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September 24, 2007

Evil's just not my thing.

At the high school I attend in Danbury, CT, chapel is a mandatory half-hour period on Mondays.  Yet, these chapel services are often filled with political implications; last year, I challenged the reverend to a debate in the school newspaper over his discussion of the Iraq War and Global Warming during chapel.  This year, during the 9/11 remembrance ceremony, the reverend suggested that it is time to forgive, and once again I challenged him to a debate in the newspaper.

This is just one example of how pervasive the concept of moral relativism is.  My article suggests that we should not forgive, but instead we should hate, or rather, we can hate and we need not feel guilty about it.  After all, is anything less than hate anything more than indifference?  Is evil just not your thing? Or can you not define the slaughter of thousands of innocent men, women, and children as evil?

And if we do forgive, how will terrorists respond to us?

"Perhaps, 'Why, how kind of you! But we couldn’t really care less. See, our concrete political goal is the destruction of liberty and Western society, and we are willing to sacrifice our physical existence on Earth for our goal. Thus, we have nothing to be sorry for.' They might even get a kick out of it: 'So what you’re saying is that if we harm you, you won’t hate us; you won’t retaliate, but instead forgive us? Well thanks so much for the open invitation to kill without consequences!'"

So instead of following a pointless journey (during which we have to give up our values and morals) to somehow rationalize forgiveness, why don't we secure the fate of our nation and the stability and morality of the world.

I end with, "Forgiving evil men following evil dogmas will not bring peace, morality, or liberty. Instead, it excuses immorality. Rather than pursuing a pointless and impossible moral journey to somehow rationalize forgiveness, we should be condemning the actions of these men as purely evil and fighting as well as we know how to destroy this evil. No, this does not mean invade every country that we find evil. But evil exists; evil is embodied in the actions of evil men, and whether we can recognize evil for what it is and fight to uphold morality will be our greatest ethical dilemma as we are confronted by radical Islam."

When the issue comes online, I will post a link so that you can read the reverend's rebuttal.

March 28, 2007

Compromise on a Timetable for withdrawal

Democrats want to start withdrawing troops from Iraq starting in four months. Republicans don't want a timetable at all. Sitting here in my pajamas, I offer a compromise.

Democrats (and Leftists) are always using a comparison to World War II; as in "The war in Iraq has lasted longer than US involvement in World War II". And I think part of their problem is that they use historical heuristics rather than historical accuracy when they devise policy statements. So before I can make my proposal, we have to set the historical record straight.

As Ari Berman, writing for The Nation correctly points out

Germany declared war on the US on December, 11, 1941, four days after Pearl Harbor. The US announced victory in Europe on May 8, 1945. That's one thousand, two hundred and forty-four days.

But that was only the end of Major Combat Operations in Europe (not World War II) and the correct comparison in Iraq would be how long it took us to capture Baghdad. Major Combat Operations in Iraq began on  March 20th, 2003 and ended on  April 9th, 2003. Bush announced the end of Major Combat Operations on May 1st. So to be generous, we'll use that date. That would be 42 days.

So in Iraq, the Evil Rumsfeld took 42 days what it took the noble Henry Lewis Stimson 1244 days during WWII. (And that was just to end the war in Europe).

Now, the occupation of Germany lasted another ten years. The "Agreement on Control Machinery in Germany" was signed by Russia, France, Britain and the US on 14 November 1944. This began the official Allied Occupation of Germany. The Federal Republic of Germany (aka West Germany up until 1990) came into existence in May 1949 four years after the occupation began. That would be the equivalent in Iraq today of when the permanent Iraqi Government was elected in October of 2005.

So the evil George Bush did in 2 years what the hero FDR took 4 years to do.

But we still aren't done.

West Germany, or the FRG was declared "fully sovereign" on 5 May 1955; for Democrats and Leftists that's ten years after Major Combat Operations ended.

And in case you think the occupation to sovereignty was a cake walk, consider

In the months and years following the end of the World War Two, Allied forces faced a series of bombings and attacks in occupied  Germany.

Nazi loyalists attempted to derail the rebuilding process by killing any Germans collaborating with the enemy. And the mysterious SS-Werewolves underground organization boasted of the coming  rebirth  of the Party.

But we're not done yet.

