Apparently, Americans are beginning to wake up from their drunken stupor--a stupor induced by Obama's seductive magic--to realize they have just made one big colossal mistake.
Many within the Christian community in particular are being brought to the stark realization that they are getting much more 'change' than they ever dreamed was possible, and that change is the type that is increasingly disgusting.
Lured into a state of idol worship, false euphoria, and unfounded 'hope,' many of these thought that Obama might represent a good change for the country, in spite of dire warnings by patriots, conservatives, bloggers, ministers, and others.
They saw Christian leaders such as Rick Warren of the Saddleback Community Church in California appear to embrace the Obama mystique and jump on the bandwagon.
Whether or not this is actually true is not an issue. Warren gave the appearance of endorsing Obama.
And thus, many Christians felt they could in good conscience support such a man for President.
But now that we have seen with our own eyes what many of us warned about prior to the election, Americans are beginning to wake up to reality. Obama is not what they thought. Far from it.
In one week alone he has proved to be the most rabid proponent and exporter of abortion on demand overseas...by executive order. He has snubbed Israel by calling the Palestinian leader Abbas as his first official foreign contact as President, in order to tell him that the U.S. would now 'support Palestinian goals.' With the stroke of a pen he has ordered the closing of Gitmo prison where hundreds of the most dangerous persons in the entire world are held. These persons will be brought to the U.S. mainland, to be housed in our prison system, placed within our court system, and provided legal representation all at taxpayer expense.
And this is just within 4 days.
CNS News provides a stunning look at how perhaps the American people are beginning to realize what a terrible mistake they have made in placing Obama in office.
This is excellent. Self-examination and reflection in the aftermath of bad decisions are a good thing. Perhaps citizens will take a serious personal inventory of their lives, determine how and why such a glaring error of judgment was made, and take steps to prevent such a fiasco from happening again in the future.
I know this may be expecting too much in this day and age, but we can hope.
Saturday, January 24, 2009
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2 comments:
You can hope. I cannot. I just meet too many people who couldn't qualify for Leno's Jaywalkers.
Aye. It's a bitch, isn't it.
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