Another Symptom of a Nation in Decline?
Many of you have read articles written by a black woman named Star Parker. She writes for Jewish World Review. Of course she is not your typical black woman in that she is a Conservative Republican....but... she is NOT HAPPY with the direction the Republicans are headed.
I've pasted her entire opinion piece here.
Notice how she ends her article...saying the words, "...just another symptom of a nation in decline?"
Some 25 years ago, I changed my
life.
A visit inside a church opened my eyes to the destructive life I
was living, financed by welfare checks generously provided by American
taxpayers.
I got off welfare, went to work, got politically active and
became a Republican. I didn't become a Republican because of what the party
looked like. I became a Republican because of what the party stood for:
individual freedom, traditional values, with a view that government's role is to
protect our freedom at home and abroad.
For the next 25 years, I had to
suffer indignities from liberals who could not fathom that a black could be a
Republican because she actually embraced these values.
But now, we have a
strange turn of events.
Liberals no longer feel on the run like they did
in the 1980s and 1990s. They are running the show and they know it. So I hear
less from them.
Now the indignities come from inside the party that I
embraced 25 years ago.
It was always the Democrats that were about
interest group politics.
Now Republicans have somehow concluded that
their party's woes are because it once stood for something. So the game plan is
to morph into the Democrats' stepsister.
Whereas once Republican
buzzwords were family and freedom, now it is inclusion. The marching orders,
according to the post-election "autopsy" report from the Republican National
Committee, is outreach to blacks, Hispanics, gays, women and Asians. It's now
about what the party looks like, not what it stands for.
Christian conservatives, once the answer, are now the problem.
Which
gets to Bishop E. W. Jackson.
Bishop Jackson is an outspoken black
Christian conservative with a law degree from Harvard. He also was just selected
as the nominee for lieutenant governor of Virginia.
Although Republicans
are talking about black outreach, it is not, unfortunately, blacks like Jackson
that they have in mind.
He is outspoken about limited government and
personal freedom, about the importance of family and traditional marriage, and
about doing something about the scourge of abortion.
In other words, E.W.
Jackson stands for everything that the Republican Party once stood
for.
He's making the Republicans of inclusion squirm.
The current
Republican lieutenant governor of Virginia, Bill Bolling, immediately criticized
his party for nominating Jackson, saying it will feed the "image of extremism"
in the party.
Ronald Reagan used to say that the 11th commandment was to
not speak ill of a fellow Republican. That commandment has now been modified to
permit it, if that fellow Republican is a Christian conservative.
Certainly, Jackson does not pull punches. But his statements about the
government "plantation" are 100 percent true. It's no accident that trillions of
dollars in government programs have had zero impact on black poverty. Black
single-parent homes and out-of-wedlock births have tripled since the War on
Poverty began in 1965.
A new Gallup poll shows a dramatic shift in
American attitudes on traditional morality. Fifty-nine percent now say
homosexual relations are acceptable, up 19 points from 2001; 60 percent say
out-of-wedlock birth is OK, up 15 points from 2001; 68 percent say divorce is
OK, up 9 points from 2001; and 14 percent are OK with polygamy, twice that of
2001.
The economy is sputtering at 2 percent growth, four points below
the expected recovery growth rate from a deep recession, and our national debt
is now greater than our gross domestic product.
The country needs a bold
alternative voice to wake it up. The conservative Ken Cuccinelli-E W Jackson
ticket in Virginia is such a voice.
Will their party get behind them or
pull the rug out, as it has done to other conservatives in recent races? Will
the Republican Party get back to what it once was about, or will it become just
another symptom of a nation in decline?
Yes it does appear that the world will start to hate us maybe from even within the Republican party!
But why should that surprise us? Jesus clearly said that the world WILL HATE US!
Hat tip to Wilson R.
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