Friday, June 13, 2014

Paul Kersey: America in 2034 - "Likewise, not one conservative leader pointed out that there were no white people in positions of power when Detroit went into the ditch."


Paul Kersey: America in 2034

Moon

Our flag will still fly on the moon.

To understand where America is headed, we need only look at one of the commentaries the Old Grey Lady saw fit to publish the day after man successfully set foot on the moon.
A few steps on earth’s natural satellite–one every human eye has looked upon with awe–should have ushered in an era of exploration, scientific achievement, and advancement.
Unfortunately, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin’s steps on the moon on July 20, 1969, were the culmination of the United States of America as a country dedicated to advancing the interests of its founding, majority population. Six years earlier, a young black activist, Medgar Evers, was gunned down in Mississippi. It was his assassination, along with the events in 1963 Birmingham, that saw all moral authority ceded to blacks and their white liberal allies.
That is why the New York Times, on July 21, 1969, asked Evers’s brother Charles to write an editorial giving his opinion on the moon landing. Charles, just elected mayor of Fayette, Mississippi, wrote a roadmap for our country’s future:
As a daring adventure, this exploration of the moon compares with the voyage of Columbus in 1492. There are a lot of similarities. Like our astronauts, Columbus left behind a world crowded with people who didn’t have enough to eat, people who had no decent clothes to put on their backs, people who had no doctor to look after them when they were sick . . . .
http://www.amren.com/news/2014/06/america-in-2034-5/