Rudyard Kipling"
“When you're left wounded on Afganistan's plains and
the women come out to cut up what remains, Just roll to your rifle
and blow out your brains,
And go to your God like a soldier”
General Douglas MacArthur"
“We are not retreating. We are advancing in another direction.”
“It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.” “Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.
“The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and be the deepest wounds and scars of war.”
“May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't .” “The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
“Nobody ever defended, there is only attack and attack and attack some more.
“It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.
The Soldier stood and faced God
Which must always come to pass
He hoped his shoes were shining
Just as bright as his brass
"Step forward you Soldier,
How shall I deal with you?
Have you always turned the other cheek?
To My Church have you been true?"
"No, Lord, I guess I ain't
Because those of us who carry guns
Can't always be a saint."
I've had to work on Sundays
And at times my talk was tough,
And sometimes I've been violent,
Because the world is awfully rough.
But, I never took a penny
That wasn't mine to keep.
Though I worked a lot of overtime
When the bills got just too steep,
The Soldier squared his shoulders and said
And I never passed a cry for help
Though at times I shook with fear,
And sometimes, God forgive me,
I've wept unmanly tears.
I know I don't deserve a place
Among the people here.
They never wanted me around
Except to calm their fears.
If you've a place for me here,
Lord, It needn't be so grand,
I never expected or had too much,
But if you don't, I'll understand."
There was silence all around the throne
Where the saints had often trod
As the Soldier waited quietly,
For the judgment of his God.
"Step forward now, you Soldier,
You've borne your burden well.
Walk peacefully on Heaven's streets,
You've done your time in Hell."
Omar is “amazingly ungrateful,” Weingarten notes, after America’s
land of opportunity has taken in Omar’s family as refugees from 1990s
war-torn Somalia and allowed her to achieve lofty heights. Rather than
laud America’s freedom, she has become a prominent national figure in a “red-green”
alliance of convenience between Islamists and Leftists, united in their
various collectivist desires to extinguish liberty. Thus she “is in the
running for leader of the modern-day ‘Blame America Firsters.’”
Former federal prosecutor and leading conservative intellectual, Andrew McCarthy,
notes in a forward that “Omar is the instantiation of this
Islamist-Leftist collusion.” This “committed ideologue at the crossroads
of statism” forms an intersectional
link between two ideologies that jointly despise Western civilization
yet radically differ over key issues such as gender and human sexuality.
Accordingly the “alliance between Islamists and Leftists is not
intuitive,” he notes, and Weingarten observes that in Omar’s confused
farrago “it is unclear where her Leftism ends and her Islamist
sympathies begin.”
Weingarten analyzes how the “secular progressive camp” and the
“Islamist camp” want “to impose totalitarian designs anathema to
America’s founding principles and the Judeo-Christian values that
underlie them.” Rather than benefit disadvantaged minorities, such
centralizing agendas will actually primarily empower state-employed
“white elite social justice warriors.” Such devotees of a “Great
Awokening” will impose a “condescending paternalism justified by
narcissistic virtue-signaling.”
These attacks on a Judeo-Christian “Great Satan” America complement
attacks on the “Little Satan” Israel, for Weingarten observes that
“Jew-hatred is a key ingredient in the glue that holds the
progressive-Islamist axis in the West together.” Omar is thus
unremittingly bigoted towards the “collective Jew” Israel, which is
actually the “first line of defense of Western civilization against
Islamist tyranny” in the “perpetual struggle between civilization and
barbarism.” Yet the “preternaturally victimological” Omar “has leveraged
criticism of her own bigotry to transform herself from victimizer into
victim” and used “Islamophobia” as a “weapon of identity politics” in a
“victimological pivot.”
Omar’s own Minneapolis, Minnesota, congressional district in the
Cedar-Riverside neighborhood, where Somali refugees to America
congregated, embodies the Islamist-Leftist alliance. “Little Mogadishu”
melds here with “college town. Literally adjacent to the looming
low-income and subsidized housing towers where many Somalis first settle
upon arriving in America are swanky modern condos,” Weingarten reports.
In a district that is actually over 60 percent white, the “only thing
that would seem to unite the inhabitants” is “overwhelmingly
progressive” politics, an example of how “elite opinion” of the “ruling
class” promotes her.
In Minneapolis Weingarten documents how “Omar is a symptom of our
failings as a country” and “of what happens when a progressive-Islamist
axis takes hold,” namely “crime, poverty, and misery—but always with the
best of intentions.” The progressive politics that has long-dominated
her overwhelmingly Democratic district has proven hollow, as “Omar’s
district was recently rated as the worst for black Americans nationally
according to numerous socioeconomic criteria.” “Cedar-Riverside has seen
a dramatic rise in violent crime, driven by Somali gang warfare,” and,
with this Somali population, Minneapolis’ “welcoming progressive
bastion…remains the terror capital of the United States.”
Meanwhile Weingarten notes how Omar lives in a “luxury condo in an
upscale Minneapolis neighborhood,” a class struggle-hypocrisy well-known
throughout the history of socialist totalitarianism, as in her native
Somalia. Here her parents actually were “important Communist
apparatchiks” of the “ruling class” in Mohamed Siad Barre’s
“Marxist-Islamist dictatorship” that emerged in a 1969 military coup
and fell into chaos in 1991. Now “Omar appears to have returned to a
life of privilege” thanks to another red-green alliance.
Omar has also so far enjoyed a privilege before the law, as revealed
by Weingarten’s collated evidence of numerous scandals including
violating congressional rules on book payments. She “is outspoken on
everything but the personal behavior that has implicated her in all
manner of potential crimes,” he writes, such as the copious indications
that she briefly married her brother
in an immigration fraud. Her complicated personal life of marriages,
divorces, and affairs has involved office payments to lovers and the
filing of joint tax returns with a man with whom she merely had a
Muslim, but not a legal, marriage.
Correspondingly, Omar would probably fail standard government
security clearance background checks, yet Weingarten notes that this
does not concern Omar and other members of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee (HFAC). With this plum appointment by congressional Democrats
to a position handling classified information, she “poses a significant
threat to America’s national security interests” concerning the “most
sensitive matters of war and peace.” Her numerous ties to her native Somalia and in Turkey’s Islamist dictatorship as well as Muslim Brotherhood-aligned groups such as the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) only heighten these dangers.
Weingarten analyzes Omar in a wider context where the “Left is
effectively accepting an ethos of national self-hatred” and
“self-immolation.” The radicalized “Democratic Party is no longer the
Party of John F. Kennedy or Bill Clinton” and has “no more Scoop
Jacksons.” The “Elephant in the Room: Democrats are Trading Jewish Votes
for Muslim Votes” especially contrasts as “conservatives and
Republicans…demonstrate by word and deed that they are America’s
preeminent philo-Semites.”
Weingarten urgently concludes with a warning about the “simmering
civil war” that endangers America, “man’s last, best hope on Earth.”
“Progressive orthodoxy prevails across our core institutions” and has
“never been more widely represented in our national politics.” Yet faced
with Omar and her allies, embattled conservatives often respond with
“suicidal rules of engagement.”
Conservatives, Weingarten accurately observes, “cannot expect to win
political elections one day every two years if we are losing elections
for the American Mind every other day of every year.” Particularly free
speech requires defense as the “first pillar the progressive elites and
Islamists alike seek to abolish” so “there can be no competition in the
War of Ideas.”
In this war against the Islamist-Leftist alliance
Weingarten’s complete takedown of the American ingrate Omar has made an
admirable contribution.