9 Comments on What’s Going On With The Left?

  1. The first few reminded me of the Clown’s at Birthday parties as a kid.
    That was in the early 60’s though. As soon as they started that psycho crap instead of magic tricks and balloon animals they would be disappeared.
    Most of the fathers and grandfather’s the were WW2 and Korea vets and you didn’t have to put up with this crap back then.

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  2. It’s outlandish conformity, but they can’t even be conformists without being perverts at it.

    We normies are living in their heads, and so we’re the target. They want us to be outraged, but they’re the ones outraged because mostly we ignore them and when we don’t we ridicule them.

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  3. They know they lack direction and meaning in their life. So, they desire to be noticed. This validates their existence. It is a sad example of the very human desire to not be ignored. That they matter. If you have no accomplishments as a human, become a spectacle. Get noticed at any cost.

    See also: Kardashians.

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  4. A common rule of thumb these days goes “Nose ring detected, opinion rejected”. I will never understand why an attractive woman would ruin her looks with a septum ring; but in addition to it being a turn-off, it does tell you how they vote …

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  5. Uncle Al — haha! Back as early as about 12 years old, conformity of the Left (back then I don’t think we even had an actual political affiliation for hippies, except Democrat or, maybe, ‘liberal’), was the VERY FIRST THING I noticed about them. My best friend’s hippie brother was all about the whole ‘free love’, ‘groovy’, tie dye, headband, love beads, thing. He tried his best to justify his weirdness in his otherwise normal family by pointing out just how ‘free’ he was in his noncomformity. The best I could figure out about him was that he really just wanted to smoke pot, dress like a weirdo, not work, and feel superior because he and his hippie friends had, apparently, discovered what life was all about. But what seemed glaringly obvious to — remember 12 years old — was that his way of thinking, dressing, and behaving was EXACTLY like his delusional friends. And such a state of mind/attitude required strict compliance to such a degree that it looked more like his brain was in prison. Not the case with the normal people I knew, who had the real freedom to discuss and debate and think about anything they wanted, from any angle they wanted, and they had the ability to reflect on things and change their minds about something. Unsurprising that people who don’t think they know the answers to everything, have the ability to reflect and come up with new ideas, given new information.

    I do clearly remember saying to my friend’s brother: “So, you’re different just like all your friends, right?” It really made him angry.

    I think it almost always just comes down to immaturity which, naturally, involves selfishness, laziness, the inability to have real empathy, and escapism.

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