Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey - Ep 4 | The Christian Case for American Patriotism (+ Cat Facts)
Episode Date: April 4, 2018It's no longer commonly accepted that America is the greatest country in the world. It has become trendy to apologize for, minimize and even demonize our country's strength. There are many in the chur...ch who have adopted this unpatriotic mentality as well, either because of apathy or a misinformed desire for socialism. Here's why we should all be thanking God for the gift of living in America.
Transcript
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Hey guys, welcome to the podcast. I'm Allie. I am the host of this podcast, obviously, but I'm also
host at CRTV.com. I hope that everyone is having the best week of their entire lives. And if not,
I hope that you're at least having a good week or even inadequate week. And even if you're having the
worst week ever, I hope that this podcast right here makes your week better. Today, we are going to
talk about something very serious. We are going to talk about
cats and how to know whether or not your cat is allergic to the essential oils that you are
diffusing in your home. I'm totally kidding. If this is your first time to this podcast,
like you probably already turned it off by now. I'm kidding. I just made that up. I just wanted to
say that because I've actually been thinking about that subject recently. I did just find
out that cats are allergic to essential oils and I became really distressed about this because
we have these airwick plug-ins that are supposedly essential oils and I was worrying that were poisoning
Rachel McAdams and sweatpants, aka Cat Damon.
And the ending to this story that I'm telling you for absolutely no reason is not that I found
out that they will be fine.
I didn't actually find that out.
I just found out something worse.
I learned that these things are probably bad for me too.
Like, did you know that these air freshener companies do not have to tell you at all?
Anyway, not online, not on the back of the packages, what the ingredients in air freshener is?
Like, that's weird.
I feel like it's not okay.
So I just don't know what to do.
here's my dilemma. I don't want my cat, or I don't want my house to smell like cat litter. I actually
don't want my cat to smell like cat litter either. So that works. The question is, do I allow my house to
smell like cat do-do and avoid being intoxicated by possibly deadly essential oil air fresheners?
Or do I keep my house smelling like lavender and just say, you know what, Jeremiah 29-11? God knows the
plans he has for me. And if I die from air freshener, then so be it, you know, to live is Christ and to die his game.
I don't know. I don't know. I'll let you guys weigh in.
Message me on Instagram. Let me know. Okay, that is enough of that. I'm really sorry again,
if this is your first time. That isn't always happen. Sometimes it does. I just felt like I needed
to share that with you, but that rant was way too off base and long has nothing to do with
what we're talking about. What we're actually going to talk about today is this trend of being
unpatriotic, especially in the church and why that is incredibly stupid.
So here we go. So there's this really ignorant myth floating around in the church in particular that
basically says we cannot be patriotic and proud of America and be a Christian. The people who say
things like this also usually say things like, oh, Jesus was a socialist. They have this attitude that
America is bad because of slavery and stuff. So there's really no reason to be proud of it.
And Jesus is coming back anyway. So why should we even?
care about our country. Wouldn't it be more loving to just have a government that, like, gives
people stuff? These people tend to want us to be more like Europe. They love Bernie Sanders.
These happen to usually be the same people who believe that unconditional tolerance is more
important than preaching the actual gospel. These are what I call social justice warrior Christians,
and they are ignorant. Now, to be fair, some Christians who lack patriotism are not full on Bernie
Sanders, SJWs. They just look at our past and even our present and they say, rightfully so,
hey, we are not perfect. We have done and still do some messed up stuff. Our politicians are all
corrupt. And these people don't want to get on their high horse about America because they
know we have our own set of problems. So they just kind of detach themselves from politics,
learning about our history and talking about America because they kind of feel guilty about it.
This is an understandable view. I know a lot of very smart.
people like this, but the problem is it still does not line up with reality. And then, of course,
you have people who are not religious at all, who feel unpatriotic as well. But I always want to
address the Christian view because this is a Christian conservative millennial podcast.