US Military is still, today in Germany under agreements with the German government. The US is only now, 62 years after winning the war in Europe and occupying Germany, leaving Germany. And not completely.

So given the history of World War II, which Democrats and Leftists think is an appropriate analogy, I say that as a compromise between the two sides ('cause, you know, I'm a uniter not a divider), I say we settle on a time line that says the US should begin its pullout from Iraq in 2013; with an option to stay if the government of Iraq wants us to stay.

Sound fair? Democrats (and Leftists) get their time table, and Republicans get to finish the job of stabilizing the government of Iraq.

I like it.

Oh wait: Leftists don't want a time table. They want us to lose immediately.

Well, you know what they say: you can't please everyone.

March 21, 2007

When arguments fail, try pork

Being anti-war, for many Democrats is fine, so long as it remains rhetoric. Once it turns to actual legislation, the political divide becomes apparent.

One of the Democrats' chief designated vote counters, Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), is actively working against the Iraq war spending bill. The leadership's senior chief deputy whip, Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), spoke passionately against it on the House floor. And one of the whip organization's regional representatives, Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Calif.), is implacably opposed.

The disarray in the House whipping operation ahead of tomorrow's expected vote on the bill is putting a harsh spotlight on House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn (D-S.C.), who has the task of rounding up the 218 votes needed to pass the $124 billion measure, but who has not even kept his organization in line.

"There's only one test, and that will be whether we get 218 on the board on Thursday," said House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel (D-Ill.), who predicted that Clyburn will come through with the votes...

To be sure, House Democratic leaders appear to be making progress toward securing the votes to pass a $124 billion emergency war spending bill that would establish strict readiness standards for deploying combat forces and set a firm deadline of Aug. 31, 2008, to bring U.S. troops home from Iraq. Clyburn and other House Democratic leaders locked down two critical Democratic converts -- one liberal, one conservative -- yesterday.

At a closed-door gathering of the House Democratic Caucus, Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), a close ally of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and an early opponent of the bill, announced that she had changed her position and will support it when it comes to a vote.

But it's not the arguments that are winning converts so much as the pork

House Democratic leaders are offering billions in federal funds for lawmakers' pet projects large and small to secure enough votes this week to pass an Iraq funding bill that would end the war next year.

So far, the projects -- which range from the reconstruction of New Orleans levees to the building of peanut storehouses in Georgia -- have had little impact on the tally. For a funding bill that establishes tough new readiness standards for deploying combat forces and sets an Aug. 31, 2008, deadline to bring the troops home, votes do not come cheap.

But at least a few Republicans and conservative Democrats who otherwise would vote "no" remain undecided, as they ponder whether they can leave on the table millions of dollars for constituents by opposing the $124 billion war funding bill due for a vote on Thursday.

"She hates the games the Democrats are playing," said Guy Short, chief of staff to Rep. Marilyn Musgrave (R-Colo.), a staunch conservative who remains undecided, thanks to billions of dollars in the bill for drought relief and agriculture assistance. "But Representative Musgrave was just down in southeastern Colorado, talking to ranchers and farmers, and they desperately need this assistance."

Of course, it was the Democrats who said they were going to Washington to clean House and get pork out of politics.

And it was the Democrats who claimed they had an anti-war mandate from the people.

Clearly if you have to compromise your "principles" in order to win support for your supposed "mandate" then maybe both your principles and your mandate are just an illusion: a comforting bedtime story that keeps you from being awake all night with the thought of what the Middle East will look like engulfed in a region-wide civil war between secular dictator-states and 14th Century Islamists.

Because here's how things will play out if we leave:

Iran and Syria will support the Shi'a Islamists and Saudi Arabia and Egypt will support the Sunni Islamists to prevent Sunni's from getting slaughtered. And everyone else who desperately wants to keep their dog out of that fight will either get caught in the middle or have to choose an extremist side.

And you think we're generating more terrorists while being in Iraq? Just see what happens when we leave. Because there is no way to go but down, towards extremism.

As long as we remain, and as long as Iraq succeeds, there is a path away from extremism.

But worse than pork, and worse than the legislation is the moral spinelessness of Democrats.

Because if you believe that we are fighting an immoral war, or you believe we are losing, then your position should be to get the troops out now.

Your position should be, remove the authorization for war. Now.

