Humanity deserves nothing more than to be obliterated from this planet
by Jack GrantIn order to achieve what I desired for my original weblog here at Random Fate to be, I wanted to separate my political views from my other posts into my other weblog, Radio Saigon and my non-political or most balanced analyses into Random Fate.
What I have read in the past few hours goes beyond all comprehension, beyond all belief, beyond all limits, and cannot be restricted to one venue.
I cannot separate the political from the personal.
Some have said that “cultural relativism is evil”. If what they say is true, NO CULTURE DESERVES TO SURVIVE.
I have been reading weblogs on both the left-wing and the right-wing.
What do I encounter in response to the effects of the hurricane Katrina?
Instead of “here is what you can do to help those stricken in New Orleans, Lousiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and other areas” I find “what is (insert enemy point of view here) doing about this?” and “they (the opposition) are wrong because they are not doing (whatever)”.
There it is…
Do your own God-damned math, and tell your fellow travelers to SHUT THE FUCK UP if they can do nothing more than to cry how the “other side” is inadequate in their response to this disaster.
If you cannot do the math, if you cannot see the problem, then let me tell you something:
YOU ARE THE FUCKING PROBLEM.
Then shut the Hell up and let the adults take care of things, you pitiful, pitiful, hopeless children.
There is nothing more to say, and if you do not understand, you are not intelligent enough to be a full member of the human race.
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Aw, c’mon Jack, tell us what you really think! :)
I came to about the same space as you did; posted about it too.
It will be interesting to gauge the US response to the South Asian tsunami crisis in Indonesia against our response to Katrina. With Indonesia, the political interests in our country could afford to be bipartisan and lovey-dovey because it affected a bunch of poor brown people on the other side of the world for which there was no significant voting bloc here. Besides, politicians love being paternalistic, and there was plenty of smarm to go around.
Louisiana, by contrast, promises to be an ugly political meat grinder in the wake of Katrina. The stakes are high for both sides; and we will see politics descend to a level that Americans haven’t experienced since the 1800s.
The high ground is the middle ground, but that will be very hard to hold.
By Scott Ferguson on 09.03.05 16:52
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