December 12, 2005

A "WTF?" Moment from Salon

Captain Ed and Instapundit point out this bit of absurdity from Salon's Cary Tennis.

At a certain point in the near future, if the current oligarchy cannot be removed via the ballot, direct political action may become an urgent and compelling mission. It may then be necessary for many people in many walks of life to put their bodies on the line. For the moment, however, although pressing and profound questions have arisen about whether the current government is even legitimate, i.e., properly elected, there still remains a chance to remove this government peacefully in the 2008 election. (Or am I living in a dream world?)

I do think this regime's removal is the most urgent matter before the country today. And I do think that at a certain point the achievement of that goal might take precedence over our personal predilections for writing, teaching and the like. We might be called upon to go on general strike, for instance. We might be called upon to set up camp in the streets for weeks or months, to gather and remain in large public squares as the students in Tiananmen Square did, and dare government forces to remove us or to slaughter us in the streets.

This is all terrible and rather fantastic to contemplate. But what assurances have we that it is not all quite plausible? Having discarded the principles that Jefferson & Co. espoused, the current regime seems capable of anything. I know that my imagination is a feverish instrument. But are we not living in feverish times, in times of the unthinkable?

Looks like a serious case of Bush-Hatred Derangement Syndrome.

Posted by: Greg at 02:03 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
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1 Yeah, because I'm sure this Salon writer really espouses the ideals of Jefferson. I'll bet he lives by the motto "that government is best which governs least."

Sorry bud, socialists can't claim the mantle of the founding fathers.

Good post, Greg.

Posted by: Brad Warbiany at Tue Dec 13 02:34:33 2005 (JtTzp)

2 Well, at least "peacefully" was added. The funny thing is, if they all did just sit down in the streets etc., the majority of Americans would continue their daily business, going to and from work, and if these "street sitters" got in the way, they'd be hauled off to jail.

So goes the "revolution."

Posted by: Hube at Tue Dec 13 13:01:42 2005 (Gr/mK)

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