What does it mean that you believe the war is wrong, but the troops should stay for another year? What kind of message does that send our troops in battle with the Islamists who think Democracy is apostasy?

And what message does it send our enemies?

Bribing lawmakers for votes on war and peace is only slightly more immoral than accepting the bribe.

And I despise you both: The bribers and the takers of bribes.

March 06, 2007

Walter Reed

So Congress is going to hold hearings on sub-standard health care at the outpatient clinic at Walter Reed. Democrats and Republicans alike are outraged. And so am I.

Democrats are doing what they can to paint every Republican, and especially the President in a poor light based on this scandal. I really don't care. The facts are this has been going on for a very long time: While Republicans were in control of Congress and while a Democrat was President. Soldiers get injured in peace-time as well as war time and the level of care that should be granted them should be the same in either case: Most Excellent.

There is little dispute that the Hospital itself offers first rate care. But the outpatient facilities, which is the focus of this investigation, should be first rate as well.

This is clearly not the case now. Reports of sub-standard housing: bugs, black mold, buildings that are falling apart. ''It wasn't fit for anybody to live in a room like that. ... You've just come out of recovery, you have weaker immune systems. The black mold can do damage to people," [Spec. Jeremy] Duncan said.

And it's not just the facility. According to this NPR report, Chris Ryan father of severely wounded Marine Eddie Ryan, the staff was uncaring to put it kindly. This is unacceptable.

All of us who served understand that the bureaucracy of the military is the least effective aspect of the armed services. We accept that and know that if it wasn't for the leaders, the officer corps and most especially, the NCOs, our military couldn't win a single battle. But the level of bureaucratic bullshit that allowed this to go on goes beyond what we grudingly accept.

What's worse is it's not like we don't know how to do it right. The Center for the Intrepid just opened to patients at Brooke Army Medical Center. It's a $50 million, state-of-the-art rehabilitation center. But tellingly

It was all made possible by some 600,000 Americans who donated to the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund for the center, which is staffed by the Defense and Veterans Affairs departments.

OK. So now we know the problem. And we know the solution. We will say past Congress's didn't know. But now we do know.

OK. So we'll allow Democrats their political pot shots and we will allow some hearings to they can bloviate and revel in their political windfall.

But at the end of the day, a day that had better come damn soon, they had better do something. They had better find every sub-standard VA hospital in the country and allocate funds to fix it.

Now. Right away.

And not one more American serviceman or woman had better be subjected to anything but the very best. I don't care if you have to move everyone out of the outpatient center and put them in the Hilton while you tear down the old building and put up a new one. Fire every nurse and therapist that was uncaring to the heros in whose presence they should have been honored to be. Get people who care.

But they had better do something now.

And if they do nothing, or wait too long, trying to get people to believe that the Executive branch can do the job without the funds provided by Congress in order to improve their political prospects in 2008, I swear by everything I hold sacred I will do everything in my power to destroy the political career of everyone involved.

So take your pot shots. Be pissed and indignant for the cameras.

But you had better do something about this very, very soon.

November 26, 2006

Thanksgiving

Everyday I'm thankful to live in a country where me, my family and most everyone I know can walk the streets and learn, play, and express themselves in relative safety.

And I'm thankful for the men and women who serve in our military, police, and government who work to make it happen.

And because of the above, I am thanful to have had this gathering of the three generations: all my children and grandchildren

 

My grandson Anthony is thankful too

July 07, 2005

Imagine all the people...

...speaking with one voice against Jihadists.

One aspect of war that is critical for success is morale. The side that loses it can lose the war even if they are technically superior to the enemy.

So imagine if everyone not only in the US, but also the powerful Democracies throughout the world spoke with one voice that we will not give up our freedoms to Jihadists; that terrorist acts were unacceptable, and that we will never give up the fight until we win.

If such a thing happened, the murdering Jihadists would find it very difficult to maintain the morale that keeps them a force.

If there was no indication anywhere that we would eventually give up and go away, they would lose hope.

If there were not people like British MP George Galloway, Saddam collaborator and terrorist apologist, who at every opportunity gives the enemy hope that at some point the political will to win will evaporate, today's attack might never have happened. Today, after the horrendous attacks in London he again gave comfort to the enemy

He told the Commons it was the US-led coalition's actions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo which had inflamed hatred of the West in the Muslim world.

