War On The Rising Poor

RAMANAM
In the Name of The Father, and of The Son and of The Holy Spirit, Amen.

He shames our liberalism with its light rejection of the hard-won truths of generations,
and its fond imagining that a new thing is therefore a true thing.
The Rev. Dr. George Arthur Buttrick

There never was a War on Poverty.  It was always and it remains a War on the Rising Poor.  Calling it a War on Poverty compares to calling 0 incompetent.  No he is not.  He is a top-drawer liar who intends, along with the rest of his enablers and minions, destruction of the, in their dirty intellects, evil America.  The War on the Rising Poor — called, as disinformation, the War on Poverty, a war counter-indicated by the facts when it commenced and still — was to prevent the poor from rising educationally, financially, culturally and, most importantly, in morale: feelings of self-confidence and self-satisfaction.

American Africans, American Spanish-speakers and American descendants of Polish, Italian, Welsh, Irish, Scots-Irish and Russian immigrants were rising in prominence by their ability to self-sustain and happiness doing so.

This terrified the Northern and Midwestern leadership cadres, those who fomented the Civil War Between the States — made or born Puritans or Tories — and whose instincts were profoundly oppressive for those not of their circle.  Jealous power attacks competition.

So they did what they could.  They offered to buy off the rising threats to their hegemony.  It worked for most American Africans.  Those took the bait that they were being abused as a class and could be restored by tax and borrowed dollars intensified by a legal carve-out for the color of their skin or their diction.  Many American Spanish-speakers also bit that bait.

Southern and Western leadership cadre — especially Southern — objected at first but for their own hegemonistic benefit, which differed in details from that of Northerners and Midwesterners yet also was hegemonistic.  So these, especially Southerners, could raise only morally weak objections to the War on Poverty War on the Rising Poor.  Eventually they saw the potential it held to sustain their position and voted “Yes” to the War on Poverty War on the Rising Poor.

They even hit upon the idea of forcing American Africans and American Spanish-speakers into neighborhoods and institutions created and populated by Americans of European, African, Asian, Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian descent.  This action generated real confusion and chaos for most Americans, but not for regional and national leadership cadres, who could shield themselves physically, financially and politically from disquiet.  Or thought they could.

Now the dupe is playing again but now on a larger field of battle: the mother of all health care laws Wars on the Poor, who now are not even rising.  They were already supine and are being pushed now further into the muck of self-pity and reality-denial: that tax and borrowed dollars will sustain them.  And the War on the Poor has expanded to include War on Affluent Americans.  Neither the poor today nor the affluent, ground to pieces by taxation and inflation, threaten the leadership cadres.  Yet, they are targets for farther fleecing by those cadres … embalmed by drugs, pacified by disinformation — that their fleecing benefits said poor and affluent — and seduced by lies.

Attachment-1

Madness.  It will pass.

The moral of the story of Cain and Abel is not that people “should look out for each other,”
but rather, that they should not commit murder.
John Hinderaker

Update 1: The Middle Class Abandons California

Update 2: How about a RICO suit at Tom Steyer?

Update 3: Ignore The Dire Warnings About Our Lives Because It’s Just Hysteria

AMDG – VICTORY

Seeds Or Pits?
Seeds Or Pits?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *