When it is smart to hate
Hate Evil
Dennis Prager, Real Clear Politics
From a diversity-first, multiculturalist perspective, there is only moral relativity. There is no universal good. There is no definitive evil. So, for liberally indoctrinated westerners, there is no line between the two.
Future historians will see "progressives" as the catalyst if westernized and Americanized notions of what is "good" get snuffed out. And they'll see conservatives stifled and rendered mute by political correctness as equally culpable dupes.
Dennis Prager, Real Clear Politics
Western Europeans and their American counterparts loathe the language of good and evil and correctly attribute it to religious -- i.e., Judeo-Christian -- values. Among those values is fighting evil and "burning evil out from your midst." And to do that, you have to first hate it. Because if you don't hate evil, you won't fight it, and good will lose.
From a diversity-first, multiculturalist perspective, there is only moral relativity. There is no universal good. There is no definitive evil. So, for liberally indoctrinated westerners, there is no line between the two.
Future historians will see "progressives" as the catalyst if westernized and Americanized notions of what is "good" get snuffed out. And they'll see conservatives stifled and rendered mute by political correctness as equally culpable dupes.












