Tuesday, July 27, 2004

More Clinton Than I Can Stand



Big Bubba is whining about the GOP again:

"They [Republicans] need a divided America, but we don't," Clinton said.

Republicans find certain distinct mental categories to be intellectually and morally useful. Such as the distinction between citizens and criminals, the distinction between patriots and traitors, and the distinction between human beings and socialists.

"We Democrats want to build a world and an America of shared responsibilities and shared opportunities"

Which brings us to the distinction between the producers and the parasites.

The Democrats at least since FDR have taken the funds from productive citizens and used them to create an ecological niche for the parasites who support them. They are in practice, taking money and destroying opportunity in the real economy, and using it to construct an economic and political fantasyland for the parasites who vote for them.

In the immortal words of Ayn Rand, "they need us, we do not need them."

"On the other hand, Republicans in Washington believe that America should be run by the right people, their people."

It's because the right people insist on being right.

Get it?

Being right, which is knowing the truth about a person or a situation and acting on the basis of that knowledge, is a morally necessary part of being alive.

By insisting on being wrong, the Democrats (and socialists in general) must force others to pay the economic and moral price of their various fantasies. Like other socialists, the Democrats must become a despotic ruling class that disarms, subjugates, plunders, and through direct or indirect means inflicts death upon the productive inhabitants of their domain.

This may explain why the Democrats, and liberals in general, virtually worship socialist dictators and object strenuously when one is taken down.

Why we continue to permit these walking hazards to Life and Liberty to actually stand for and hold public office, let alone allow them to continue to waste oxygen, is simply beyond my comprehension.

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