Is it true that in Mr Galloway's World, the response to the attacks on New York and Washington should have been ignored and that the Taliban and al Qaeda fascists should have been left alone to continue to train and plan and kill in addition to enslaving the people of Afghanistan? That by doing this they would have left Britain alone? That all they wanted was to destroy America and once that goal was accomplished, the murderous thugs would have gone quiescently back to sleep and left the rest of the world be. Had Mr Galloway been Prime Minister would he have told his ally and friend the United States to "Fuck off. Better you than me"? Is that what he truly believes?

Or is he in the employ of the enemy as he was in the employ of Saddam?

If one of the aims of terrorism is to divide the will of the people so that they become "combat ineffective" then George Galloway is quite obviously susceptible to the tactic.

Mr Galloway urged the government to remove people in the UK from "harm's way" by ending the occupation of Iraq and focusing on finding a real solution to conflicts in the Middle East.

Maybe he's Spanish?

"People have to remember that 11 September was in 2001 before the military action," [Foreign Secretary Jack Straw] said.

Well, there's that.

He's not alone. Here in the US we have Sen Kennedy, son of a Nazi appeaser during WWII and we have House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi among others.

People who make it impossible to speak with a single, unified and determined voice that clearly articulates

"No! You may not pass!"

So if we win; if our values survive, it will be inspite of people like these.

But that's Democracy too....

June 27, 2005

The Next Campaign

It seems clear that with the Kelo decision, action must be taken to preserve private property rights from crooked politicians and State governments.  The new definition of eminent domain, as recently established by the Left side of the Supreme Court means that anyone, rich or poor, can be kicked out of their home so the property may be acquired by WalMart.

"Now that they've got carte blanche to do whatever they want, they will," said Dick Saha, 75, who in May won a six-year fight to keep Coatesville, Pa., from seizing his farm.

"We have four horses. My two daughters have some land we gave them and the grandkids come down and ride the horses," Saha said. The town, he said, "decided they needed our property for a golf course."

Eminent Domain used to mean that government could only acquire private land for a public works project like a road or a dam. Now "public works" has been redefined to include shopping malls and golf courses.

Eminent Domain used to mean that your home could be acquired only by the "public"; now it means your land could be confiscated to be given to someone else.

And not even a "poor" someone else; no a filthy rich someone else. A land developer or a corporation.

wealthy investors and city leaders had been given the power to run people from their homes to make way for new development. The line between public and private property has been blurred, [Justice Sandra Day] O'Connor said in her dissent, and no home is safe.

The Government in the US is supposed to exist to protect private property not take it away and give it to high tax-paying enterprises owned by wealthy developers at the expense of some old person paying lower taxes on less "valuable" property.

Since it is clear that the Supreme Court can not be trusted with correctly interpreting the Fifth Amendment, the next political campaign should be about Amending the Constitution to precisely say that Government can not abrogate the private property rights of citizens by taking their property and giving it to other citizens in a for-profit venture.

Is that too much to ask?

Failing that, or perhaps in addition to that, each State should amend their Constitutions with similar words. As of now, only two State's Constitutions have such words. However, since the Supreme Court has essentially interpreted the US Constitution this way, those State's Constitutions are in legal limbo with regards to this matter.

This is what happens when you lose respect for private property rights; rights which have been under assault by the Left for decades.

It's time we defend something that is quintessentially American: Private property.

And the time is now.

"Any property may now be taken for the benefit of another private property, but the fallout from this decision will not be random. The beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process, including large corporations and development firms." - Chief Justice  William Rehnquist

Is that how you want it? Is that what you think is right?

Is it?

Update: Eugene Volokh points out that Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) has introduced legislation that is intended to clarify the 5th Amendment for the Supreme Court. And everyone else.

But we need to go further....

June 24, 2005

We're Surrounded!

Both the Left and the Right have raised my ire today. First:

Mark this day because it is not too often that you will ever find me agreeing with Democrat Representative John Conyers, but today is one of those days. In response to House Republicans passing an Amendment that makes the burning of the US flag illegal under the Constitution he said

"This amendment elevates a symbol of freedom over freedom itself."

Which is precisely the case. Making flag desecration a crime punishable by prosecution would be as bad as Muslim killing people for Quran desecration. Just as the Quran is not the religion, the flag is not America.

