We lost another one. (please ignore the disgusting SOBs in the comments below) (Apparently, please avoid all the moonbats; something about the death of an honorable man brings out the slander machines. Cowards. Can't attack an 80 year old man while he lives, you have to wait for his death.) I think it might be good to quote from Mr. Heston himself:
Who will defend the core value of academia, if you supposed soldiers of free thought and expression lay down your arms and plead, "Don't shoot me." If you talk about race, it does not make you a racist. If you see distinctions between the genders, it does not make you sexist. If you think critically about a denomination, it does not make you anti-religion. If you accept but don't celebrate homosexuality, it does not make you a homophobe. Don't let America's universities continue to serve as incubators for this rampant epidemic of new McCarthyism. But what can you do? How can anyone prevail against such pervasive social subjugation? The answer's been here all along. I learned it 36 years ago, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C., standing with Dr. Martin Luther King and two hundred thousand people. You simply ... disobey. Peaceably, yes. Respectfully, of course. Nonviolently, absolutely. But when told how to think or what to say or how to behave, we don't. We disobey social protocol that stifles and stigmatizes personal freedom. I learned the awesome power of disobedience from Dr. King . . . who learned it from Gandhi, and Thoreau, and Jesus, and every other great man who led those in the right against those with the might. Disobedience is in our DNA. We feel innate kinship with that disobedient spirit that tossed tea into Boston Harbor, that sent Thoreau to jail, that refused to sit in the back of the bus, that protested a war in Vietnam. In that same spirit, I am asking you to disavow cultural correctness with massive disobedience of rogue authority, social directives and onerous laws that weaken personal freedom. But be careful ... it hurts. Disobedience demands that you put yourself at risk. Dr. King stood on lots of balconies.
2 comments:
Well Said!!
And you're right about the lefties, you should have see the vitriol they were spewing on Kos.
He was the Omega Man in more ways than one, Foxfier.
By the By? Will Smith ain't no Chuck Heston.
I have a picture of me, sitting on CH's lap at ten years old when he came to my Sire's house for dinner back in about '64.
Good Man. Even my Sire thinks so...
Gotta dig that pisture out....
Wollf
Oh...Eff the Leffies
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