Dead[ly] wrong
Despite decades of harsh reality, I'm still sometimes surprised by the convoluted multiple wrongness of our rulers and Leninist Poison Vendors.
News item this morning:Nation Ponders King in Wake of Arizona Shootings
The federal holiday honoring Martin Luther King Jr. has taken on added meaning for most Americans this year, as they try to make sense of the violence in Arizona that left six people dead and a member of Congress fighting for her life.
"Dr. King's message was about inclusion and the recognition of human dignity, of human rights and making sure that all of our voices are heard," said Imani Perry, an African-American studies professor at Princeton University. "I hope people in Arizona, in particular, embrace that part of his message. The politics in Arizona recently have often seemed to revolve around excluding people."
Uncountable lies, uncountable inversions of logic.
Plain fact: Loughner was able to be out of an institution, and able to purchase a weapon,
precisely because of the "Rights Movements" inspired by Comrade King.
Before these movements, the ample warning signs provided by Loughner would have led to an involuntary commitment, and he would have been rationally and sanely
excluded from the general public. His
voice would have been confined to his own head, and would not have been
heard via his Glock.
If we're going to associate Comrade King with this event at all, the sole
factual conclusion is that six people died
because of the evil work of Comrade King's followers.
Labels: Loughnerian Logic