So first, to kind of give you my perspective, let me back up a little bit and tell you about my
relationship with patriotism. I can't really call myself anything other than patriotic, not just like
a little bit, but like really patriotic. I love America. My husband can tell you that when we're seeing
the Star Spangled Banner, which it's not like in our living room, like if we're at a game or something,
or even when I say Pledge of Allegiance to the flag, I almost always get tears in my eyes. Courtesy of the
red, white, and blue by Toby Keith is seriously one of my all-time favorite songs. I know some people
have qualms with the Hamilton musical, but I seriously cry when I listen to the first.
two songs because it is such a beautiful depiction of the resolve of the American spirit.
My parents really instilled in me a love for our country and the knowledge that America is unique.
I always knew that it was an incredible privilege to be born in and grow up in a free country,
although I may not have always known what that really meant.
Now, we hear the word privilege a lot nowadays. I said it was a privilege to live in this
country. When we hear the word privilege, it's typically used it a bad way. Like if someone has
privilege, they must be spoiled and totally blind to reality. But privilege isn't a negative
unless because of your privilege, you're unable or unwilling to see the needs of those who are
worse off than you are. Privileges are gifts. They are blessings that we do not deserve. They can be
used to insulate us from the plight of other people, which is bad, or they can be used to actually
do something good and impactful. So when my parents are, I'm going to be used to do something good. So when my
parents taught me that it's a privilege to live in America. I knew that didn't just mean
that I was lucky. It meant that I had a responsibility. I understood from a really young age that I
needed to do something with what I was given. Because the only thing worse than allowing your
privilege to blind you to reality is to deny its existence altogether, to take it for granted.
That is what those who ignore America's greatness do. They fail to appreciate the immense
blessing that they have been given. And so they fail to use it in a way that
actually matters. A big reason I think my parents so naturally instilled patriotism into me
was because of their own story. It's part of who they are. It is who they are. So I'm going to give
you a brief rundown of where my parents came from and the journey that I think really,
really well depicts the American dream and the reason for the patriotism that I have. So my dad's mom,
my grandma, with whom I have always had a really close relationship with, was the second oldest of 13 kids.
She grew up on a cotton farm in Louisiana. They made all of their own food, their own clothes.
As you can imagine, they were extremely, extremely poor. I once asked my grandmother a while ago,
if they ever had any hired help, you know, around the house with the kids cleaning, picking the cotton,
and she said, we were the hired help. Neither of her parents were educated at all. Maybe the eighth grade.
my grandma was the first one in her family to graduate from high school. She was the first one to go to college. She
finished college. She went on to get her master's. She supported herself through all of that.
She became a teacher and she taught for 30 years. Really, her story alone is a testament to what hard work
gets you in America. But that's just kind of the preface to my parent story. She married my grandfather,
who was a church band director, his entire life. They had four kids together, including my dad, of course.
So they had a church salary and a teacher's salary.
They got by.
They weren't destitute, but they certainly didn't have a lot, especially for a family of six.
My grandfather, as it turns out, unfortunately ended up being a really bad dad and husband.
And from what I hear, the kids didn't have a great childhood.
My grandparents ended up getting a divorce when my dad was a teenager.
Switch over to my mom.
My mom's mom got pregnant with her.
when she was 18 and then she married my granddad. Neither of them went to college, according to my mom.
Her dad had lots of different jobs when she was growing up. Sometimes they would have money.
Sometimes they wouldn't. And when I say have money, I mean like enough to get by. Both of her parents
drank heavily. She might not say that they were alcoholics, but they were probably close.
My mom talks about having to drive to the liquor store for her dad when she was 13 to get him beer and cigarettes.
But unlike my dad's parents, my mom's parents actually loved each other.
And even though their marriage was volatile at times, apparently they did at the end of the day love each other or want to be together.
My mom says that growing up around all of this, one of her only goals in life was to not get.
get married or pregnant as a teenager. Not her only goal, but one of her main goals in life. And she
didn't. A month after she turned 20, she married my dad, who was still 19 at the time. They met in
college in the small town in Arkansas, close to where both of them lived. They dated for six months.
I think they were also engaged for six months. And then they got married in 1980 just a year
after my dad's parents got divorced,
they had absolutely no money.
They had no long-term plans, really.
