Honor and Respect
By Eastan McNeal on November 5, 2008 at 11:00 AM in Current Affairs
How do we protect it?
We honor our fellow Americans for exorcising their right to vote. We respect our country for being built upon that honor.
Let us not critique the Obama children and their dresses. But let us fear the vindictive hatred their mother has for all things red, white and blue. Let us remember that we do not trust this son of men who had no respect for women. Let us remember that his chief advisor, who we have been repeatedly told by team world-order was not involved in his campaign, has had a long agenda of running a world domination operation. But unlike this advisor’s last president this one is not a Phd who has questions. This one is Barack.
It almost does not matter when this started. What matters to us today is that it is here.
Washington, DC (PRWEB) April 15, 2008 — The United States is in the grip of a soft coup. The Brzezinski faction has won over the power elite, and the neo-cons are already lame ducks. Obama is the elitist favorite for a facelift to the tottering empire.
Obama is a Brzezinski protege who has been scripted in the role of messianic figure, a key ingredient in the planned hysteria of the “people power” coups perfected by the CIA and its NGO’s in Eastern Europe, and now brought home to short-circuit America’s political process.
Barack Obama is a deeply troubled personality, a megalomaniac front man for a synthetic revolution by intelligence agencies using fake polls, mobs of swarming adolescents, super-rich contributors, and an orchestrated media honeymoon, to seize power.
I considered for a while, after hearing the election results, to resign from writing. I was silent for over 20 years and came back out only to share my thoughts with NoQuarter. I wrote my first article here to encourage bloggers to investigate and add undeniable facts to others’ research. Many great writers have gone far beyond that little movement I joined.
Sometimes the difference we make in our world is not so much defined by what we do, but what we don’t do. I observe our political landscape, just like you do. I may have more experience than many in the field of planning and analyzing campaigns. But the most enlightening part of my political experience this year has been reading the comments posted to pieces on this site. People from every walk of life have been contributing insight on this blog. You have made it one of the most – if not the most – thoughtful places to visit on the internet.
If Larry Johnson chooses to keep this blog active, as a place where we can post observations and critique of our government and its political partner, then I would be proud to be one to volunteer to attempt to contribute to the conversation.
What say you, NQ contributors and commentators? Should Larry keep this haven of open thinking going?






















