Four Years Ago This May by Robert Socha
Four years ago this May, a repeat offender, with fentanyl in his system, died after he resisted arrest and wiggled his way out of a squad car, and was held on the ground in a normal and properly taught technique during his apprehension for counterfeiting, an illegal activity! The biased reporting favoring the criminal’s behavior over the policeman’s attempt to subdue their uncooperative subject fueled a pent-up animosity toward a system where divisions based on appearance and prestige, sewn by the Left for generations, exploded in a vicious summer of riots, murder, and mayhem. The repercussions of using media as a mouthpiece for propaganda are deleteriously unraveling the fabric of Western culture in an uncontrollable slide toward despotism.
The duplicity between unconstitutional lockdowns depriving the nation, nay the world, of the right to work and travel freely, needing permission to accomplish daily tasks, and the allowance and encouragement of civil unrest in light of the violent, fiery protests and unrest culminating in lawlessness from coast to coast must never be forgotten by We the People affected by such subterfuge. The tangled web of deception that started with the Russia collusion hoax in 2016, continued in a second failed impeachment attempt in January 2020, was boosted by the fearmongering and unknown future of the next version of coronavirus.
It culminated in a series of coordinated and violent thievery aimed at destroying the economy and a sitting President’s popularity in hopes of killing his chances at reelection is rearing its ugly head in hyped deception bloviating from the internet and TV. Certainly, another COVID scare aimed as a missile toward his defeat will add clout and strength to the deception.
Fast-forward four years. The championship teams are meeting once again for a rematch. The boxers introduced by the master of the ceremony are in their corners, and his voracious appetite for a blood bath has described this event as a winner-takes-all foray into the match of the century. Lo and behold, riots and social unrest have taken hold of our once prestigious universities, whose feckless faculty allows for lawlessness on their campuses in the sacrosanct name of diversity. Thieving and terrorizing organizations whip easily malleable minds into a frenzy, and an inept response gives validity to their insatiable and inexcusable hatred.
Welcome to another Presidential election cycle summer of mostly peaceful and excusable civil unrest. Add to the mix a reeling economy, lawlessness in the cities, unmitigated immigration, and irrational election law, chicanery, and we are in for a wild ride.
The good ship of the United States is sailing through dangerous, uncharted waters whose tempest threatens its seaworthiness. Her institutions are crumbling, and her seats of power are gobbling every vestige of liberty with a voracious appetite for destruction. The self-inflicted wounds in the economy, trade, and social networks have opened such massive wounds that their binding might be beyond repair, leaving her to bleed out and die whimpering like a stuck pig. Her enemies violate her borders and use her generous magnanimity to infiltrate and destroy from within. And an inept executive sunbathes into obscurity, leaving our friends and foes to laugh at and taunt us.
Those of us who still believe in the opportunity the dream of the United States affords every soul on earth must meet the daunting task before us with tenacity and forbearance. That dream, rooted in the idea that all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, is living and active, springing up a well of hope within the soul. Here’s to the dream and leading by example into the foray, exposing the darkness and revealing the Light. Hopefully, voices of Reason and Virtue will overwhelm the fray with the Truth.
About the Author
Mychal Massie
Mychal S. Massie is an ordained minister who spent 13 years in full-time Christian Ministry. Today he serves as founder and Chairman of the Racial Policy Center (RPC), a think tank he officially founded in September 2015. RPC advocates for a colorblind society. He was founder and president of the non-profit “In His Name Ministries.” He is the former National Chairman of a conservative Capitol Hill think tank; and a former member of the think tank National Center for Public Policy Research. Read entire bio here