They had very few,
if any, solid examples of what a good,
godly committed marriage looked like.
My dad never had someone teach him
what it was like to lead a family
in a Christ-like way or even in a practical way.
And my mom didn't really have that kind of example either.
But got married, they did.
My mom continued to go to school while working.
My dad went to school at night.
night and worked at an oil company during the day. They had my oldest brother about a year and a half
after they got married. My mom graduated from college. The first person in her family to actually do
that when she was 21, only three months after she gave birth to my brother. It took my dad 10 years,
10 years of taking night classes and working full time to finish college. But he did just before
his 10 year high school reunion. Early in their marriage, my
parents lived in what they tell me was a cockroach infested trailer. My mom still to this day has a fear
of these cockroach type bugs called water bugs. She, if she's listening to this, she is probably
cringing, but that's what they had to do. They couldn't afford really anything else.
My mom tells me about my dad's first boss, whom she hated at the time, because he would make fun
of my dad for wearing the same suit to work every single day. One time my dad called my mom from work
and told her to go out and buy him new shoes because his boss told him he had to. She was panicked.
She was freaking out because she was like, oh my gosh, where am I going to find the money to buy shoes?
So she literally scrounged up whatever change they had lying around and went to the discount store to buy my dad new dress shoes.
To make a long story shorter, both of my parents continued to work their butts off because they were determined that they weren't going to.
to stay in poverty. Right after they had my other brother in 1985, still young and still
poor, they moved to Dallas where my dad took a job at a bank and it was that job that
launched him into other career opportunities that after many years and after many late nights
and weekends working eventually led to him owning his own investment firm. Really for as long
as I can remember, so probably for the past like 21 years, my parents have been
entrepreneurs. I've only ever known my dad to be extremely hardworking, wise, and generous. He has been
very successful in all of his business and even political endeavors. My mom was able to stay home with
us, which I know is something not every child gets to benefit from growing up. And they were
able to provide for me and for my brothers a life that was so vastly different from the lives
they had when they were growing up. We never had to worry about clothes or food or shoes. We never had
to worry about college. And it wasn't just monetarily that my brothers and I were better off than
our parents. They also set a much better example for us than their parents probably did.
They raised us in church with good values. They've been married 38 years now. They just celebrated
their anniversary last month. And they still love each other and even like each other.
Both my parents grew up in unsteady homes, but I never did. They made sure of that. It wasn't
perfect growing up. I mean, no home is perfect, but I never had to worry about whether or not I was
going to be provided for or cared for or loved. And I never wondered whether or not my parents loved
loved each other and wanted to be together. And because of that, because of all of that,
I was able to go to college, the college that I wanted to. Because of that, I was able to get a good
job out of college. And because of both of those things, I'm doing what I am doing now, which is what
I've always wanted to do. I've always wanted to write and speak. That's it. I've never wanted to do
anything else. And because of my parents' incredible hard work, I was placed in a position to be able to
chase after that. And I did. And I am. I'm doing it. I'm doing more now that I ever thought that I
would be doing at 26. A lot of that is, of course, because of my own hard work, yes, but I'd be
fooling myself if I didn't acknowledge that my parents' sacrifices positioned me to get here.
And here's the thing. I'm not ashamed of that. When I talk about those things, it's not bragging. My parents worked
really, really hard to help me be in a position to do what I want to do. People who use the word
privilege as some kind of bad word want me to be ashamed of the fact that I use my parents' hard
work as a springboard for my life and my career. No, I'm not. I'm not ashamed of that. I'm proud.
You ask me if I'm privileged and I say, yes, I am privileged.
and my parents worked hard to make sure I had privileges that they never did.
They came from almost nothing, pulled themselves up by the bootstraps at 19 with no help,
no money with all odds stacked against them, and they made it.
And by the time I was old enough to listen, they were able to look me in the eye and honestly
say, Ali, you can do anything you want to do in life.
And because they are living proof, I believed them.
Yes, their lives are, of course, a testament to the grace.
of God, but they are also evidence of the benefits of making good, even biblical choices.
My parents made good choices when they were young that distinguished them from their friends
and their other family members that didn't.
