Joyanna Adams

Nobody's Opinion

“Communist Agenda, 2020”

Nobody’s Opinion

So, here we are: right in the middle of a communist ‘revolution.’ They have tried everything to get rid of President Trump, but he was doing such a great job, they had to resort to the unthinkable: spread a virus. Use that virus to get everyone away from each other, and in the meantime, bring out the Obama/Soros army of BLM thugs, to destroy the country. Pit the blacks against the whites.

Release the fear, the terror. Destroy the churches, and the flag.

Statues of American history are being torn down, and the police ordered to stand down.

The white people are being told they are racist, and must take a knee to the blacks and ‘colored.’ Give power to them. Step aside.

So far, the white people have not taken the bait to attack back. But if they go for our guns, which they WILL, then all hell will probably break out.

I thought this guy had it right. Almost an Any Rand road to destruction scenario, and if like John Kerry threatens, that a huge civil war will break out IF President Trump is reelected, the TRUTH must be told to anyone who will listen.

Joe Biden even threatened to demand Generals go and take him out.

It’s not just President Trump they are after: It’s the whole of Western Civilization and democracy.

The only thing we have left is our vote, which so far, if we can convince enough people NOT to fall for “mail in or die” BS,. and go and vote, Trump will probably get another four years.

Nevertheless, too many of our young men and women are completely ignorant of history

The good news is: The ‘progressive-communists’ have shown their hand. And as President Trump pointed out last night in his speech, the whole world can see what democratic-communists will do to your life.

It’s war alright, and we are in it.

June 21, 2020 Posted by | American History | , | Leave a comment

Nobody Flashes Tucker Carlson…Again

Nobody Flashes

Once again, and because I’m on vacation, the great insights of Tucker Carlson.

Just in case, you missed it like I did.

June 19, 2020 Posted by | American History | , | Leave a comment

Bunker Funk Joy

Nobody Knows—

That today was my birthday. Great. When you get to be my age, you WANT to ignore them. My husband has been bugging me for over a week…

“What do you want to do?”

I would have loved to say, “Let’s go see the Redwood Trees!” Ha. Well. That was out.

Lets just say, I came up with—nothing.   Once upon a time, before the Wuhan virus and the Chinese communist BLM takeover, you could go anywhere. Not anymore.

My husband said, “Well, what do you want to do? It’s your day.” Wow. This was REALLY hard. What to do?

I can tell you, and I must admit. I’m BORED to death with shopping the usual BIG stores: Wal-Mart, Target, Kohls, And all the franchises you see from coast to coast…selling the same old stuff, the same old BORING things. Things with no character. No uniqueness. Just plain mass productions.

I’m even bored looking at them. And THEY have all remained open. Besides, I think Steve Jobs had it right. Wear a nice turtleneck, a good pair of jeans, comfortable shoes or shorts, NOBODY in the Mid West gets dressed up anymore.

Sometimes when I see those old forty movies, where the men and women all dress up in suits and beautiful dressed and go dancing on Saturday night…I think “What the hell happened?”

Couples don’t even dance together anymore. The kids just jump up and down. But back to WHAT TO DO?

The biggest attractions in St. Louis were closed.  The ZOO was closed. The Botanical Gardens was closed. It was too hot to rent bikes, or even to hike. St. Louis summers can be brutal if your not used to the heat.

So, we went to St. Charles. St Charles, MO, the main street is the ONLY place left in the whole St. Louis/St. Charles area where a string of about 40 shops amid various restaurants will take you back to the America we all loved. Specialty shops, of every kind. After parking on the cobblestone street, we went into one of my favorite shops, owned by a gay man, who sells…fake flower arrangements, Christmas ornaments, some clothes, little statures, every space is filled with delight.

I went in for this hand lotion that I love. It was invented by a nurse who worked in a burn unit. And of course, the size I was looking for was not in stock.

The owner of the store, followed me into the room, and I picked up the sample display jar.

“We are out of stock on that” he said. “But I can order it for you.”

“Okay, that would be great.”

And then, get this: He said open your purse and just put the sample in, in other words, he was giving me a jar almost full for free.

Now, merchants NEVER do this. This entire street and ALL it’s shops have been shut down due to the mayor. This little street of merchants and small time owners IS filled on various festival days. The 4th of July being the biggest. ALL and EVERY festival has been canceled. People come by the thousands from all over Missouri to attend and these shops thrive on the crowds.

These poor shop owners.

My husband ended up buying me a wooden cardinal bird…because he felt that we should buy something since the man was giving us that lotion for free. The stuff is not cheap.

I swear the guy gave me that free lotion because I had on my head, a USA cap with the number 45 on it.  He was so kind. I got the feeling he was that way because of my hat. But he couldn’t say that now, could he?

We left the shop feeling great that someone had been kind to us. We searched for a restaurant that would be open.

We ended up eating outside at a restaurant, and all the table were full. Mostly of old ladies. It was a beautiful day. We split a plate of nachos, and an apple caramel dessert.

The rest of the day we drove around, went downtown, and saw the empty shell of a city. Filled with BLM signs, and boarded up stores, and crazy drivers.

