Gun-grabbers howled at the US Supreme Court in the DC vs. Heller and McDonald vs. City Of Chicago finding for protection via scrutiny under the 14th Amendment, just like social conservatives did for this latest 'Gay Marriage' ruling.
Gun-grabbers said then that the high court invented language to arrive at the findings, just like social conservatives did for this latest 'Gay Marriage' ruling.
Judge Nap nailed it today. We’ll just just keep redefining words to mean whatever the socialists want them to say.
Last time around when the government said it was not a tax and the challengers said it was not a tax, the chief justice ruled it was a tax and that saved it, he continued. This time around he took the plain meaning of ordinary words, established by the states, and somehow held that they were ambiguous, and that he could and that that the majority could correct the ambiguity according to what they thought the drafters meant.
God Bless Judge Nap.
You’re not wrong. Here is why we lost:
First, in 1965, due to Ted Kennedy’s immigration reform act, this country decided to fundamentally alter itself from a white, European republic to something else. Today, we are seeing the impact of that. Whites are now a minority of children under five. The people who established this country decided, in 1965, to give up their control over it, and to replace themselves with people who don’t have our generations-long cultural appreciation for the values on which our country was founded.
Second, in the 1980s when the Baby Boomers decided to put on suits, pick up cocaine habits, and make a bunch of money on Wall Street, we all assumed that the cultural upheaval and radicalism of the 1960s had been defeated. But the 60s radicals didn’t go away. They went into the universities, where they took control of the training of our kids’ teachers (see Bill Ayers). They went to Hollywood, where they took control of our popular culture. And people with our ideology said, “so what? I’m making money. These ex-hippie radicals are harmless.” We let them get away with it.
We’re finished. We’re never going to vote our way out of this. The question is, now what are we going to do about?