While people are deciding whether or not to download a version of Amazing Grace straight out of a Civil War era Southern tunebook (last post), my latest pontification sits, waiting to be read, at Lee's Pontifications. It's called, "The Yahoos Aren't Always the Other Guys. Or, Scott Walker and the FFRF." The link: LINK
In it, I point out remarkable similarities between one side's war on public workers and the other side's war on religion. For one thing, neither side admits to being at war, let alone to being the aggressor in that game, and both sides are just trying to keep things fair, and, golly gosh, why do people insist on suggesting otherwise? Two persecuted, misunderstood crusaders from the same state, and here I am, adding to the misunderstanding. Read about other, utterly uncanny similarities in mindset and approach between Walker and the country's premiere non-profit, fairness-pursuing organization.
Lee
In it, I point out remarkable similarities between one side's war on public workers and the other side's war on religion. For one thing, neither side admits to being at war, let alone to being the aggressor in that game, and both sides are just trying to keep things fair, and, golly gosh, why do people insist on suggesting otherwise? Two persecuted, misunderstood crusaders from the same state, and here I am, adding to the misunderstanding. Read about other, utterly uncanny similarities in mindset and approach between Walker and the country's premiere non-profit, fairness-pursuing organization.
Lee