They got married.
Then they had kids.
They lived within or below their means.
They finished college despite how long it took or how hard it was.
My dad took jobs he knew would propel him forward and would provide for a family.
They both worked incredibly hard.
They built a life for us that they never had.
Like I said, my grandma, growing up on a Louisiana cotton farm, was the first in her family
to go to and finish college.
My mom was the first in her family to go to and finish college.
My dad was the first person in his family to make any money.
They broke cycles in their families that could have just as easily been perpetuated.
I could have been the first in my family to finish high school in college.
I could be living in a trailer with my two kids, but I'm not.
And most of it has to do with, yes, number one, God's providence, and also my parents' wise decisions
in life.
And what makes me privileged isn't just that my parents worked hard for me, but that I live in a
country where this is not only possible, but it's actually the norm.
That is why it is called the American dream, not the Canadian dream, not the British dream,
not the Chinese dream, the American dream. America is the only place on earth where stories like my
parents are typical, where people are expected to endure right up from poverty, from abuse,
from destitution, from the worst adverse circumstances possible and become something. And to have
this typify what it is to be an American is an incredible thing. No other country is defined that way.
This kind of determination is literally in the American DNA.
Think about our founding and how we fought for independence from Britain.
We were tired of being taxed by an island miles away,
so we freaking destroyed an entire shipment of tea by throwing it into the ocean.
We knew it was going to start a conflict with the British people and we did it anyway.
I mean, think about the Revolutionary War.
It's all you need to look at to see just how badass America is.
We were fighting against Britain, a global superpower,
We were a poor, good for nothing, underfed, underarmed group of men who had no business going up against the British.
We had no chance of winning, but we did. Why? Because we are awesome. Because liberty means that much to us.
George Washington did a surprise attack on Christmas crossing the Delaware and defeated British troops. Totally relentless.
In case you didn't know, we won the Revolutionary War, just in case you forgot about that.
and we did gain our independence.
And speaking of the Revolutioning War,
think about Alexander Hamilton,
one of our founding fathers.
Born in poverty in the Caribbean,
orphaned at a young age,
became a self-made genius by the time he was 14.
His community took up a collection
just to send him to the States
where he became one of the key players
in the Revolution and in our founding.
The right-hand man of George Washington
during the war,
he also wrote the majority of the Federalist papers
that defended the Constitution.
His handiwork literally laid
so much of the foundation
of our country and he came from absolutely nothing.
Our beginnings as an entire country are rag-tag.
The odds were zacked against us so much for so long, but the American spirit has this,
it has this unprecedented grit.
And so far we've proved everyone wrong.
That is the spark that is placed inside us as Americans, that there is nothing too great
or too far off for us to accomplish.
I mean, we did win two world wars.
We put a man on the moon.
We are the leaders in technology and innovation.
Apple, Google, Facebook, Twitter.
These countries used by billions around the world were made on our soil.
We are the capital of creativity and entertainment.
We are the mecca of TV, movies, music.
There are some other really great countries out there, but no country comes even close to
having what we have.
Hundreds of people, if not thousands of people risk their lives every day just to come
here. America is the last and the only shining beacon of freedom left in the world.
We are the greatest last hope for liberty. We are the only country willing to stand against
tyranny. Despite all of our flaws, despite the horrors that we've had in our past, horrors of
slavery, Jim Crow, despite our history of inequality. Yes, I'm a conservative and I said that.
Despite our imperfections, the American experiment is the greatest in my world.
most successful experiment this world has ever seen. But all of these things have become dramatically
less true in the last 10 years. People don't believe these things anymore. They want to make us
more like Canada, more like Europe. They think socialism is the way. More gun control, single-payer
health care, free college. They would rather exchange freedom for comfort like every other country
in the world has always done. They want to even the global plane.
They think it's mean and wrong to say that America is the best.
It's all of a sudden just a conservative thing to be patriotic.
It's not an American thing.
It's a conservative thing.
The cool, liberal thing to do is too, sorry, but shit on our country.
And I will tell you why.
Okay.
So what I'm about to say, I don't say as a Republican, honestly and truly.