So, I had to wonder tonight. St. Louis, used to be a great city. It took years for it to fall apart into the sucked out hollow mess it is now. Everybody moved out, and the thugs and criminals moved in.

St. Charles is the last remaining vestibule of sanity, where they still sell paintings of George Washington and old radios. A path where Lewis and Clark started their long journey to the West. A path where the old America still remains.

And their statue was still there.

And the streets were PACKED with cars. That was a sign that despite what you hear, people long to get outside and walk among other people. I pray that the last place to shop where you can see a hundred different products displayed with the care that only the shop owners who dreamed of having their own little place on the earth to work, survives this war.

This social distancing is insane. Clearly, it’s aim is to destroy the little guy. The little shops. The little working man.

Yes, I was born on Bunker Hill Day. President Trump was born on Flag Day.  And so…

Today I decided that MY life, or what’s left of it, matters too.

I am going to start wearing that hat more often.

 

June 17, 2020 Posted by | American History | | 3 Comments

THIS IS WAR

Nobody’s Opinion

Clearly, the destruction of the police in democratic cities all over the United States is in progress. WHY the republicans don’t declare it as a WAR…by the democratic/communistic cabal of thugs and criminals is beyond all commons sense.

But, clearly, they have been planning this takeover of the world for some time. And  yes, it IS the world. Why the heck would London and Paris be protesting an AMERICAN black man being killed by an AMEIRCAN police man?

Over 600 police have been injured by the leftist idiots, mostly young kids black and white, who lost their jobs, are told they can’t talk to each other, and now with one video (WHO TOOK THIS VIDEO? ANYBODY?) has the whole WORLD up in arms against white people.

Mainly the old white people who weren’t brainwashed by their socialist schools.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: While they CLAIM it the white supremist being violet it’s not. It’s the white and black Marxists doing all the violence.

WHATEVER CRIME THEY ACCUSE THE CONSERVIATIVES OF…THEY ARE COMMINTING. 

These are tyrants. Who have joined with the Chinse to take over the world

The onslaughts of social engineering is so abhorrent I feel like it’s the communist revolution and Obama and his merry black women and men of color and sympathy with ISLAM, are behind.

This lock down of masks and social distancing is ALL about keeping everyone from talking to each other, and promoting rage and submission.

Sorry…maybe tomorrow I’ll be in a better mood, but tonight. I need a hot tub.

Obama: Hillary: Soros: BLM: Words cannot express how evil can keep on living, but then again, they’re not finished.

June 14, 2020 Posted by | Agenda 21 | , , | 1 Comment

Comrades…KNEEL!

Nobody Cares

Eat the rich! And boy did they.

No doubt any body who owns land in Texas or Florida can make a fortune selling that land right now.

And right after this, in the next movement of the great racial war against President Trump, our democratic Congress, places the flags of Africa around their necks and BOW to their masters.

All for show of course. The blacks surely will fall for it, won’t they?

They are going to pass another “bill” with all kinds of free stuff in it…and once again, claim that ‘BLACKS WERE BROUGHT HERE IN CHAINS!
Oh….silence for the black victims! Promising to brings jobs, health care, prosperity, and NO POLICE, to the neighborhoods who have been forgotten.

Who are now selling all the stuff they looted on e-bay.

Comrades…KNEEL before your new gods.

 

June 8, 2020 Posted by | American History | , , , | Leave a comment

Eat Bugs? You First Twitter Man

Nobody Wonders

Meat prices have risen because of the virus and lockdown of meat companies. BEFORE this lockdown, the liberals were claiming that we eat too much meat. When nobody gave up meat, they said cow farts would destroy the planet. When THAT didn’t work, the virus was released, and the meat processes were locked up because of the Wuhan virus.

Many of us are now eating chicken and have decided to wait for the meat prices to come down.

Protein is the food that makes us all strong. I once asked Lee Salk, (Jonas’ Brother) what he thought about the vegan revolution and he said that man was made to eat steak. Said his brother would agree. Many scientists believe the growth in the human brain, from the caveman to the man of high intelligence, came about when man started to eat— meat.

With all the restaurants closing down, soon, only the very rich will be able to afford a good steak. Why do I think they would want this?

How long have they been pushing veganism? Just a few weeks ago, a man who helped start Twitter, said that he was a vegan, and oh yeah, he had to have a heart transplant. Somehow, this man bragged about how healthy he was during the transplant. And how he recovered so well. It never dawned on him that maybe being a vegan for so many years ruined his heart. And protein is needed more as you grow older.

So, it’s no surprise the the U.N. wants us all to eat bugs now to save the planet. Giving the global weezbies an opportunity to promote their agenda for starving humans. Tell them to eat BUGS! Stalin would approve.

 

Nobody Wonders how many idiots are endorsing this madness? Something tells the legalization of Marijuana will help this along, as everybody knows, a stoned person just wants to EAT!

On another global note, the E.U. is continuing to get England transformed into Little Mecca.

I’m watching ‘Grant’ tonight and the revelations is clear: The democrats are at WAR with America. They literally have declared war on America. Not just Trump. The whole of America. As Obama once said, and Biden also, “To fundamentally change” the America we all know and love.

