cartoon credit: politicalcorrectnessrunamok.blogspot.com
The recounts continue in Florida, Georgia, and Arizona. More
ballots are mysteriously popping out of closets, trunks of cars, magicians’
hats. Macron just insulted President Trump again. Etc., etc. Feeling worn down?
Sally Zelikovsky has something of a post-election pep talk
at American Thinker. She concludes:
Warriors don’t retreat just as they
are making inroads. We may not be fighting a kinetic war, but it is our destiny
to fight this ideological war for the soul of this country. It is just as
vital and, in some ways harder, because the enemy is an internal hegemon--progressivism.
Fortunately, it no longer hides in the shadows.
We see its face every
day. It is tenacious, brazenly mendacious, ferocious, avaricious, ubiquitous;
it is relentless and merciless.
This is not a war with swords and
guns, but of words and actions. My father fought against NAFTA for 30
years. Trump couldn’t have changed NAFTA without the efforts of people
like Dad. The president can’t do all he has to do in the next two years
without us either.
The midterms were a mixed bag and
left us feeling pretty lousy. And it’s not over given the looming morass
of election challenges. We also face the exhausting reality that the left
will not stop until they take down a president who has our back in a way I’ve
never seen in a political leader, let alone a president. Are we going to let
this happen?
America’s conservatives are at a
crossroads. We can tack to the right and commit to a new “morning in
America,” emboldened by the power we have as the People, by judges and
representatives devoted to conservatism, and a Senate majority that can
punch back working in tandem with a fearless and indefatigable President.
Or, we can tack to the left, where we’d be “mourning in America” because we let
the light go out on this beacon on a hill.
The full article is here.
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