I strongly believe that the kind of person who flinches when they hear "blood of our nation" are all too Default Liberal to begin with; their programming runs too deep. The citizens are indeed the lifeblood of the nation. Without a citizenry living their lives and embodying the spirit of their country, there is only empty and desolate land. When foreign entities enter into the body, the first response is an allergic reaction. They do not belong here, and in order to survive they must be removed. Eventually the immune system can be overwhelmed by either other disease, or consistent poisoning.
Whatever level of evil might be leveled at someone who also used that phrase does nothing to change the truth of it. The attempt to disarm yet another natural thought process of Americans to stand in defiance of their slow and cancerous invasion is as obvious as it is sinister. Trump was nowhere near a dictator his first go around, and I don't have any confidence he would go berserk on his second. His election would, at the very least, be the further echo of the middle finger he represented to the establishment in 2016. (I do not believe him to be a compromised candidate designed to corral undesirables into easy identification, I have never seen such an unhinged political reaction to anyone in my life as I have towards Trump.)
I strongly believe that the kind of person who flinches when they hear "blood of our nation" are all too Default Liberal to begin with; their programming runs too deep. The citizens are indeed the lifeblood of the nation. Without a citizenry living their lives and embodying the spirit of their country, there is only empty and desolate land. When foreign entities enter into the body, the first response is an allergic reaction. They do not belong here, and in order to survive they must be removed. Eventually the immune system can be overwhelmed by either other disease, or consistent poisoning.
Whatever level of evil might be leveled at someone who also used that phrase does nothing to change the truth of it. The attempt to disarm yet another natural thought process of Americans to stand in defiance of their slow and cancerous invasion is as obvious as it is sinister. Trump was nowhere near a dictator his first go around, and I don't have any confidence he would go berserk on his second. His election would, at the very least, be the further echo of the middle finger he represented to the establishment in 2016. (I do not believe him to be a compromised candidate designed to corral undesirables into easy identification, I have never seen such an unhinged political reaction to anyone in my life as I have towards Trump.)