Our Radical Military
December 31, 2013
ALEX writes:
This will not be well received but it needs to be said. As a manifestation of the fundamental transformation of America in general that is being completed before our eyes, the feminization of the U.S. military is of course sad. However, patriotic Americans who are honest with themselves must admit the tragic reality: their beloved United States and its military are now fully and unreservedly the greatest force for evil in the world, wreaking havoc everywhere that there is a chance to overthrow a moderate regime and install a democratically elected Islamist government, which will promptly align itself with the most radical Muslim scum, exterminate the country’s Christians and ship hordes of “refugees” to the West.In Europe, the U.S., backed by its troops stationed there, is hammering the new God-less, homosexualized society down the throats of Eastern Europeans. In Ukraine right now, it is trying to advance its troops to Russia’s very doorstep while sacrificing the Ukrainian people’s hopes for any economic revival, which will be impossible under EU control.
Admit it, honest Americans – your country has been the world’s greatest anti-Christian, anti-God, evil, destructive force for a long time now.
A weakened U.S. military, less able to wreak havoc around the globe, makes the world safer. As to America’s security, America is under no threat of invasion.
— Comments —
Henry McCulloch writes:
Alex describes the United States as the “world’s greatest anti-Christian, anti-God, evil, destructive force.” I fully agree that the U.S. armed forces are being misused to carry out missions that have results hostile to Western civilization and Christianity, and are harmful to America itself as well. I strongly suspect that results from one of two things: post-modern internationalism (think both Bushes and Clinton) or, a more new phenomenon in the White House, active anti-Americanism and anti-Westernism (think Barack Hussein Obama). I agree with Alex that U.S. support of al-Qaeda surrogates is evil and that any support of Soros-funded social undermining of Eastern Europe’s more traditional societies that managed somehow to survive decades of Communism is deeply evil. To the extent the U.S. armed forces are unable to help advance that agenda, their weakness may be a benefit — for now — to those who would see Christendom and the traditional America in some form survive.
But America does need defending against a demographic invasion, primarily from Latin America and Asia, that is unprecedented in size and speed. That is what the U.S. armed forces should be preventing, and services twisted into social encounter groups for women, homosexuals and alien mercenaries will fail to do that should the United States ever again have a government patriotic enough actually to defend America for a change.
That said, though, I cannot agree with Alex that America is the world’s greatest anti-Christian, anti-God, evil destructive force. Looking at history over the longer term, and at what is happening today, I think that palm goes to Islam. After Islam, I would name international Communism, whose intellectual subset Cultural Marxism — not an American phenomenon in its origins — has become the ruling paradigm for all Western governments and major social institutions, especially schools and universities. America is as much a victim of Cultural Marxism as it is a propagator of it. And without that new orientation in elite American thinking, if one may call it that, U.S. governments would not be supporting Islam in any form.
Diana writes:
Alex has guts. He has freed me to say the following:
1. As someone who grew up during the awful days of Vietnam, when soldiers were despised, I welcomed the change of heart towards our troops, which began as a genuine grass roots movement about 20 or so years ago. “Support our troops” was once an innocent and praiseworthy phrase that meant exactly what it said. No longer. “Support our troops” now means “Support our empire.” Include me out!
Moreover, “Support our troops” has morphed into a detestable, all purpose corporate diversity monster product, shoved down our throats at every opportunity. Lord, I can turn off the commercials featuring weeping moms and squealing babies greeting the homecoming soldier, but when they haul out the troops at every sporting event, which I still occasionally watch on television, and sometimes attend in person, I wonder if I’m living in the US, or the late Roman Empire.
2. Now comes the really difficult revelation. I’ve never truly believed in “Much madness is divinest sense.” But some madness is. A few years back, I saw the crazy and crazed Margie Phelps interviewed on television. I want to make this as clear as I can: the Westboro Baptist Church is an evil organization masquerading as a church. Fred Phelps is delusional and mentally ill. So is his daughter, although apparently she actually leads a normal life when she isn’t hectoring bereaved people. But….and this kills me to say it….she said something that never left me, on that interview. From memory, and I’m trying to quote as exactly as I can, she said (or rather, frothed, with rabid intensity): “Make no mistake about it, when you put on that [army] uniform, you are fighting for homosexuality, and homosexual marriage!!” I can’t put enough exclamation points to convey her tone. Two will have to do.