The global elites are not scared of anyone: They continue their global mass Tower of Babel migrant mix, and they work together. Here Nigel Farage points out that the French Navy is escorting illegal migrants into England. And the British government, does nothing.

Here, the democrats not only help illegals to get them in, they give them voting rights when they get here.

Nobody Wonders how in the world will the normal citizen of any democratic country stop their corrupts leaders, when their leaders are making it happen?

After watching Grant, it’s clear: Americans must fight to keep the America they love.

They will use the “virus” to keep us from gathering, from speaking.

I think, more than ever now, this “virus” is a means to an end. An end nobody wants a second America Civil War.

But it seems, that’s where we are heading.

 

May 26, 2020 Posted by | American History, Uncategorized, War | , | 2 Comments

Nobody Flashes with Tears of Honor For Those Who Gave Their Lives For Us All

May 24, 2020 Posted by | American Soldiers | | Leave a comment

The RINOs Go on Defcon Five

Nobody Wonders

Funny: What a little beachlight can do!

Governor Newtron of California got pissed off that thousands of Americans disobeyed him and went out to the beaches last week. And that act, showed the rest of the globalist Nazi’s that maybe releasing the corona virus to “fundamentally change” America, was..well, even THAT was not enough to get rid of President Trump.

What do to? Everybody is finding out that the Democrats are sticking up with the Chinese! That wasn’t suppose to happen. They just haven’t gotten complete control of that pesky internet yet.

So, out comes good old George W. Bush. The man whose father help start all the NAFTA’s and merging of the 3 North American nations into one big Spanish/English continent. Trump is destroying that big Bushie dream.

Why, that nasty no good President Trump just won’t BEHAVE, or act like a good President should!

What that really means is that he won’t be the controlled KING, they want. These globalists’ who run everything want a KING…who will act gracious, and obey their commands, and read their Harvard written orders in ‘caring’ tones of loving dishonesty. Someone who will do whatever it takes to ‘fundamentally’ change America.

One, who can read a good flowery speeches, after disasters.

I don’t know about you, but when George W. flew around on his airplane for hours, and then took WEEKS to get to the ground on 9/11…that speech he made, actually looked fake to me.

I don’t believe for a Cuomo New York Minute that George W. Bush cares one wit about the American people.

This article, really pisses me off. Go ahead, read the “The Bushes were WONDERFUL” crap if you can stomach it. It’s a liberal praising the President for trying to ‘unit’ the country.

https://theweek.com/articles/912481/how-george-w-bush-exposed-trumps-biggest-failure

And here’s the Hollywood slick  video:

Sure, it was a very big attack on Trump. When you are an X President, and you release a video that ONLY the President has a right to do, you are telling the world that YOU think you made the better President.

All through the 8 years of Obama, X-President George W. said not one single word about anything Obama did.  And during all the NASTY attacks on Trump, he has kept silent. There is no doubt in my mind that George W. probably helped with the coup.

Would Obama have kept silent if some comedian held up his severed bloody head? Would Bush have kept silent if a likeness of him was assasinated every night on a Broadway stage? Would Obama put up with reporters insinuating he was killing people? I turned the channel the other day and the lady talking had a “FUCK TRUMP” tee-shirt on. Nobody complains. And yet, anybody supporting Trump is kicked off twitter and YouTube.

How would Obama and Bush liked that?

The article, and both video’s are attacks on our President.

But in other roles — addressing the nation in a time of domestic or international crisis, delivering the State of the Union speech to Congress and the country, meeting with foreign counterparts privately, in press briefings, and at state dinners — the president speaks differently. In these settings, he is the head of state, the country’s leader, charged with using his considerable powers to do what is best for the political community as a whole, not just the parts represented by his own party.

This is part of the job that Trump is thoroughly incapable of performing. Instead of aspiring to unity, he exudes divisiveness and provokes antagonism with everything he says. How  much time has he devoted  to expressions of condolence or sympathy for the nearly 70,000 people who have thus far died from COVID-19? Five minutes? It’s outrageous.

So, why are the RINO’s back? Well, I must admit, it was good to see our beloved Trumpster back in fighting form today…he countered it all with this:

“A group of RINO Republicans who failed badly 12 years ago, then again 8 years ago, and then got BADLY beaten by me, a political first timer, 4 years ago, have copied (no imagination) the concept of an ad from Ronald Reagan, ‘Morning in America’, doing everything possible to get even for all of their many failures,” Trump wrote online just before midnight on Monday.

And he didn’t even have to have a speech writer to do it.

I don’t know about you, but I didn’t find any comfort in Bush’s leadership after 9/11. I thought, he acted just like a puppet. And then, protected himself.

A REAL President would have flown out of that kindergarten room, and not have flown around for 16 hours…I don’t care what he says. Bush, like the Clintons ALWAYS claim “I knew nothing!” while they knew everything.

Fifty years from now, the Bushes will be remembered much as the Obamas’….two dynasties trying to push America into a One World Government. Two lucky families that got to run the world.

When George W. Bush kept silent about all the crimes of the Clintons, he is just as guilty as the democrats FOR those crumbling cities in that video.

All talk. No action. Except to make sure THEY stay in power, and get richer.

What do most Americans think about George’s sly attack on Trump?

