What has happened on the streets of major American cities in recent days has far less to do with an imagined “institutional racism” than with the fact that there is no longer anything, other than perhaps geography, that binds us all together.
Increasingly, I try to avoid news-binging, watching assiduously all
the compiled, feculent bilge that passes for news reporting these days,
those authorized “stories” fed to us like tasteless, industrial-strength
pablum to non-rational infants, or more, to non compos mentis inmates of the giant asylum which is what our country is quickly becoming.
Viewing just a few minutes of Fox’s coverage of the reaction to the
death of George Floyd in Minneapolis this past week, I was struck by the
essential sameness of what could have been seen—and was, in fact,
seen—over on MSNBC or even CNN. First, the cries and jeremiads about
“racism”: Will we ever overcome that “problem” which seems to be endemic
in our history, in our character, the broadcasters exclaimed in virtual
unison? Then, the hand-wringing about the destruction of property, the
“wrong way to express revulsion at Floyd’s death,” again said by almost
all the pundits, although a few of the more exalted social justice types
at CNN expressed degrees of sympathy for the rioters (after all they
were just exhibiting their “justified rage”).
More @ The Abbeville Institute
I agree. There is very little binding the USA together any more except land-mass-of-residence and DNA. And sometimes, looking at the rioters and others, I wonder about the DNA.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately it's not like 1861 which had distinct lines.
DeleteNo. Any separation would be more like India into India/Pakistan, with entire cities rent between the two.
DeleteAny way will do.
Delete