One writer who comes to mind is John Nolte, at Breitbart. Here is his opener on the Zimmerman/NBC suit:
Now, I gather that his basic assertion about NBC editing the sound track of the 911 call is factual. But I don't think anyone would deny that the inflammatory nature of the paragraph. I'm not suggesting that Mr. Nolte do anything differently - he has his "bully pulpit", the editors must like the way he's writing, and the First Amendment applies. You go, John."Though it might feel like a hundred years ago, it was only last April when the media joined Barack Obama's cynical crusade to gin up his base in Florida through the artificial inflaming of racial tensions. And there was no question NBC News was the worst of these co-conspirators after the network was busted editing a 9-1-1 call to make Trayvon Martin's suspected shooter, George Zimmerman, look like a racist. Today, Zimmerman filed suit against the Peacock Network."
But I think this kind of writing only helps to maybe put an up-tick in the pitch fork, torch, tar, feather, and rail markets. Which I don't think is really helpful at all, even in the short term.
My metaphysics training has taught me to stand guard at the doorway of thought. In a nutshell, this warning is based upon the idea that we see and become what we think and believe. If we don't pay attention to what we are admitting into our thoughts, we can start to slide downhill. A practical example - repeat a lie often enough, and it (seems to) become true.
My distress is in no small part to my own slippage. Looking back over my pre-election and near-post election posts, I'm struck by how they could have been less, well, vulgar, and more informative and thoughtful. Fortunately, Gerard turned on a light for me, and gave me a glimpse of what I've been seeking. It has apparently been wending its way thru the web. One full copy of it is at The Thinking Housewife. I'm excerpting the first section here:
(Debt isn't the huge problem it was five years ago. The belly fat, though continues to be tough.)A Plan for Traditionalists
AT The Orthosphere, Kristor offers a reasonable guide to survival and affecting the culture. In the immediate future, he recommends:
- Resolve to pay no more PC jizya (beautifully spelled out in the Solzhenitsyn essay that has been discussed a lot lately in the wider orthosphere). Tell the truth, and call a spade a spade: calmly, politely, and without being obstreperous about it, but nevertheless firmly. Without making a big deal about it or calling attention to yourself, fail to appear for the public rites of Moloch. If you must thus appear, quietly fail to meet the requirements of the rite.
- Write, read, blog, talk: join a book club, an apologetics roundtable, a bible study group. Learn the arguments for reaction, for Christianity, for theism; learn the arguments against them, and how they may be defeated. Speak up: fearlessly, scandalously, but always humbly and politely.
- Live a virtuous, upright life, at home and in business. Speak the truth, and do the right thing. Whatever it happens to be, don’t let it be about yourself; let it be about the True, the Good, and the Beautiful.
- Beware; and be prepared to move, quickly. Get rid of stuff that you don’t need or that is not positively beautiful to you in some way – especially debt and belly fat, which are likely going to cost you as the financial and medical sectors of the economy devolve over the next ten years.
- Maintain tradition in small things: e.g., dress more formally than is customary these days, practice old-fashioned manners, refrain from swearing; read old books, and then discuss them around the family dinner table; join together in regular and serious family prayer, if only to bless each meal; remember your family holiday traditions, and observe them gravely and with joy.
- Pray without ceasing. Pray whenever your attention is not wholly consumed with the task at hand. Work toward praying even when it is. Nothing is so convincing as sanctity, or so attractive, or so authoritative. Without it, personal rectitude can seem like Pharisaical arrogance (and risks becoming just that). You can’t push sanctity. But you can work at allowing it to happen.
There's more, all worth read, pondering, and incorporating into our lives. Go!
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