Well, they turned off the comments. That should tell you.

AND THEN CAME TRUMP. AND THE PEOPLE SAID:

NO MORE BUSHES.

Go back into your hole George. AMERICANS think the video you did, was just another RINO sore loser message.

And TRUMP is back!

May 5, 2020 Posted by | American History, Uncategorized | , | Leave a comment

If They Can Arrest A Mother in a Park With Her Child, They Can Arrest Comey

Nobody Wins

A government of laws and not of men…..John Adams 

FINALLY. Even though the whole world knew that General Flynn was framed, thanks to some patriotic citizens that NEVER let up, like Flynn’s lawyer and Tom Fitton, they have proof that Obama’s whole administration was in on taking out the President, and they started with General Flynn.

And NOBODY will win if James Comey, and all the other ones involved are NOT prosecuted and found guilty of their crimes. There was a illegal coup attempted by Obama, Hillary, and Comey, who used all our institutions to try to destroy an elected President.

We all know.

Also, if they are NOT punished, just repeating, “This should never happen to any President ever again.” is not enough. It should go to the Supreme Court and they all should face prosecution.

Listen to Comey BRAG about how he knew the honest men like Flynn and Trump (He is gleeful they don’t yet know the rules) could easily be caught in a trap with lies and deceit. (By the way, if you try and its says Media won’t play, keep pushing the start button.)

General Flynn AND President Trump were vilified, AS WERE the American people.

We either have a justice system, or we don’t. If we don’t, we might as well be just another communist country.

George Washington would have had these men shot. We don’t do that anymore, and that’s why, it will keep happening.

UNLESS, the American people insist on all these top elites to be punished like anybody would be.

This WAS high treason, and probably why Nancy is hiding near her refrigerator.

All of us should DEMAND…justice. If not, we deserve the horror they are planning for us all, and to which we are all being subject to.

https://twitter.com/V_4_Vendatta/status/1255106349941358593?s=20

 

From FBI Emails: 

“I have a question for you,” Page wrote in an email that included Strzok. “Could the admonition re 1001 be given at the beginning at the interview? Or does it have to come following a statement which agents believed to be false? Does this policy speak to that?

She added: “It seems to be if the former then it would be an easy way to just casually slip that in, Of course you know sir federal law makes it a crime to…”

A while later, Page gets an emailed response: “I haven’t read the policy lately, but if I recall correctly, you can say it any time. I’m 90 percent sure about that, but I can check in the a.m.”

April 29, 2020 Posted by | American History, Uncategorized | , , | Leave a comment

Nobody Remembers: Religion in American Founding

Nobody Remembers

A reader sent this to me, and I just wanted to share it. A bit of history is always good for the soul. And of course, anything about the Adams is fun to me. Besides, I didn’t have much time today to write…all ridiculous crap anyway, like President Trump wants to inject everyone with bleach.

Good god, they never stop.

Anyway, I bought a new parakeet today, just a baby, and I was all day making sure that my other 5 parakeets didn’t reject it. It sat alone all day, looking sad, because none of the other birds would go up to it, so I was going to take it back (never returned a pet in my life) but my husband talked me out of it. What a softie. I’ve yet to name it. I mean, I DO have a parakeet named Corona. No kidding. I bought him the day after the eclipse.

You never know about these things: birds can be just as finnicky as people.

Anyway, thanks to Mrs O! For sending me this excellent post! This was really good stuff. I’m going to get some of his books.

Enjoy!


Don’t know much about history?

HISTORY | How concerns over corrupt Anglicanism helped spur American colonists to revolt
by Marvin Olasky

Posted 4/04/20, 02:42 pm

I’ve given more than 300 speeches in more than 180 cities over the years, but since I’m turning 70 this year it’s time to retire from speechifying. I developed over time about 10 “stump speeches” on various subjects to be used with modifications in different places, and we plan to post a few of them on the first Saturday of the month as part of our Saturday Series. Here’s one, first delivered at Hillsdale College in 1996, about causes of the Revolutionary War.

“Don’t know much about history” is the first line of a great song about love, but it’s also an accurate description of the state of the nation’s knowledge. Let me quote you some answers to test questions concerning the American Revolution that teachers have collected. Here’s one: “The colonists won the war and no longer had to pay for taxis.” Another: “Delegates from the original 13 states formed the Contented Congress.” And one more: “Benjamin Franklin declared, ‘A horse divided against itself cannot stand.’”

It was Abraham Lincoln, of course, who said that a house divided against itself cannot stand. He made that statement on the eve of the Civil War, but the great war of the 1860s was actually the second civil war in American history. The first civil war was the American Revolution, and three major camps dominated political discussion at that time.

Those favoring big government sided with the British. Those favoring smaller government, lower taxes, and more local control turned against the British. Those who did not care much about questions of big or little but yearned for righteous government did not necessarily side with big or little. They merely wanted officials to act according to Biblical principles. They were the swing vote.

In time, the small government and righteous government folks joined to make a Revolution. I’ll discuss how that happened.

The book most quoted by political writers and leaders prior to the American Revolution was not one of John Locke’s but one of God’s: the book of Deuteronomy.

