Orwell Rolls in His Grave

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  1. GetAClue on January 25th, 2008

    An unquestioning acceptance of non-stop propaganda, sodium fluoride in our water and toothpaste, MSG in our food and an unsatiable appetite for bread and circuses via the almighty god of Television defines the American today. We have become altogether the most pathetic society in the history of the world.

  2. Ken Ray on January 25th, 2008

    Remember how dark and frightening Orwell’s 1984 was the first time you read it? In some ways we’re past it. In others, we’re almost there. If you want a timeline/quick-read on what that feminist-Marxist Clinton is bringing, read Orwell’s Animal Farm.

    Dear Currupt Washington Bastards:

    The battle has not yet begun. And we have the Right given to us in the Constitution to do so. So, keep trying to seperate us and destroy our Bill of Rights.

    The Bell Tolls for You…

  3. DTFreak on January 25th, 2008

    I just read 1984 last year and seems tame in comparison to the reality we live today.

  4. Ken Ray on January 25th, 2008

    DT:

    You’re right on. With cameras everywhere, Echelon and Carnivor satelites reading e-mails and listening in on phone calls, media corruption, chemicals in food and such to control, lies, lies, and more lies. It’s horrifying to say the least when you see it all–and not many talk about it. I think that’s the most frightening part. When will everyone wake up?

    Other good books are:

    Atlas Shrugged and Anthem, by Ayn Rand
    The Trial, by Franz Kafka
    Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley

    KR

  5. Chris Elfers on January 25th, 2008

    More proof the majority in this country are willfully ignorant would be hard to find.

    The US attorney general hangs a PICTURE of George Orwell in his office in some twisted version of hero worship:

    http://www.reuters.com/article.....0620080125

    In some twisted, bizarre, and impossible to follow logic, he claims that he has the picture there because he admires George Orwell’s clarity of thought.

    Not to say that Orwell didn’t have clarity in his writing. But to pick that attribute and THAT PERSON to exemplify clarity out of all the billions on Earth strains credulity far past the breaking point.

    More likely, it reminds him how easy it is to mold people because they will ignore facts if a sweeter lie is told instead.

  6. Aaron Williams on January 27th, 2008

    Read Terry Goodkind’s Sword of truth series
    Wizards First Rule: “People are inherently stupid, given proper motivation, almost anyone will believe almost anything. Because people are stupid, they will believe a lie because they want to believe it’s true, or because they are afraid it’s true.”I started reading Terry’s works in 1994 at about fourteen years olds. Needlees to say his works heavily affected me, even more than some of the world’s greatest philosophers. His books are relevant to what we are thinking and feeling today. The Imperial Order is coming.

  7. John Mascaro on January 27th, 2008

    Ken Ray, great post and I agree.

    But remember - our rights come from The Creator they are not given us by the Constitution; and, as such, they are unalienable. The Constitution merely enumerates them as already existing and even says that the ones enumerated e.g., “Life, Liberty and The Pursuit f Happiness and the ten in The Bill of Rights are only several i.e., “among these”, thus implying that there are others not so enumerated but equally existing and unalienable.

    Peace.