tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6557458849091969678.post483253326578652987..comments2023-06-15T09:13:45.467-04:00Comments on Liberty's Torch: The Right That Went Unmentioned Part 2Francis W. Porrettohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05862584203772592282noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6557458849091969678.post-82252312575853680422018-07-02T16:21:25.908-04:002018-07-02T16:21:25.908-04:00It is not difficult to make the leap from abortion...It is not difficult to make the leap from abortion and eugenics to managed genetic profiles. Once you abandon long held values and beliefs typically Christian in nature you enter the world of scientific conjecture and social planning. There is much to be afraid of looking at this type of future. <br /><br />Our past ways of living were built the support of family and community working together. In many cases the community was represented by a church or fellowship. The government governed the nation or state. The combined community raised the children and managed the affairs of the community based on their shared values and needs. Each community had its own traditions and practices creating unique pockets of humanity that added to the fabric of man.<br /><br />The progressive philosophy of life will gradually erode the value of family and the traditions therein. They will claim that we will no longer need them. At least that is what they will tell us despite the fact that they really do not know if they are right.<br /> <br />Part of what has given mankind the confidence to evolve and grow are these foundations we have built upon our long held traditions. Once these are gone, our unity starts to fade as we no longer are linked by heritage but are, instead, linked only by consensus and data and the organization that we look to for guidance. There is little to celebrate in such mundane concepts.<br /><br />The future is full of questions. By eliminating the core values that brought our civilization to where we are there is the risk of losing our individuality. By encouraging the ‘Hive’ (drone) mindset we may see the death of that which made us great.<br />Glenda T Goodehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01124547784959889077noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6557458849091969678.post-73235472693628451312018-07-02T09:55:30.457-04:002018-07-02T09:55:30.457-04:00"The numbness to killing is something that ha..."The numbness to killing is something that has been noted in people who have been in wars or have experienced death repeatedly."<br /><br />We now have a generation or two of children that have grown up being told that their lives (at least up to birth) are disposable. That their own parents (especially their mothers) not only approve of, but actively FIGHT for the right to killed their offspring for any reason. And these generations. And these generations now also fight for the right to kill off their children as a matter of "women's rights."<br /><br />They have been raised with a constant drumbeat that lives -- even their own lives -- are so unimportant that they could have been disposed of before they were born for reasons of convenience. <br /><br />What does that do to form the thought patterns of children as they grow and develop? Is it coincidence that we are seeing more mass murders than ever before -- most committed by young people? Or is it because they have been trained to believe that life is unimportant... and, thus, feel no repulsion about taking lives for any perceived slights?<br /><br />I'm sure I'm not the first to have these thoughts.Markhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16445328419607697910noreply@blogger.com