Skip to main content

Patriots and Tyrants

"The Kennedys are not in public service
to make money. We have paid too high a price."

Ted Kennedy said that.

Joe Kennedy: killed while in military service.
John Kennedy: shot while President.
Bobby Kennedy: shot while running for President.

Idiots are carrying guns to political meetings;
some concealed, some openly, some assault weapons.

Timothy McVeigh, who blew up a building in Oklahoma,
when arrested was wearing a T-shirt that quoted Thomas Jefferson,
as if to spit in the face of democracy:
"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time
with the blood of patriots and tyrants."

These savage idiots, misusing the same quote from Jefferson,
pretending to be concerned about health care, chanting
their mantras about the right to bear arms, probably
not so much concerned about either health care or the right
of States to maintain a militia, but afraid that a white America
that never really was white now has African and Hispanic
and Asian citizens, and a President, play with the fuses
of hatred that killed Teddy Kennedy's brothers.

I scorn their savagery, their ignorance, their stupidity,
their hatred, and their willingness to spill the blood of patriots
by pretending those patriots are tyrants.

Ted Kennedy worried for the life of Barack Obama.
I worry, too, for Obama, for us all, for our nation.

It is the tyrants who are carrying the guns.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Friends-- My step-father of 35 years died this morning. His name was Conrad Royksund. He was 86 years old. He was born into poverty on a farm near Puyallup, WA. He was the first member of his family to attend college and earned a PhD from the University of Chicago. He paid his way through all of that by fishing in Alaska. He spent his professional career as a college professor. I met him when I was just 3 years old and don't actually have any memories of my life befor e he was in it. He was intimidatingly smart, funny as hell, and worked his ass off. He taught me to meet people with kindness and decency until I was certain they could not be trusted. He taught me to meet ideas with carving knives until I was certain they could. I will remember him as one of the bravest, most curious, and funniest people I have ever met. He left this world with a satisfied mind. We are so grateful. Dan Hubbard

Nice to Run Into You Again

We do not see things in enormous time-frames.  We human beings are fairly new at figuring things out for ourselves.  For instance, some  people today still think of the earth as a newly created thing, perhaps ten thousand years old.  Earth is actually about four-and-a-half billion years old.   That is to say, the earth is 450,000 times older than the Adam and Eve story, and the universe is three times older than that! I recall first hearing that continents were slowly drifting around the earth, and that there quite likely had been several times when the continents were squeezed together.  But people could stand on the edge of their own continents, and not see Africa or Asia getting closer.  It took at least fifty years to figure things out. We called our continent something special. But sure enough, there have been numerous times during several-billion year history of the earth, when supercontinents formed, and eventually drifted off. ...

The Sea is Rising

Let us just step back:  two hundred and fifty years ago, or so, the ships of England and Spain had drifted onto a whole new continent, as they saw it, from far north to a savagely cold south; pole to pole, as if there were such things. Millions of people already lived here, some of them still hunters and gatherers; some of them very wealthy, indeed!  Gold and silver stolen from the southern Americas funded Spanish and English dreams. There was land, lots of land, under starry skies above, rich land, and oil and coal and iron ore.  The whole western world learned how to build industries not on simple muscle power, but on steam and oil.  We farmed, too, of course.  All we needed was cheap labor--slave labor from Africa, mostly, so the ships came with slave labor.  Chinese labor built railroad beds where there had been rock cliffs. Europeans, long used to killing each other for good, religious reasons, brought their religious savagery with them. ...