But what issues drove the colonists to fight against the most powerful government in the world at that time? You might think the answer is simple: Americans fought for liberty. Leaders read John Locke and learned the right way to build a society. But here’s a problem: The book most quoted by political writers and leaders prior to the American Revolution was not one of John Locke’s but one of God’s: the book of Deuteronomy.

Significantly, Deuteronomy, like other books of the Bible, would not have told colonists in the abstract whether British rulers, the representatives of big government, were forces for good or evil. Sure, their own observations concerning the problems of big government backed up Biblical warnings about tax, spend, and enslave monarchs: See 1 Samuel 8. But they also knew that Jesus Himself was born during the reign of Augustus Caesar, certainly an emblem of big government, and Christ did not demand the overthrow of Rome.

What Jesus did say was, “Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s, and to God what is God’s.” Although the division was not always clear, the founders understood taxes were Caesar’s, as long as taxes were not used to attack what was God’s. But that’s how colonists in the 1760s feared new taxes would be used. They thought their taxes would go to support not only governmental functions but also a corrupt Anglican denomination, which had abandoned Biblical Trinitarian concepts and become deistic in principle and materialistic in practice.

Concern about Anglican corruption was enormous in those days. Around London, some parsons wore riding boots under their cassocks so they could ride to the chase with their hounds the minute services were over. Congregations in high-back pews repaid pastoral disinterest in kind by eating during the sermon, to avoid taking time from their subsequent pursuits. Britain’s John Brown complained that Anglican priests “despise the Duties of their Parish to wander about, as the various Seasons invite, to every Scene of false Gaiety.”

One foreign visitor commented on “how fat and fair [English] parsons are. They are charged with being somewhat lazy, and their usual plumpness makes it suspected that there’s some truth in it.” One pious lady, Hannah More, complained that among the upper classes, the Bible was “the most unfashionable of books.”

Writers and artists skillfully depicted the decline. Poet William Cowper depicted the typical parson as “loose in morals and in manners vain, in conversation frivolous, in dress Extreme. At once rapacious and profuse … well prepared by ignorance and sloth, by infidelity and love of world, to make God’s work a sinecure.” Artist Joshua Reynolds pointed out that the 18th century London elite often lacked even knowledge of the Bible, let alone belief in it. When he showed leading aristocrats his painting of the prophet Samuel, they asked who Samuel was.

Compulsory tithes went to support a minister who preached required quarterly sermons against fornication and drunkenness while regularly indulging in such activities.

Across the Atlantic, the Virginia House of Burgesses complained that many local parsons were known largely for their ability to throw dice, deal cards, and “gabble in a pulpit, roar in a tavern, exact [money] from their parishes, [and] give themselves to excess in drinking or riot.” Compulsory tithes went to support a minister who preached required quarterly sermons against fornication and drunkenness while regularly indulging in such activities.

Colonists could console themselves with the thought that the worst abuses were across the ocean, and that Americans did not have to put up with Anglican bishops lording it over them. The American part of the denomination was run out of London, and that vital distance limited the destructiveness of Anglicanism in America.

So, all stayed fairly cool—until British officials during the 1760s decided imposition of theological controls over the Colonies would help to keep them under political control. Up to that decade, Anglicanism had been a minor player in New England, but New Hampshire leaders were annoyed in 1761 when London decreed that all schoolteachers emigrating from England to teach in New Hampshire had to be Anglicans certified by the Bishop of London.

Similarly, Massachusetts ministers were furious when they incorporated a missionary society to help in the conversion of Indians to Christianity, only to see London officials disallow the organization because it was not under Anglican control. Connecticut ministers attacked “imperious bishops who love to Lord it over God’s heritage,” and spoke often of the “pomp, grandeur, luxury and regalia” of Anglican worship and lives.

When London in 1768 seemed ready to appoint Anglican bishops who would live in America and amass the pomp and power of their Old World kin, the middle Colonies erupted. New York Presbyterian and political leader William Livingston criticized “the politics of the [Anglican] church … its thirst for domination.” The New York Gazette regularly attacked “ecclesiastical bondage.”

Pennsylvania Presbyterian Francis Allison said Anglicans should be free to worship as they saw fit, but “what we dread is their political power, and their courts.” The Pennsylvania Journal in 1768 ran 21 straight articles on the way that Anglican plans were “totally subversive of our Rights and Liberties.”

Southern colonists were used to Anglican establishment, but when Anglicans whipped some Baptist preachers and jailed others, James Madison condemned the “diabolic, hell-conceived principle of persecution.” Those who would later campaign for religious liberty often did so not out of a desire to restrict Christianity but to set up defenses for it against Anglican-style corruption.

Colonists’ concern about Anglicanism has not been emphasized by 21st-century historians who are accustomed to seeing the economy as the central campaign issue, with religious matters relegated to the closet of private concerns. Yet, the centrality of theology to the development of a revolutionary coalition was evident to John Adams and other contemporaries: Adams said London’s attempt to impose Anglicanism upon the Colonies, “as much as any other cause, arouse[d] the attention, not only of the inquiring mind, but of the common people, and urge[d] them to close thinking on the constitutional authority of Parliament over the colonies. … This was a fact as certain as any in the history of North America.”
Henry, a great speaker, and Adams, a great writer and organizer, tied together the Biblical and tax reasons for opposition to England.

