Here’s Why We Celebrate Today:
Answering John Pavlovitz in Kind[1]
by Tom Carlyle, Jr.
I don’t think you understand us right now.
I think you think that we think that this is about politics.
I think you believe this is all just gloating; the “trash-talk” of the winning locker room with the scoreboard going for us after the buzzer.
I can only tell you that you’re wrong. This is not about winning an election.
This is about two very different ways of seeing the world.
Trump supporters are opposed to the cult of diversity – the “multi-cult” – one effect of which, if its evangelists have their way, would be to reduce the majority ethnic group in the United States to a minority. The multi-cultists treat opposition to this program as a moral defect, an oddity given their proclivity towards ethical relativism.
Multi-cultists insincerely advance the notion that religion or skin color or sexual orientation or place of birth aren’t liabilities or deficiencies or moral defects.
Their insincerity becomes clear when one realizes that certain varieties of “religion” are indeed treated as “liabilities or deficiencies or moral defects.” This fact is obvious to anyone who listens to left-liberal rants directed against supposedly “bigoted” Christians - Christians who have the temerity to adhere to doctrines (for example regarding the sanctity of life and of sexuality) that have been staples of their faith since its inception.
Their insincerity is plain in the myriad tirades that employ phrases such as “white and straight and Christian” as though that description were indeed expressive of a set of liabilities and defects.
Trump supporters believed that Hillary’s campaign, while posturing itself as one of inclusion and connection and interdependency, was simply the latest battle against forces aiming to enfeeble American nationalism, replace historic Christianity with a theologically liberal simulacrum, and undermine the white majority of this country (or, rather, to induce it to undermine itself).
Trump supporters believe in preserving the cultural and ethnic heritage of America.
Although it is impolitic to state this overtly, the voting verified it. Trump ran a campaign based upon the truism that the continuation of unrestricted immigration – whether illegal or legal – will, sooner or later, render Anglo-European, working-class Americans a minority in the country their forefathers founded.
Donald Trump has never made any assertions otherwise. And that’s the vision of the world those who voted for him have opposed.
They have aligned against the email-“deleter,” rapist-defender, and turn-coat white, and they have repudiated the countless misdeeds on her criminal rap sheet:
Every scandal from Chinagate, Whitewater and the strange death of Vince Foster, to Filegate and Emailgate.
Every profanity-laced altercation with individuals, including members of her own staff (covered up or otherwise ignored by the press).
Every piece of pro-sodomy and pro-infanticide legislation she has championed.
Half of our country has declared these things unacceptable, ignoble, and anti-American.
This is the disconnect and the source of ourcelebration today. It isn’t a political victory that we’re lamenting, it’s a victory for Humanity – including the innumerable female “fetuses,” murdered in their own mothers’ wombs, who do not fall under the “protection” of the self-proclaimed “champion for women.”
We’re not happy that our candidate won. We’re relieved because your candidate’s losing means this country will hopefully be safer for the unborn and the born, more focused upon kindness (that is, concern for our own kind), and less apt to cater to minority segments of its population at the expense of the majority’s vital interests and welfare. And that’s just the truth.
Those who have been called “deplorable” have voted to taken their country back. Those rural voices have refused to remain silenced and will not be further quieted. Those who have been marginalized by minority interests and turn-coat white liberals will not be pushed further to the periphery. Those who are routinely demeaned as “uneducated” and inferior now have confirmation in actual percentages.
Those things have essentially been campaign promises of Donald Trump, and so many of our fellow citizens have said this is what they want too.
This has never been about politics.
This is not about one candidate over the other.
It is not blue vs. red.
It’s not her dishonesty vs. his bad language.
It’s about covert Communism and hostility toward country folk.
It’s about religion being liberalized.
It’s about disregard for yeoman whites.
It’s about a nation of borders.
It’s about America for historic Americans.
It’s about not giving up our heritage to globalists and their shills (like Hillary Clinton).
And it is not only that these things have been ratified by our nation that give us cause to celebrate; it’s knowing that these things have been “amen”-ed by our neighbors, our families, our friends, those we work with and worship alongside. That is the most validating thing of all. We now know how close this is.
It no longer feels like living in enemy territory being here now. We refuse to wake up tomorrow in a home we no longer recognize. We are celebrating the dodging of a multi-cult bullet. This may have been the America of Obama and his legions of doting fanatics, but it is not the America we believe in or recognize or want.
This is not about a difference of political opinion, as that’s far too small to mourn over. It’s about a fundamental difference in how we make judgments about morality.
As a nation we took the opportunity to affirm the beauty of our heritage, to choose tradition over Pollyanna, multi-cult maxims invoking “tolerance.”
The Scriptures say: “If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.” (2 Chronicles 7:14, New Intl. Vers.)
We believe that true humility and repentance are impossible – collectively – so long as we wink at evils such as the murder of millions of babies in utero or the expansion of a global neo-liberal empire under the misnomer “spreading democracy” or the institutionalization of the sin of sodomy masked by euphemisms like “gay marriage.”
While Trump is no Jesus Christ, the movement that seems to have crystallized around him seeks to push back against these grave evils.
And this is why we celebrate.
(For the original article, to which this piece is a response, see: http://johnpavlovitz.com/2016/11/09/heres-why-we-grieve-today/.)
[1] This post draws from, and is a reply to, John Pavlovitz, “Here’s Why We Grieve Today,” [personal website], November 9, 2016, http://johnpavlovitz.com/2016/11/09/heres-why-we-grieve-today/.
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