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Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Info Post

Modern liberalism bases its ideology in large part on the concept of oppression. The ideology grew up out of a desire to protect oppressed classes of people in order to enfranchise them into society. One such class distinction started with the Marxist concept of the proletariat, or, in modern terms, "the poor." Blacks and women as oppressed classes were included. Stemming from the successes of the civil rights movement, other classes formed: homosexuals, animals, and even the earth itself. All tried to create special legal protections in order to achieve that most elusive of Marxist liberal ideals - equality of outcomes.

Along the way, many of the elitist "oppressed" became the oppressors. With the political rise of the liberal elite, liberalism invented concepts such as hate speech, hate crimes, or hate groups in order to promote equal outcomes. Such concepts, however, are a double edged sword and are now wielded without real authority or meaning. They are wielded mainly as a means of oppressing other groups now in disfavor with liberal ideology, with no regard to "equality."

The other day, several of my friends complained to me about some examples of hate speech. Each of the examples showed an unrestrained hatred toward an oppressed group. Yet, unlike what the politically correct police and modern liberals would like us to believe, this hate speech didn't come from right-wing ideologues. This hate speech derived from liberal elitist groups who "feel" that their way of thinking is the only correct way.

There are indeed hate groups in America. These are the intolerant who belittle, sneer at, and rage against anyone who disagrees with their ideals. Four of these groups are particularly zealous in defending liberal dogma: Born Again Atheists, anti-Mormons, liberal feminists, and gay activists. These groups cling to their beliefs as truly radical conservatives - trying to conserve and to protect their dogmas with what can only be described as religious zeal.

Born Again Atheists
Born Again Atheists are those secularists who don't believe in God or religion, but cannot leave religion alone. They fight against religions and believers with all the fervor of any religious proselytizer. Here's a typical example from this hate group, taken from a pro-liberal site:
"We just don't want to be bombarded with your PERSONAL religious beliefs. We sure as [*^%$] don't want them to become public policy."
Notice the capitalized letters (shouting) and the use of profanity (edited). (Profanity seems to be endemic to modern liberalism.) Those who write such comments cannot see the duplicity in their attack against someone else who may have argued a point from a religious viewpoint. Rather than ignoring the comment, ignoring someone's religion, or ignoring the person altogether, Born Again Atheists insist on setting the record straight by attacking religion in favor of their own skewed personal beliefs.

Most people who disagreed with a religious point of view would merely ignore it. A Born Again Atheist, however, must spread the gospel of atheism in the most offensive and belittling manner possible. Hence, Born Again Atheists deserve a place as a hate group.

Anti-Mormons
With Mitt Romney's presumptive nomination as the Republican candidate in this year's election, anti-Mormonism has come to the forefront as a national pastime. Mormon bashing has brought both liberals and Christian conservatives together in a surprising, yet awkward tango. While the politically correct frown on jokes about blacks, Latinos, and even the Polish, jokes about Mormons are fostered and encouraged.

Bash on Romney's religion as a cult? Everyone nods their head sagaciously, knowing that those crazy Mormons don't practice a "real" religion:
"That is a mainstream view, that Mormonism is a cult. Every true, born again follower of Christ ought to embrace a Christian over a non-Christian."
Make fun of  Mormons in a popular Broadway show? Everyone laughs along, calling Mormons who object, haters, of all things. (By the way, The Book of Mormon Musical has the crudest language of any show I can name, honoring the liberal tradition once again. Sitting through two and a half hours of the F bomb in counterpoint to the "sweet but stupid" Mormons? No thanks.)

I did a quick Google search on "Mormons" and "Mormon beliefs" and found, not surprisingly, pages and pages of anti-Mormon sites from ex-Mormons, Christians, and liberals. The content of the few sites I visited was full of the most vitriolic language imaginable. It's hard to find any group so roundly hated and attacked as the Mormons.

Consider, for a moment, if any other pet group of liberalism were treated as the Mormons, the outcry would ring across every news station across America. Meghan McCain and Brad Pitt would speak out. MSNBC would make the defense of the group its "news" story for three months.

Yet, since those people are just Mormons, they don't really need any special consideration. Just hate.

Liberal Feminists
Apparently there is no duplicity when a conservative woman is maligned. Think of the public destruction of Sarah "I can see Russia from my house" Palin, Michelle "crazy eyes" Bachmann, Laura "talk slut" Ingraham, and recently Ann "never worked a day in her life" Romney.

I watched, along with the rest of America, as Sarah Palin was systematically excommunicated from the true believers, ostracized from mainstream America, and slandered as an object of derision across the news and entertainment media. Modern feminism no longer defends the rights of women. It only defends the rights of women to have abortions and to adhere to liberal doctrine. Women with beliefs other than modern liberalism need not apply.

Is there any more proof needed to show that liberal feminism is a hate group?

Gay Activists
There is no voice quite so shrill as those who attempt to defend same sex marriage as a natural and civil right. Millions of voters' voices have been excoriated in public and in the courts, merely because they expressed a desire to keep marriage between a man and a woman.

In the recent North Carolina vote to amend the state constitution, gay activists expressed their disappointment by condemning millions. For example:
"Surely no one is surprised... This is, after all, the brain-atrophied south; a place where reason and science are eviscerated are 'optional' and religion, mythology, and utter nonsense are trumped as 'hard fact'."
For a group of people who call marriage supporters haters (as the photo above implies), gay groupthink simply cannot see past its own boundaries to see the duplicity of its own position. Gay activists only want love and tolerance, as long as everyone else agrees with their dogmatic point of view.

If we could point to any of these ideologies I've mentioned here, as coming closest to an organized religion, it would be the Church of Gay Marriage. (Born Again Atheists are too disorganized to be an organized religion.) Rarely has any group been so doctrinally biased toward the rights and beliefs of others as gay activists are.

All four of these groups are hate groups by any definition, except of course, by the definition of modern liberalism which upholds these groups as mainstream. In its never-ending quest to promote socialist doctrine, nihilism, and state-defined morality, modern liberalism has lost its way. Instead of leading the civil rights movement as it once did, it is now mired in a tar pit of intolerance and hate.

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