I say it as an American.
him. But hear me, Barack Obama had a lot of good qualities. From what I could tell, he was a good
father, he was a good husband, he was eloquent, he seemed down to earth, probably really nice,
probably fun to talk to. He seems like someone you just want to grab a beer with. Fine.
But the reality is he did serious damage to our country. He was the first president to make being
unpatriotic cool. He apologized to countries constantly for our strength. He apologized.
He worked to even the global playing field rather than have America lead.
He exacerbated racial tension.
He focused on America's flaws and perceived oppression rather than our inherent goodness.
He popularized social justice warriorism and words that we hear today constantly like bigotry, sexism, misogyny, yada, yada, yada, yada.
He was an ideologue who made it his goal to show America how bad it was an attempt to change America to look more like the rest of the world.
there's this really interesting statistic by Pew that I think shows just how much Obama changed people's perspectives on America.
The overall study shows just how far left liberals have gone since 1990 while conservatives have stayed about the same.
But this particular stat in the study I found so interesting.
Democrats and Republicans had to say if they agreed or disagreed with the following statement.
and that is racial discrimination is the main reason black people cannot get ahead these days.
The commentary says that this means that racial discrimination rather than individual choices is the thing holding black people back.
In 1990, 39% of Democrats agreed with that statement as opposed to 26% of Republicans.
39%. So a minority. Today, today, today,
The number of Democrats who believe that racial discrimination rather than personal choices
is holding black people back in America is 68% in all-time high.
29 percentage points that number has gone up.
And if you look at the graph, it's really so interesting.
That percentage hit an all-time low in 2010 at 28%.
So lower than 1990, 208% of Democrats believe that it was racial discrimination rather
than personal choices that were holding black people back in America.
2010, 28% the year Obama took office,
lowest it's been in 30 years.
That means from 2010 to 2017, the years Obama was in office.
Democrats went from 28% thinking racism was the main thing holding people back,
black people back, to 68% believing that.
Highest number we've seen.
That number jumped 40 percentage points when Obama,
our first black president was in office.
Now, is it even remotely logical or possible that during the eight years Obama was in office or in the past 28 years since 1990 that America has actually become more racist?
That racism is actually holding black people back more than it used to?
No, of course not. Absolutely not. That's just not reality.
But it doesn't matter because the perception has changed. And as we know, perception is reality.
That is what Obama did, both in his apologetic foreign policy and in his divisive race-bating domestic policy.
He instilled in Americans what really no president that I know of before has done, and that is the idea that America is bad and that we still need to pay for our sins.
So you can imagine why when we have a presidential candidate come along with a slogan that's literally a direct slap in the face to everything Obama tried to do in his presidency,
make America great again, people are going to be really upset.
The idea of American greatness is offensive to people who have been conditioned for the past
eight years to believe that America is bad.
I mean, we probably talk more about colonialism, our mistreatment of Native American slavery
in the civil war than we ever have before.
People are all the sudden upset about Confederate statues.
People all the sudden care about the so-called racism of the Star-Spangled Banner.
Why? Because we're more racist than we've ever been before? No. Because Obama validated that attitude,
that we need to rehash all of our old sins and pay penance for them still. He fundamentally changed
how people view America. It used to be that the people who disagree politically did so because they
both cared about and loved the country. It is now a battle between those who love America and those
who in general, not everyone, but those who in general don't. They don't agree anymore in what America
fundamentally is. They don't like the Constitution. They think the founding fathers were a bunch of
bigots. They think America is inherently flawed. Whereas the other side, I'm included in this,
believe that, yes, of course America has flaws. We've made mistakes. We have stumbled. But we are
foundationally good. That the idea, the American idea, is the best idea any creation,
human has ever had. And because of that, we are still the best country in the world.
