Divided by Right & Wrong

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HagiaSophia

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From Phil Brennan’e column:

Someone once said – I think it was Abraham Lincoln; it sure sounds like him – that we must not allow ourselves to be deluded by those who would have us believe that there is some middle ground between right and wrong.

Yet the only way to unite those who uphold what they believe in their hearts is right, and those who they are convinced espouse that which is wrong, is to arrive at that elusive middle ground between the two, and it just plain does not exist.

One of the burning issues of our times is abortion. Roughly half of the American people believe that the killing of the unborn is not only wrong but also wantonly atrocious, while the other half think it’s a perfectly acceptable way for a woman to solve the problem of an unwanted pregnancy.

Where’s the middle ground here? How can you bring together people who regard abortion as murder and those who either deny that it is murder, or worse, insist that it doesn’t matter if it is? A woman’s right to choose to kill her unborn child simply trumps the right to life of an unborn human being. Period.

How can you bring together the two sides of this issue, which is, no matter how you put it, a matter of life and death? Did George Bush fail here? Well, if he couldn’t do what is clearly an impossibility, you could say he failed. But you’d have to be Michael Moore or some other disingenuous fool to buy that nonsense.

There are genuine issues that divide this nation, and in almost all cases they involve matters of Judeo-Christian morality vs. the secular doctrine of anything goes. Most Americans, for example, adhere to the ancient doctrine that marriage is a union between a man and a woman. But the media and a large number of moral misfits insist that marriage should also be recognized as a union between a man and a man or a woman and a woman – an absurdity on its face.

This has been called a culture war, but it is far from that – it is a war where what is at stake is the nation’s soul. We are either a Godly people adhering to a moral code as spelled out in the Ten Commandments, or a godless people wedded to the idiot notions that if it feels good, do it, and if it works, try it.

There is no middle ground here. There is right and there is wrong, and never the twain shall meet.

Writing in the current Weekly Standard, P.J. O’Rourke played ghostwriter for President Bush’s inaugural address and he hit the issue head on.

“My Fellow Americans,” he had the president saying, "I had intended to reach out to all of you and bring a divided nation together. But I changed my mind. America isn’t divided by political ethos or ethnic origin. America isn’t divided by region or religion. America is divided by jerks. Who wants to bring a bunch of jerks together with the rest of us? Let them stew in Berkeley, Boston, and Ann Arbor.

"The media say that I won the election on the strength of moral values. If the other fellow had become president, would the media have said that he won the election on the strength of immoral values? For once the media would have been right.

“We are all sinners. But jerks revel in their sins. You can tell by their reaction to the Ten Commandments. Post those Ten Commandments in a courthouse or a statehouse, in a public school or a public park, and the jerks go crazy. Why is that? Christians believe in the Ten Commandments. So do Muslims. Jews, too, obviously. Show the Ten Commandments to Hindus, Buddhists, Confucians, or to people with just good will and common sense and nobody says, ‘Whoa! That’s all wrong!’”

O’Rourke has it right. On one side are the great mass of the American people whose heads are screwed on right. On the other are the jerks, the self-appointed elitists who think the majority of their fellow Americans are an illiterate bunch of yahoos who live in flyover country, probably in trailer parks or shacks with hound dogs living under the front porch, and whose opinions are not worth listening to.

The jerks are the intellectually superior class who think they can bring a president down by using forged documents on a TV news show and get away with it. The jerks are the politicians who lie to senior citizens that the president’s attempts to solve the looming Social Security problem are really meant to cut benefits of those retirees now getting them.

The jerks are the people who would like to see the greeting “Merry Christmas” outlawed and that sacred holy day driven into obscurity. The jerks are the people who want to convince us that the universe and those within it created themselves.

Does anybody really want to be united with the jerkery?

newsmax.com/archives/articles/2005/1/18/141419.shtml
 
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HagiaSophia:
it is a war where what is at stake is the nation’s soul. =
Great Article!

Reminds me of this pair:

The second American civil war: what it’s about, Part I
townhall.com/columnists/dennisprager/dp20031014.shtml

The second American civil war: What it’s about: Part II
townhall.com/columnists/dennisprager/dp20031021.shtml

Great post! 👍
 
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Jay74:
Great Article!

Reminds me of this pair:
Prager is always so succinct and so on target - I admire the way he can with just few words bring you right to the point. One of my favorite columnists.
 
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HagiaSophia:
Prager is always so succinct and so on target - I admire the way he can with just few words bring you right to the point. One of my favorite columnists.
Same here. I quote him on here almost too frequently, but he is always so on issue and has such a good moral compass.

I emailed him last month and he personally replied…it made my day. 🙂 I’m not normally big on celebrities–my wife is an editor/journalist and we’ve met several–but he’s an exception because he makes this world a better place. 🙂
 
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