The work of Patrick Henry in the South and Samuel Adams in the North heightened colonists’ concerns. Henry, a great speaker, and Adams, a great writer and organizer, tied together the Biblical and tax reasons for opposition to England. The two men understood how not the quantity of taxes but the lack of quality in what would be paid for—in part, an Anglican establishment—infuriated their fellow citizens. When London in 1768 proposed to appoint an Anglican bishop to live in and attempt to control churches within the Colonies, Henry and Adams were among those who yelled, seven years before Lexington and Concord, “The Bishops are coming, the Bishops are coming.”

Materialist historians looking for class conflict have portrayed Samuel Adams as an organizer of the proletariat, but Adams’ own emphasis was on “Endeavors to Promote the spiritual kingdom of Jesus Christ.” Once, when Adams wrote to a friend about the high points of a celebration, he stressed the sermon delivered that day. The friend wrote back, “An epicure would have said something about the clams, but you turn me to the prophet Isaiah.” In good and bad times Adams wrote of the need “to submit to the Dispensations of Heaven, Whose Ways are ever gracious, ever just.”

Adams always emphasized the connection between attacks on political rights and attempts to restrict religious rights. He repeatedly explained that “the religion and public liberty of a people are so intimately connected, their interests are interwoven, and cannot exist separately.” In 1765, he said the levying of taxes was part of a British plan to force submission to religious slavery: “I could not help fancying that the Stamp-Act itself was contrived with a design only to inure the people to the habit of contemplating themselves as the slaves of men; and the transition from thence to a subjection to Satan, is mighty easy.” Later in the 1760s, Adams continued to use his regular column in the Boston Gazette to explain how the British would use tax revenue to support Anglicanism.

Adams’ understanding of the Stamp Act eventually became standard throughout the Colonies. Materialist historians miss much of this because religious fervor to them is merely a sign of something else, but here’s what excited many colonists: One, the Stamp Act imposed taxes on documents in ecclesiastical courts. Two, the act allowed London to require that all transactions be conducted on officially stamped paper to be sold only by government-selected distributors. And three, Anglicans with influence could choke off dealings by dissenting churches by refusing to supply them with stamped paper. They could even jail dissenting ministers who broke the law.

The Stamp Act, in short, became not merely a tax issue but an ideological onslaught.

Colonists came to understand that if the Stamp Act were sustained, officials soon might have to hold Anglican views and pay tithes to support luxury-loving bishops. The Stamp Act, in short, became not merely a tax issue but an ideological onslaught. Even the St. James Chronicle of London acknowledged that “stamping and episcopizing our colonies were understood to be only different branches of the same plan of power.” John Adams, Samuel’s cousin, argued, “There seems to be a direct and formal design on foot, to enslave America.”

Patrick Henry also spiritually triangulated by connecting religious, political, and economic issues. When Henry became famous, those who did not like his theology complained that he resembled “a Presbyterian clergyman, used to haranguing the people.” Those who did not like his belief in democracy said Henry was “so infatuated that he goes about … praying and preaching amongst the common people.” (The horror!) Those who did not like the way he searched for opportunities to build a coalition between opponents of higher taxes and critics of Anglican corruption portrayed him as an opportunist.

An opportunist he was not. A seeker after opportunities he was. The first fell into his lap in 1763 when Anglican clerical leaders, desiring larger compulsory tithes, went to court to gather in some back tithes that London said they were legally owed.

Henry, arguing in court against the payments, spoke out against Anglican priests who were “rapacious harpies snatch[ing] from the hearth of their honest parishioner his last hoe-cake, from the widow and her orphan children their last milch cow.” He discussed the law not as an economic matter but as a moral concern, stating that although Anglican leaders wore the garb of humility and preached the beauty of charity, in practice they were greedy.

Henry’s dramatic expressiveness pushed along his oratory, but even the words he used before the jury were revolutionary. Henry proclaimed that an oppressive king “from being the father of his people, degenerated into a tyrant, and forfeits all rights to his subjects’ obedience.” The jury, which included both Anglicans and Presbyterians, agreed on a verdict for the local Anglican minister, as required—but established damages of one penny. When news of the verdict spread through Virginia, Henry was acclaimed not only for winning a case but for uniting theological and tax concerns.

During the remainder of the 1760s, Henry’s legal renown and income grew. He used some of that income to pay personally the fines that some Baptist ministers received for speaking out against corrupt Anglicanism—he was building a coalition. Colonists began predicting that if Anglican bishops were appointed to America they soon would demand the lavish incomes common among English bishops.

Presbyterians and other Dissenters also argued that American bishops would gain the political power their counterparts had in England. This meant that the question of Anglican establishment was politically as well as spiritually important. Even the Virginia House of Burgesses went on record as opposing “the pernicious Project of a few mistaken Clergymen, for introducing an American Bishop.”

Adams believed the establishment of Anglicanism would affect even those who did not care about the theological issues.