And the closer we stay to what this country was intended to be, a beacon of liberty and free
enterprise, the better off will be. I mean, even Martin Luther King Jr., a true and good and
actual and productive social justice warrior, not the superficial kind we have today, believed
that what the founder set up was good. Even though Americans strayed from it and the founders
themselves didn't act it out very well, that all are created equal and are endowed by their
creator with certain unalienable rights among them being life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness. That in scripture were his constant foundation in all of his rhetoric and his push for
civil rights. But today, the people who claim to care about social justice and civil rights
don't refer to the constitution of what our founders set up. They actually don't believe in
unalienable rights at all, because if they did, they would have to be. They would have
to admit that the government, an institution made by man, can't take away rights that are
unalienable. Unalienable. I have a really hard time saying that word. Sorry. They would have to
acknowledge that our rights are inherent and God-given, which completely messes up their ideology,
which says that the government should be able to give and take away rights as they see fit.
They don't believe in rights and inequality. It outlined in the Constitution and is constantly
referenced by MLK Jr. They believe in
government mandated moral relativism. They want the government to drive forth their progressive
Marxist ideology, no questions asked. They want open-bordered socialism and nothing less, which
couldn't be any further from what America was set up to be. It's no longer Republican versus
Democrat. It is those who love America and those who don't. In no other country is my
grandmother's and parent story possible. In no other country can
a poor mom or dad look at their kid and say with absolute certainty, you can do anything you want to do.
No other country values merit and strength and determination and bravery the way ours has.
No other country was set up to give its government less power than the people they govern.
Did you hear that?
America is the only country in the world designed to empower its people.
We have the Second Amendment literally to defend ourselves against a tyrannical government
That's amazing.
Every other government is set up to keep the people in line, to reign in the government.
Our government isn't.
And for Christians specifically, who seem to think that being patriotic is a bad thing,
how do you think religious liberty goes in a socialistic country?
You think Christians in socialist China are thriving, North Korea, the Middle East,
you think they're doing well there?
Even in the UK and other parts of Europe, does the church seem thriving there to you?
No, because it's not.
You go to those countries, the church is literally mostly dead.
I would know I have been there.
In countries where the government is the caretaker, godlessness always ensues.
More government always, always, always, always, always leads to godlessness.
You think we're going to be seen pro-life policies in a socialistic America?
You think we're going to value the unborn, the sick, the disabled?
No.
Think about Charlie Guard.
Think about the epidemic of assisted suicide throughout Europe.
Now, listen, I do think it's important that we don't raise our patriotism to the same level as our allegiance to God's kingdom.
Absolutely not.
All earthly allegiances are secondary to our citizenship in heaven.
How we treat others and how we conduct our lives should be subject first and foremost to God.
He is our purpose and our ultimate hope.
The gospel is the banner we weigh far above the American flag.
I do think it's important to say that God is not an American and that even though yes, I believe he
ordained America to be special, we are not exempt from his wrath. At the end of it all, every knee
will bow, every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord and there will be a new heaven and new earth
and America and all other countries will be obsolete. Okay. So I just need to say that because I
could feel some of you getting a little bit antsy there. So I just needed to put that out there.
but we as Christians also have an earthly and moral obligation to push for good policies in a form of government in which people can best succeed.
And as much as people want to tell you that Jesus himself was a socialist, socialism ain't going to cut it. And that's really our only other option besides what we have. You think a healthy government is one where they force you to give all of your work, energy, and money to them? Socialism has claimed the lives of over 100 million people throughout history. You think that's a good thing?
You think God rejoices in that?
Hitler was a socialist.
Nazi stands for national socialists.
You think that worked out well that maybe we should try it here?
You think that's the biblical thing to do?
Now, I'm not saying that God's a capitalist.
I'm not saying that capitalism is perfect,
but it's lifted a heck of a lot more people out of poverty than socialism has.
It's encouraged a lot more charity and generosity than communism has.
It's allowed for human flourishing more than any other economic system.
There is a really,
we are the most successful nation in history and it is not because of socialism.
And so many people take that for granted. I hate to say this because I know it's rude,
but please, if you don't like our country, go somewhere else and see how it works out for you.
I mean, I would love for you to move to another country and try out their governments.
You might honestly like it better. I don't know. You might. I'm not trying to be mean.
You might actually like Europe better than America. And if so, so be it. But don't tell you.
take away other people shot at the American dream by making America more like Europe.
