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Duane McPherson's avatar

Were Jesus here to witness current events, he would be weeping bitter tears from his clear blue eyes and tearing out thick locks of his light-brown hair. After first vomiting his abundant heavenly breakfast at the nauseating sight of Christian Zionists and Old Testament Christians.

I agree with Chesterton's assessment that America has the soul of a church; that is, it adheres to the superficial and material signs of Christ while ignoring all of the spiritual message. The American soul is rigid and hollow, stuffed with rules and regulations. A dead place.

Most American Christians worship a mob-style god: "Believe in Jesus or Go to Hell!" That is not a god I want to hang out with. (There are happily exceptions, like the Quakers.)

Nothing could be further from that mobster than the living message of Christ: "God is Infinite Love and your are Loved, whoever you are, wherever you are, and whatever you have done."

Jesus was a human messenger, like Buddha. He never claimed to be a Messiah. Unfortunately, the message became corrupted in translation and transmission.

War is Hell; that is true just as stated by General W.T. Sherman; he meant it literally, and he was correct.

Yes, we are in an End Time now, but not the one the Zionists expect. It is the end time for American Empire and the Zionist wannabe-an-empire. What will come after, we will find out after.

There will be a lot of turbulence along the way.

Buckle up!

Tom Welsh's avatar

"The need for a narrative, a coherent story explaining this war, grows more acute with every opinion poll, all of which now indicate that the majority of Americans oppose this adventure".

A plausible explanation involves two factors: American arrogance and American ignorance. It's unclear whether Ambrose Bierce really said that "War is God's way of teaching Americans geography", but he certainly should have. https://quoteinvestigator.com/2014/05/19/geography/

On the one hand, we have the very prevalent attitude ("The Ledeen Doctrine") expressed in the early 1990s by Michael Ledeen:

"Every ten years or so, the United States needs to pick up some small crappy little country and throw it against the wall, just to show the world we mean business".

(Ledeen is described by Wikipedia, rather euphemistically I think, as "an American scholar". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Ledeen)

On the other hand, most Americans - including apparently even the nation's leaders - may have been under the delusion that Iran is "a small crappy little country".

They are now finding the contrary. Evidently better teaching of geography would have saved a great deal of money, prestige, and lives.

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