Robert Oscar Lopez "The left is composed of horrible people. Most sane people realize this, even if they have friends on the dark side. I have friends on the left, so I can say, "Some of my best friends are horrible people." The right wing has its own problems, but for now, let's talk about the first two years of Trump's presidency. It should stun even the most cynical among us.
"From the "99%" to "Crush the Little Guy"
"Jason Wilson published a column at the reliably left-wing Guardian called "How the world has fought back against the far-right and started winning."
"It celebrates Gestapo tactics against inconsequential bad guys the left labels as racists, Nazis, or whatever. Wilson glorifies "doxing," "counter-surveillance," and "no-platforming." He likes pressuring governments to classify internet commenters as terrorists and deny them visas. It exhilarates him to foment betrayals within conservative camps and devastate people like Milo Yiannopoulos."
"You get the feeling that Jason Wilson hates people." . . .
Taylor Swift: . . . "In sum, the Taylorizing of the left gives rich white women total unchecked power. They can accuse underlings, helpless scapegoats, and human obstacles of anything from whenever and bring hellfire and destruction without having to apologize or compensate for it. In fact, they become heroes lionized by Time." . . .
. . . I remember the party line: we should stay out of Central America's affairs. We should not take sides or make judgments about things down there! When I went to a model U.N. at Georgetown in 1987, the liberal consensus back then was: "asylum-seekers" are bad! The U.S. government used refugees from communist countries like Cuba, Vietnam, and Nicaragua to make those countries look bad and justify more U.S. "imperialist" intervention. Why, what did it matter to us what Noriega did to his people? Why should we tell El Salvador how to run itself?" . . .
"You get the feeling that Jason Wilson hates people." . . .
Taylor Swift: . . . "In sum, the Taylorizing of the left gives rich white women total unchecked power. They can accuse underlings, helpless scapegoats, and human obstacles of anything from whenever and bring hellfire and destruction without having to apologize or compensate for it. In fact, they become heroes lionized by Time." . . .
. . . I remember the party line: we should stay out of Central America's affairs. We should not take sides or make judgments about things down there! When I went to a model U.N. at Georgetown in 1987, the liberal consensus back then was: "asylum-seekers" are bad! The U.S. government used refugees from communist countries like Cuba, Vietnam, and Nicaragua to make those countries look bad and justify more U.S. "imperialist" intervention. Why, what did it matter to us what Noriega did to his people? Why should we tell El Salvador how to run itself?" . . .
. . . "Lefties forgot their antiwar and anti-xenophobia views on the Middle East and Russia, too. I nearly fainted when I saw so many lefty writers slamming Trump for withdrawing troops from Syria and Afghanistan, plus lathering Mattis in praise post-resignation. And I never thought I'd see leftists say any Russian who talks to political people in the U.S. or stirs up debate on social media is colluding with treasonous Americans to interfere with our elections.
"Such inconsistency. Yet no matter how much they contradict themselves, they are always horrible."