Madness? Oh, yes.
Divinest sense? Again: it kills me to say this, but she was right. The uniform of the US military is now the destroyer of tradition, decency and morality, wherever it goes, and it goes everywhere. Perhaps many of the traditions in backward countries are bad ones (such as female genital mutilation) but the people in those places won’t come to enlightenment after Miley Cyrus hits town, they’ll just be destroyed. Replacing native brew with Coke and Pepsi is no way to go.
3. Finally, Alex says: ” As to America’s security, America is under no threat of invasion.”
Military invasion, no. We’re doing a great job of invading ourselves. I know that Alex knows that, just can’t resist pointing it out. While we are busy destroying our military (and our economy along with it), we are being invaded daily by cheap labor, invited in by our corporate diversicrat overlords. What a deal!
Daniel writes:
Your correspondent Diana mentions the Westboro Baptist Church.
It is my proposition that the ‘Westboro Baptist Church’ is completely phony. Sort of a traveling side show, like the costume Nazis you will occasionally see in the news. Some other sites pointed out that other members of the Phelps family posted pro Obama and Democrat messages on their twitter accounts. I am amazed that no one has done a full investigation of the WBC. Reporters have tended to take them at their word, but its because it is what they want to believe ‘fundies’ are actually like.
The WBC hasn’t been a functioning church in over 20 years. Their entire message is meant to get a negative reaction, which is why they will protest against anything that will make them look as bad as possible….they once protested the funerals of coal miners who died in some mine accident, for example.
If the WBC were actually sincere – that is, hyper-Calvinist and strong on the gay issue, they would get huge numbers of members and probably a large donation base. But they dont do that – their church has no website ‘Godhatesfags.com’ is the main site.
I could go into more detail on it, but I believe that the WBC may be paid by either the FBI or SPLC. They want to make protestant Christians look as bad as possible, possibly to actually help gay rights, that is, getting protestants to say things like ‘we are against homos, but we’re not like those WBC guys’. It wouldnt surprise me if the Phelps family were all atheists.
Diana responds:
The Westboro Baptist Church may be a fake church, but I don’t agree with Daniel that Fred Phelps’ family are phonies. Margie Phelps argued the family’s case in front of the Supreme Court. I suppose Daniel can say that is all part of a plot to discredit fundamentalist Christianity, but I disagree.
“Some other sites pointed out that other members of the Phelps family posted pro Obama and Democrat messages on their twitter accounts.”
Correct. It is a large family, and large families have true diversity (not the phony kind) in their ranks. My understanding is that the publicized activities of the Westboro Baptist Church are entirely carried out by his nuclear family, not extended.
It isn’t surprising that the extended Phelps family is liberal, as Fred Phelps himself is or was a racial liberal. He started out as a civil rights attorney. Rather than link to them, you can look into the links yourselves using “Fred Phelps” and “civil rights attorney” on Google. You’ll find a lot of nasty websites.
Individuals and religious traditions have all sorts of DNA, which comes out in unexpected fashions. Thus the racial liberalism of certain strands of fundamentalist Christianity can co-exist with a strident exhibitionism, which the Westboro Baptist Church perfectly embodies.
In fact, the two are very similar. Maybe they are the same.
Daniel writes:
Diana writes:
“Correct. It is a large family, and large families have true diversity (not the phony kind) in their ranks. My understanding is that the publicized activities of the Westboro Baptist Church are entirely carried out by his nuclear family, not extended. “
The Twitter account used for the pro-Obama, pro-liberal democrat messages was that of Shirley Phelps-Roper, the number two of the clan (who also has an illegitimate child, by the way).
I am not a Protestant, so I don’t know about ‘Is this Going to Destroy Evangelical Protestantism’ conspiracy theories per se, but the costume Nazis have been credibly stated to be controlled by the FBI, why not phony churches? All of it is designed to illicit as negative a reaction as possible – how is working in coal mines serving homosexuality? They also were protesting the funerals of some children who were killed in a school shooting – again, what is the point? There is no nuance, no larger point the WBC is trying to make. Just ‘God hates Fags.’ It is like a parody of Calvinism that atheists like to make. Christianity with absolutely no charity.
Hence why I suspect the whole thing is a con, a set up, or a put on (perhaps all three?).
Laura writes:
Your theory is interesting and plausible.