Our federal ruling class is disinterested in the American people – American Thinker

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2021/02/our_federal_ruling_class_is_disinterested_in_the_american_people.html

“Theirs not to reason why…theirs just to do or die.”
—Alfred, Lord Tennyson, The Charge of the Light Brigade

This awful quote refers to a communication error定语从句 that sent a light brigade of 600 men to near certain death during the Battle of Balaclava in 1854. It also reflects the attitude of the megalomaniac class currently 分词定语pretending to lead us. They care so little for the lives of the citizens of this country 状语从句that they are formulating executive order policies to which, if one were to ask of any of them, “What does this do for our country’s benefit?,” there could be no answer.

We no longer have permission to ask such questions. Has anyone ever asked President Biden the reasoning behind a single one of his signed orders? Those 定语从句who have real questions have been ignored, canceled, or intimidated. His press secretary can’t go from point A to point B on any questions 分词定语asked her. She either needs to “circle back” or gives an inane obfuscating answer定语从句 that leaves you scratching your head.

Certainly, nobody dares to ask the president directly. We are all aware that his answers would not be forthcoming 状语从句because he has not the remotest idea what he’s signing. It’s put on his desk, he reads his little note cards, and then he makes like an automaton and does the bidding of his advisers, with Kamala hovering over his shoulder like an enforcer. The only people 定语从句who get to ask him questions, 状语从句if and when he makes a public appearance, are fully vetted and follow the script状语从句 so he can read the answer from his teleprompter.

We watch the parade of paper in awe. We watch with alarm as everything 定语从句Trump accomplished gets erased by each swipe of a pen. Gone are our energy independence and the sane energy policies 定语从句that made us prosperous and self-sufficient. Gone is the rule 定语从句that excludes China from our grid. Gone are the union jobs of workers 定语从句who were building Keystone. Now, if we want oil to get from Canada to our refineries, the only way is via fossil fuel–guzzling trains and trucks, 形容词结构both prone to disastrous accidents. What benefit to our country there?

We watch状语从句 as Biden’s orders open the border, 分词状语rendering helpless the agents 定语从句who enforce our sovereignty. We puzzle endlessly over policies 定语从句that let every person, regardless of health or intention, enter into the country and disappear from sight状语从句 until they need “services.” Yet we can’t travel to visit our grandchildren.

We’re told in no uncertain terms宾语从句 that these people will get our tax money. We will pay for their children’s education, their housing, and their health care, here in the land of milk and honey. Never mind 宾语从句that our cities are filled with people定语从句 who have no job, no home, no hope. What benefit to our country there?

Before the inauguration, I worried about the fence in D.C. I knew there was some bigger meaning than just protecting the Capitol for that single event. I felt 宾语从句that it was a threat to all of us.

I’ve come to realize宾语从句 that the fence is a clear statement同位语从句 that the People’s house excludes any but the elite, and then, only those elite 定语从句who think a certain way. The new gated community, 分词定语still guarded by thousands of troops, is a very exclusive enclave. We no longer have any rights; we’ve ceded them to those inside.

The slap in the face to all of us is 表语从句that, except in that enclave, the floodgates to the country are open. It’s a clear message. Our ruling class could not care less about the country and its own citizens. There is no benefit possible from this policy.

I would like to keep the optimistic attitude 同位语从句that this too shall pass, that the 2022 election will change the balance of power in D.C., that the pendulum will swing. The problem is, 表语从句Democrats have shown 宾语从句that cheating during an election is too easily accomplished. They will no longer have to pretend fairness. They’ve already won that battle.

Now it’s up to the states themselves不定式补语 to extricate us from the clutches of the regime. Can they?

They’d need to revise election policies back to sane levels, 分词状语cleaning the voter rolls of dead people, non-citizens, and people at mythical addresses. They’d need to rule 宾语从句that the Facebook drop boxes are illegal. They’d need to reinforce rules 定语从句that make voting in person the norm. They’d need to invest in voting equipment定语从句 that can’t be breached. They’d need to put the citizens of their state first. They need to do all that now, not sometime down the road, 状语从句so that it is completed before the next election.

Perhaps the best thing 定语从句any of us can do is 不定式表语hound every one of our state representatives to get it done. There are some places (California, I’m betting, is one of them) where it will fall on deaf ears. But there are, I think, enough states 定语从句where it could make a profound difference to the survival of the United States of America.

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