When I took my oath upon joining the US Air Force, I vowed to defend the Constitution, not the flag. And part of that Constitution is the guarantee the expression of political speech. And if some moron wants to burn the flag to express political speech, that person should not suffer prosecution. Scorn and derision maybe, but not prosecution.

Happily, the House does not get to change the Constitution. Congress doesn't even get to change the Constitution. We are the only ones who get to change the Constitution and it will not be changed in this fashion.

But is annoying that there was even an attempt by the party that is claims to stand for free speech and Federalism.

And speaking of the Constitution, Justice Kennedy sided with the Liberal side of the Supreme Court today in allowing the state to take away private property rights from people.

Cities may bulldoze people's homes to make way for shopping malls or other private development...

The four-member liberal bloc typically has favored greater deference to cities, which historically have used the takings power for urban renewal projects.

Great. So people work to buy a home and property and because the State decides it needs a new shopping mall, they can condemn your home and bulldoze it into the ground.

"The specter of condemnation hangs over all property," O'Connor wrote. "Nothing is to prevent the state from replacing any Motel 6 with a Ritz-Carlton, any home with a shopping mall, or any farm with a factory."

For all of you Liberals out there just remember, this is what you're voting for. More, bigger, hungrier and badder government. And it's not like this was given to a "public" works project, in essence these individuals lost their homes to other individuals.

The more Left you go on the spectrum, the fewer property rights you are voting for until finally, you get none.

And finally, while this story is about a Republican, greed has no political party. Representative Duke Cunningham is admitting he used "poor judgment" when he sold his home for almost twice what it was worth to a defense contractor who subsequently got more government contracts.

"At the time of the sale, I failed to adequately consider how this transaction might be perceived by others who don't know me," wrote Cunningham, a member of the appropriations subcommittee that controls defense contracting dollars. "I would never put the interests of a friend or a contractor above the interests of my country. I trust that the facts will bear out this truth over time."

Yeah, well, not good enough, just like Senator Durbin's "apology" was not good enough. Especially when Rep Cunningham then went to live on a boat that very same contractor owned, rent free.

"I ask only that my constituents reserve judgment until any investigation is concluded and I have had the opportunity to defend myself against these false allegations," wrote Cunningham, a much-decorated former Navy fighter pilot in Vietnam who was first elected to Congress in 1990.

Look, I don't care whether or not all of this was legal, it simply isn't right. And if Rep Cunningham can't see that it's wrong, then he doesn't deserve to represent anyone in Congress.

He should resign and do it regardless of the outcome of any investigation or criminal prosecution.

And failing that, voters should fail to re-elect him.

 

March 29, 2005

Theresa

People write to me and think I should comment on the hullabaloo surrounding Terri Schiavo.

To tell you the truth, I am so pissed off about the whole thing I was afraid I wouldn't be able to keep a civil tongue about it.

And I very well may not.

So if you are a parent or a guardian, you had best read this through first and make decisions appropriate to your duties.

And that's what this Terri Schiavo thing is about, isn't it? There is no doubt in my mind that people have been granted the right to refuse medical treatment if they so choose. There is no doubt that if the individual is so incapacitated that they can not choose, their legal guardian in many cases have been granted the ability to assume that right for the incapacitated individual.

Now I know there have been questions regarding the integrity of the decisions made by her husband Michael. OK. Fine. So Congress granted the parents a review of the case by the Federal court system who determined that everything is in order i.e. Terri is in a permanent vegetative state and the husband has the standing to make the decision regarding her treatment.

So that's settled.

But I swear to god that every time I hear a Democrat say that by calling for that review, Tom Delay is a hypocrite because of his pending ethics review, I say: shut the fuck up: it's not about Tom Delay.

And every time I hear a Republican say that Terri is experiencing her "Palm Sunday" and will not be forsaken as a result, I say: shut the fuck up it's not about religion its about the law.

And every time I hear someone say that the Federal court review is a violation of Federalism, I say: shut the fuck up: it is not anti-Federalist to have a disinterested set of eyes to assure murder is not being committed. And since many of the people saying this are anti-Federalists to begin with, I say what the hell do you care about Federalism?