John Adams was an early Unitarian and by no means part of the religious right of his era. Still, he disliked British promotion of twin tyranny—a powerful state and an established church—and wrote columns in the Boston Gazette explaining, “If Parliament could tax us, they could establish the Church of England, with all its creeds, articles, tests, ceremonies, and tithes, and prohibit all other churches.”

Adams believed the establishment of Anglicanism would affect even those who did not care about the theological issues: “If Parliament can erect dioceses and appoint bishops, they may introduce the whole hierarchy, establish tithes, forbid marriages and funerals, establish religions, forbid dissenters, make schism heresy, impose penalties extending to life and limb as well as to liberty and property.”

They labeled their American opponents “Presbyterians and smugglers.” London tacticians, hoping to discourage the Presbyterian-smuggler alliance, argued that the politics of independent Colonies would be dominated by “deformed Pharisees” and “sanctified hypocrites.” Alexander Martin, North Carolina’s royal governor, explained to London authorities that the onset of revolution reflected “distinctions and animosities … between the people of the established Church and the Presbyterians.” But the London Evening Post recognized the dispute was broader. It reported that the colonists “equally detest the pageantry of a King and the supercilious hypocrisy of a Bishop.”

Parliament’s passage of the Quebec Act enraged many colonists. It made Roman Catholicism the state church in what had been French Canada. To make Catholicism the established religion of a British-controlled province was a slap in the face of New England’s Puritan tradition, but it could also be construed as precedent. The Suffolk Resolutions, which Massachusetts placed before the Continental Congress on September 17, 1774, argued that if the British established a dictatorial church in Canada, they could do the same in their own Colonies: The Quebec Act was “dangerous in an extreme degree to the Protestant religion and to the civil rights and liberties of all America.”

The Quebec Act also shocked colonists from the middle states and the South. The Continental Congress of 1774 emphasized the act in its petitions and declarations. Patrick Henry early in 1775 criticized the act and used Biblical language to decry gentlemen who cried “‘peace, peace’—but there is no peace.” He spoke of potential theological and political enslavement and demanded, “Why stand we here idle? Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, almighty God!”

Samuel Adams united small government and righteous government concerns when he spoke in Philadelphia one month after approval of the Declaration of Independence: “We have fled from the political Sodom; let us not look back, lest we perish and become a monument of infamy and derision to the world.”

Well, what now? What is America now? We have great cosmic power, as Aladdin’s genie might say—but morally, a tiny living space. Our 18th-century predecessors fought for liberty and virtue. Today, much of the world admires American liberty but sees us also as a monument to infamy and derision. Is that inevitable? Are the ravages of original sin such that we cannot have both liberty and virtue, because liberty quickly becomes vice-filled license? Or can we find a way to have our virtue and drink in liberty as well?

What emerged from the Revolutionary era was a sense that man cannot live by man alone. Americans had gone to war to keep their world safe from Anglican tyranny, but they knew if they did not worship God, some man-made tyranny would emerge. Americans needed the liberty to worship Him in diverse ways, but that He must be worshipped was clear to almost all—or else, we could not have both liberty and virtue.

Americans knew liberty and virtue could be maintained only through a continuation of Biblical belief or at least allegiance to Biblical principle, through God’s common grace. Repeat: Man cannot live by man alone. This the founders knew.

What do we know? We don’t know much about American history. We don’t know much about world history, either. Students on tests wrote that “Nero was a tyrant who tortured his subjects by playing the fiddle to them.” They wrote that “William Tell shot an arrow through an apple while standing on his son’s head.” They wrote that Sir Francis Drake, with the audacity typical of English sailors four centuries ago, “circumcised the world with a 100-foot clipper.”

These comments may be funny exceptions, but one survey revealed that more than half of high school seniors failed an easy multiple choice test about major events in American history. To pass, they only had to get 42 percent right! It’s no wonder that many citizens cannot discern the emptiness of proposed governmental panaceas—they don’t know that similar programs have been tried and have failed.

Historical illiteracy is a symptom of deeper problems. After all, why study history if it, like life itself, is merely a tale of sound and fury, signifying nothing? If our existence has no God-given purpose, why not major in meaninglessness?

America is a very religious country, as was Athens when the apostle Paul visited there almost 2,000 years ago. We worship hundreds of idols: New Age gods and goddesses, materialism, drugs, pornography, citations in academic journals, you name it. We have shrines devoted to feasting and fornicating.

In an age of relativism, I’d suggest that those of us who believe in Christ, the Lord of history, need to keep stressing the basics: If we are not here to live by the Bible, we might as well worship false gods by eating, drinking, and trying to be merry (although only a fool is merry in such circumstances).

We need to keep insisting that we have only two choices, as Moses told the Israelites: Choose life and good, or death and evil. Not knowing much about history matters, but not knowing much about God matters even more.

Marvin Olasky
Marvin is editor in chief of WORLD and the author of more than 20 books, including The Tragedy of American Compassion. His latest book is Reforming Journalism. Follow Marvin on Twitter @MarvinOlasky.

April 24, 2020 Posted by | American History | , | Leave a comment

Nobody Remembers: FREEDOM

Nobody Remembers

 “A Constitution of Government once changed from Freedom, can never be restored. Liberty, once lost, is lost forever.”
                                            ― John Adams

Bill Gates wants to shut America down for 18 months.

