Posted on 10/03/2006 1:40:35 AM PDT by Jim Robinson
On the surface it seems that way but if you have read the Trilogy and really think about the War between Mordor and Gondor the alliances they each form it is easy to see historical allegories for the USSR and USA in the past or for that matter Islam and the West today.
Then to put it more simply just drawing the simple sharp line between Good and Evil today is political.
I have changedd my mind. This guy said he was a liberal and never posted in any other thread.
One of the few things he said that is right on to me. Does this mean in contrast that the liberals are very interested in texts that are unhinged and unsacred. Boy, it show seems.
So then I thought, what are some of the more friendly towns I've been in? And they were like rural Montana, rural Arizona, these really small places that are really conservative places. OK, where have people been the biggest jerks to me? Seattle, San Francisco, Portland, Los Angeles, safely blue state kind of regions. So it was a little dissonant.
I think this speaks for itself. This is probably dissonant to those that demonize conservatives and Republicans, especially 'all those Bush supporters' that talk continually about murder of the man who protects them hourly as commander in chief. To us conservatives this is a NO BRAINER.
But it's a really powerful thing to just shut up and listen to somebody who has ideas that are different than your own.
We conservatives/Republicans have been listening to these liberals shooting their mouths off for years--mostly unchallenged. Welcome John Moe to us and a slice of our lives--intelligent and powerful people that you and yours relegate to stupid, backward ass, simpleton cardboard cut outs. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Ping!
show=sure
The writer for Braveheart, Randall Wallace, is an amazing writer and man. He wrote the hymn at the end of We were soldiers which he both wrote and executive produced. The song is at the end of the film I believe and is gorgeous and just a tear jerker to listen to. I cry every time.
He is a wonderful talent as a writer and a generous man. He graduated from Duke University with a major in religion.
Concerning my own transformation from lib to conservative (a process of many decades), I regard it as somewhat going from darkness into light ala St. Paul. Naturally libs firmly believe they have everything figured out. The truth is they know very little about what makes America tick.
Wonderful analogy. It is so true, as are your words that follow it.
He also just didn't campaign in 1992. I've never understood that. It was as if he was throwing the election. He went through the motions, but his heart was clearly not in it.
I've always wondered if Clinton or one of his henchmen had some dirt on him.
I would say Braveheart is about the best conservative movie.
It was very well done - pity it was also completely historically innacurate and biased.
for starters, an admitted life long Democrat...
an Okie
a vigorous supporter of our troops
a friend and business partner of Barry Switzer..
Oh... and a "mooreon" ;).... only those with severe local knowledge will "get" that one....
Nevertheless at the time I had a lot of conservative beliefs. In fact a majority of my stances were conservative. For instance I believed in a strong military, was anti-abortion, anti-affirmative action, and anti-radical feminism. But I believed in government and it's ability to solve the nation's problems. I can see Reagan's wisdom now, but at the time decades of leftist influence had left me with no confidence in the idea that most peoples problems are personally created and had little to do with government "solutions".
So to me if you can explain and convince a person that his life's destiny is in his hands and not the government's, you have created a conservative. Not that he or she has to agree with every particular issue or idea, but that they realize that government can never make a person happy. They have to do it themselves.
His thousand points of light turned a lot of people off
I wuzz just keeding. I listen to a lot of music (it's my thing). And my taste hasn't changed much since moving from left, to center, to right. Folk, pop, rock, jazz. And I play Dolly, and Jessie Colter, Bobbie Gentry, Don Williams, etc. But I get more than a litle sick, when I hear the Dixie Chicks ;-)
Good article & post. Interesting to look back at old threads. Thanks to all linkers.
Nope, Mel's treatment of the American Revolution showed what
conservatism and freedom means much better, I think.
According to the lefties, maybe he HAS the ring!
Don't ever believe that, even for a second.....
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