Every time we grow the government, increase taxes, chip away at our sovereignty by allowing
undeterred illegal immigration, advocate for socialism, we get closer and closer to an America
in which stories like my parents just can't happen. And not just theirs, but countless
others, Oprah, Steve Jobs, Ben Carson, Frederick Douglass, the thousands of others who came from
nothing and then became something and changed history.
Yes, as Americans, we are privileged.
White, black, man, woman, gay, straight, trans, Christian, Muslim, whatever you are,
we are privileged. We are the most privileged people in the entire world.
And rather than be ashamed of that, we need to use it for good to perpetuate liberty to the next
generation. We are the last hope of freedom. We are the last final refuge for those fleeing
tyranny. It would be immoral. It would be a sin.
take that for granted. We should be on our knees, thinking God, every day for the gift of common
grace of living in the United States of America. What an incredible blessing that so many have died
to obtain and others have fought bled and died to defend. It is our responsibility to hold
on to America as long as we can. We hear the really popular quote by Ronald Reagan a lot,
but it's hardly ever read in context.
So this is the quote that was spoken at his gubernatorial inaugural address in 1967.
Freedom is a fragile thing and is never more than one generation away from extinction.
It is not ours by inheritance.
It must be fought for and defended constantly by each generation,
for it comes only once to a people.
Those who have known freedom and then lost it, have never known it again.
Knowing this, it is hard to explain those who even today would question the people's capacity for self-rule.
Will they answer this? If no one among us is capable of governing himself, then who among us has the capacity to govern someone else?
Using the temporary authority granted by the people, an increasing number lately have sought to control the means of production as if this could be done without eventually controlling those who produce.
always this is explained as necessary to the people's welfare.
But the deterioration of every government begins with the decay of the principle upon which it was founded.
This is true today as it was when it was written in 1748.
And then there's the story of Benjamin Franklin who was asked by a woman when he was leaving the Constitutional Convention,
what kind of government they decided upon and he said to her a republic, ma'am, if you can keep it.
So the principle of these two quotes is liberty is always conditional to our willingness to defend it.
So that's it. I mean, I get really pumped up about this. I just, I don't know. I just really hate when people and especially wimpy Christians talk about how bad this country is. Like, if you think it's so bad, either leave or make it better. Is that simple? And the way to make it better is by promoting more freedom, not less. Okay. So are we down to
with that? Yes, I think we are. So at the end of the podcast, we've been doing random segments.
Last week, I did, I think, confessions. And I talked about how I'm guilty of unbiblical sass,
which I am. And I talked about unbiblical versus biblical sass. And before that, I think I did
things I just don't get. And I talked about lifestyle bloggers and how I just could never be one.
And today is cat facts. I'm just going to make these up every time. Cat Facts.
So as you all know, I have two cats, Rachel McAdam's and sweatpants, and they're just two
stupidly awesome cats that I love so much. Today's cat fact is the very empirical and well-studied
and documented fact that cats would kill you if they were just big enough. So dogs don't kill you
because they're good dogos. They love you. They're good boys and good girls. Cats
are not. They feel no such affection. They're not good. They tolerate you because you feed them.
They even will allow you to be their napping place every now and then if you are lucky.
But if you even think about touching them one too many times, they will attack you.
Cats have no moral compass, no guilt. They have no remorse whatsoever. If you have ever seen that
look that a cat gets right before it's about to attack your face, like they get really still,
they pin their ears back and they narrow their eyes. And then all the
sudden is like their full body weighted on your face. They don't know they're not about to kill you.
They're like perfectly fine with whatever the outcome is of this attack. Like if they slice your jugular,
fine. If they gouge your eyes out, so be it. The only reason you are not dead is because your
cat is not big enough to kill you. Not because she loves you. So that is my cat fact for today.
It is very well studied. Like I said, I have two cats and a dog. I've been.
studying their behavior and that is a fact that your cat actually wants to kill you.
So just watch out for that.
Okay, that's it.
I hope that you enjoyed this.
Please follow me on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and at CRTV.com slash alley.
Bye.
