Tuesday, August 31, 2010

All I'll Say About Glenn Beck's Soiree

The crowd itself included veterans, parents, disabled Americans, people of all ages and – contrary to some criticism leveled against the rally – attendees of many races and ethnicities.
Day Gardner, president of the National Black Pro-Life Union based in Washington, D.C., for example, stood on the platform with Alveda King as she recalled her uncle Martin Luther King Jr.'s historic "I Have a Dream" speech. 

Before the multitudes assembled Alveda King proclaimed, "If Uncle Martin could be here today … he would surely remind us that as brothers and sisters, united by one blood in one single race, the human race, we are called to honor God and to love each other." 

To tell you the truth, Glenn Beck sometimes sort of weirdo's me out. Then again, my spiritual beliefs  are private and personal so it isn't all that unusual for the likes of me to be taken aback by the likes of someone wearing a religion on his arm.

The bottom line is that half a million people, of all shapes, sizes, ethnicity's, and races, had a rally for America and Americans, then left the place cleaner than they found it.

When Barry's lovers attended his far smaller inaugural party to usher in the era of hate-America-first and revive racism whenever possible, they came close to forever destroying the mall area and most of its surroundings.

Americans build stuff. Liberals destroy things. And not for nothing but is there ANYTHING cuter than a sweet little girl waving an American flag...

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