at the end.
(Surely the general had nothing to do with those, right? :)
https://youtu.be/qOTYgcdNrXE?t=1598
Political Grace:
The art of disagreeing well.
Intentional unity:
The ultimate countermeasure to those who would divide!
Heres another General. Same topic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1&v=V2MgTd3LgB0
Michael Flynn, talking about a
civilian army of digital soldiers...
Citizen journalists
So, boys and girls, chose your weapons well.
The battle front is easy to spot. You are the target.
But who told them to use that exact expression?
I have been an independent constitutionalist ever since the Republican Party decided to run Globalist H.W. Bush.
I have not once voted for a candidate as a person.
Not even Reagan, whom I voted for twice.
I have always voted for policies.
The people who cannot see the importance of that distinction, never matured in their thinking and without exception they are easily lead.
Yes - it is pretty bad when even the top-dogs of the party have to be provided their talking-points every day. I wonder if twitter and the call-in talk shows were also inundated with “thoughts for Easter worshippers” among the “page 204 of the Mueller report” talking points.
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