The Offensive Against Offense
By Joe B. Hewitt
Super
sensitive, whining college students, who are forever being offended, are the
result of seeds of sedition sown during the Cold War.
Remember
sensitivity training two generations
back? Employers forced their employees to practice political correctness, before the term became widely used. Civil
servants and police officers were special targets who had to endure sensitivity
training.
J.
Edgar Hoover, in his book, the Masters of
Deceit, said the communists accused Americans of doing what the communists
did in order to cover their own moral transgressions. They were heartless. Many
people in communist countries were executed when the only evidence was an accusation. Long before the Cold War,
Joseph Stalin ordered Ukrainian food stocks confiscated and starved millions
while accusing Americans of being crass and uncaring.
The
policy of American communists during that time was to encourage their children
to go into law, journalism, or academia to provide the most influence on the
next generations, according to Hoover. The offspring of communists and
communist sympathizers, although not communists themselves, inherited hate for
American patriotism. Is that not obvious now that they have practically taken
over the Universities and news media?
They
taught a generation of college students to be super sensitive, going about with
hair-trigger nervous reaction to any perceived offense. They have developed a talent of wringing their hands while
at the same time slipping a dagger under your ribs.
The
whiners can't abide cowboys and Indians, or any ethnic designation. We dare not
criticize anyone or any group. But at the same time the whiners accuse the more
plain-spoken of us of being bigots if
we disagree with them. They throw the word hate
around like a wild guided missile, to blow up any who oppose their super
liberal agenda. Another slander they sling about is to accuse people of being sexist.
Their
scales of justice are so askew that they more often defend the criminal rather
than the victim and suggest the crime was his/her own fault. They tend to
excuse the meanest evil person while nit-picking and probing for faults in the
best people.
So,
while they whine and whimper about being offended, they practice the most
offensive behavior. They are still using the communist play book.
Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil;
that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet,
and sweet for bitter! (Isaiah 5:20)Joe B. Hewitt's Home Site