And every time I hear someone say this is a right to life issue, I say shut the fuck up. What are you talking about? Are you saying that as medical science advances and we at some point get to the point where we can make enough machines to virtually keep anyone alive forever that's what we should do? That is so absurd I say again, shut the fuck up.

And every time I hear someone say that this reflects the death of America I say: shut the fuck up. The rule of law still applies. The Federal review of the cases did not change any standing law and in fact followed the law. No laws have been changed to suit this case against the wishes of the people to whom our Federal leadership is responsible. Some may wish the law to change, but they are in the minority and will not prevail. And if they become the majority and do change the law, well that's Democracy too.

And every time I hear someone vilify Michael Schiavo as a heartless criminal guilty of murder I say: just please, for heaven's sake, shut the fuck up. You don't know Michael and neither do I. Maybe he's a slimeball and maybe he's a saint. But either way it matters not one bit to what is going on. Umpteen courts have reviewed the situation and that is all we have to go on so give it a fucking rest already and mind your own fucking business.

All of you trying to make political hay out of Terri's situation: fuck you and the horse you rode in on.

All of you wearing your religion on your sleeve: fuck you and the horse you rode in on.

And all of you reporters who think you are doing some solemn duty by showing Terri's face 24/7, you're surely not; so fuck you and the horse you rode in on.

Terri Schiavo is a person not an icon. She had a life, not an agenda. She was what she was, not what you want her to represent.

So all of you, let her die in peace and shut the fuck up about it.

Guess I wasn't able to keep a civil tongue.

You were warned.

November 03, 2004

Don't forget

The President, when making his acceptance speech was, as he often is, gracious.

Senator Kerry waged a spirited campaign, and he and his supporters can be proud of their efforts. Laura and I wish Senator Kerry and Teresa and their whole family all our best wishes.

But I don't have to be.

I know that many of my blogger compatriots are quite willing to call Kerry's concession speech gracious as well and leave it at that.

But I don't want to do that.

I want to recall at this time that while Kerry said

I spoke to President Bush and I offered him and Laura our congratulations on their victory.

We had a good conversation, and we talked about the danger of division in our country and the need -- the desperate need for unity, for finding the common ground, coming together.

I note that it was this same individual that called the President and his crew liars. That he claimed the President misled the country into war when this very same Senator was complicitous in the exact action he condemned; then refused to vote for the war materials my own son needed to have in a war zone; a place where the Senator sent him and where my son was risking his life for the action the Senator authorized, essentially using my son as a pawn in his political game.

And while he now speaks of coming together, this was the same man who went before the Congressional Black Caucus and espoused that Republicans were racists.

The same person who tried to scare and divide our country by lying to young people and their parents that a new Bush Administration had a secret plan to reinstate the draft.

And now he speaks about coming together.

The problem with all of this is that after months of instigating division through lies, innuendo, and disinformation his call for people to come together is not only hollow, but not likely to heal the wounds he created.

The amazing thing is that with the vast array of media against him, the lies of Michael Moore and Moveon.org gunning for him, and the stars of Hollywood bringing their talents to bear against him, the President prevailed anyway.

At times it looked as if the unrelenting attacks coming from every direction would overwhelm anyone.

Yet in spite of all of this he prevailed.

But the devestation caused by the "loyal" opposition will take longer to mend and will not be salved by the Senator's rhetoric. If we are to heal, we must work to make it so as the President worked to overcome the incredible onslaught directed against him.

I just hope that people remember how they were lied to and by whom.

I hope people remember how CBS ran with a story based on phoney documents then claimed that the documents should be ignored because the story was true even without facts and excise this cause of division.

I hope people remember how the New York Times and CBS conspired on a bogus story about how the President personally left deadly materials laying around in Iraq so Americans could be killed by insurgents using them and excise this cause of division.

I hope people remember when a draft doesn't occur under the President's next term, who lied to them and excise that cause of division.

I hope people remember when there is no evidence that Republicans attempted to bar blacks from voting who told them that lie and excise that cause of division.

I hope when retired people don't lose their Social Security benefits they remember who lied about that and excise that cause of division.

Now that I've gotten this off my chest, I'm willing to do my bit to help people coming together after a divisive election where the enemies of freedom conspired together and unleashed all of their weapons of mass destruction to defeat a sitting President in war time for all of America's enemies to see.

But I will not forget what happened here and those who helped bring it about.

Not ever.

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