Nobody says: THAT’S Insanity.

We would lose all our freedoms, and the biggest fear would be that our freedoms would NEVER come back. Without freedom, all is lost.

The democrats and the globalists want us all to be controlled by the state. They are calling for a National takeover of everything.

President Trump, is fighting hard to keep America free. It’s a fight we should ALL fight for.

From the book BROKE, by Glenn Beck, where he grabs a man from history to explain;

Tocqueville, who visited America in the early nineteenth century, wrote that our balancing act between freedom to flourish or to be a total slacker is uniquely American and in sharp contrast to Europe. “In America it is freedom that is old—equality introduced by absolute power and under the rule of kings, was already infused into the habits of nations long before freedom had entered into their conceptions “  

European countries had become used to “equality of outcome” —which might sound okay until you learn that the outcome itself is not very good. Would you prefer to have a society where 25 percent live in wealth, 25 percent in poverty, and 50 percent in the middle, or would you prefer a society where 100 percent of the population lives sparingly? As Tocqueville wrote in apparent amazement. “Americans are so enamored of equality that they would rather be equal in slavery than unequal in freedom. “

In other words, the socialism they want, is just plain stupid.

John Adams once said that the reason America was so incensed by the British tyranny was that for over 100 years, they were used to ruling themselves. In their towns, they gathered and decided on the rules. So, America was USED to freedom.

This could be a turning point in world history. Let’s not blow it.

Too many men have fought and died for the freedom that we’ve all enjoyed.

Let’s not lose it forever over a virus, and a New World Order of Tyrants.

God be with our President.

April 2, 2020 Posted by | American History | , | Leave a comment

Nobody Reads About Power

Nobody Reads

While in his sixties, Henry Adams wrote this about the changes in history that he, as an historian, had come to conclusions about.

Ones’ belief had fattened on impossibilities. Before the boy was six years old, he had seen four impossibilities made actual –the ocean-steamer, the railway, the electric telegraph, and the Daguerreotype, nor could he ever learn which of the four had most hurried others to come.

During a million or two of years, every generation in turn had toiled with endless agony to attain and apply power, all the while betraying the deepest alarm and horror at the power they created. 

Nobody Wonders what Henry would think about bio-weaponizing a virus?

April 2, 2020 Posted by | Globalization | , | Leave a comment

Nobody’s Fool: Ray Stevens

Nobody’s Fool

This was made in 2012, and since then it’s been found out that millions of fraudulent votes were cast for democrats in 2012, not just the dead. In fact so many were discovered it’s not clear Hillary won the popular vote at all.

Which is why, this week, Nobody presents Ray Stevens with the Nobody’s Fool Award. Not many people can write a good and catchy political tune, but that’s his talent.

So, Congratulations Mr. Stevens! You won the Nobody’s Fool Award for the week.

Grandpa would be proud. Now….please write another one for this year…Maybe you could write about Bloomberg wanting to kill off the old and make fun of farmers who “Just throw seeds on the ground.”

Or is it out there already? (Now I have to go look.)

WAIT! I found just one more….

 

February 17, 2020 Posted by | American History | , | Leave a comment

AOC Continues Promoting Obama’s Legacy Of Coal Destruction

Nobody Remembers

If any of these socialist idiots on the democratic side get elected as President (Okay, we know that’s not going to happen, but still) , not only will we lose the 1st, and the 2nd amendment rights, we WILL lose the rights to drive cars where we want, heat our homes as we like, and our water will be rationed.

No new industries will be built, or any buildings at all if it was up to Obama’s favorite Congresswoman, AOC. She took Obama’s closing down the coal mines and putting up bird killing windmills, and solar panels. The “green new deal” is just a continuation of what Obama started BEFORE Trump was elected.

Let’s remember what Obama did, shall we?

From Secret Empires: 

Obama quote: “If somebody wants to build a coal powered planet, they can: it’s just that it will bankrupt them because they will be charged a huge sum for all that greenhouse gas that’s being emitted…Even regardless of what I say about whether coal is good or bad. Because I’m capping greenhouse gases, coal power plants, you know, Natural gas, you name it—whatever the plants were, whatever the industry was, they would have to uh, retrofit their operations. “

On October 8, 2007, Obama had promised before a crowd in New Hampshire that he would use “whatever tools are necessary to stop new dirty coal plants from being built in America—including a ban on new traditional coal facilities.”

In December 2010, Obama ordered new drilling restrictions placing “the entire Pacific Coast, the entire Atlantic Coast, the Eastern Gulf of Mexico, and much of Alaska off limits to future energy production”

This cost thousands of people their jobs.

Obama’s friends rushed in and bought coal company shares. John Rogers a good friend of Obama and Valerie Jarrett made REALLY  good money thanks to Obama. As did Obama’s backer: George Soros. He bought a LOT of coal shares, and you have to wonder…is this ‘green deal’ movment all about trashing the one thing the world needs to run on, JUST to make THEM money?

Well, we don’t have to wonder too much now, do we? It’s all about Smash and Grab.

 

February 13, 2020 Posted by | American History, Barack Obama, Uncategorized | , , | Leave a comment