Sorry, I can't agree. We respect the rule of law, it's at the core of our beliefs. The Constitution matters to us, until it doesn't to those in power. We're not fucking domesticated, we're playing by the rules because we still have reason to believe in them.
But that belief is being tested and rightfully wavering. It's easy for Antifa and BLM to jump some shit off and burn a city because they hate this country and the constitutional framework that supports it. We, on the other hand, love this country, warts and all. We don't want to see it burn if we can save it. But there comes an inflection point where enough of us stop believing that the mechanisms remain in place for us to maintain or recapture our republic. This is but a glimpse of that.
You keep thinking people who are die hard Trump supporters are domesticated tadpoles if you like, but you're a fucking idiot if you do.
Agreed, and that realization is what's is propelling otherwise law-abiding people to start becoming violent and forcefully resistant. If the rule of law no longer matters, conservatives and Trump supporters in general have a very weak tether to the principles of lawful conduct.
Sounds like you don't understand what you're supporting, or who you're conversing with. I agreed, I believe in this very thread, (if you enjoy reading perhaps you'll discover it as it's pretty close to this exchange), that a violent response is both appropriate and necessary. My point had nothing to do with throwing shade on the video here, it was to point out that the reason why we hadn't gotten there as a movement in general yet has nothing to do with being domesticated like dogs as you claim, it's because as a core belief, conservatives believe in exhausting the rule of law first before we paint the tree of liberty with the blood of tyrants. This video is a glimpse of what starts to happen when conservatives start feeling like they've exhausted the rule of law.
Sorry, I can't agree. We respect the rule of law, it's at the core of our beliefs. The Constitution matters to us, until it doesn't to those in power. We're not fucking domesticated, we're playing by the rules because we still have reason to believe in them.
But that belief is being tested and rightfully wavering. It's easy for Antifa and BLM to jump some shit off and burn a city because they hate this country and the constitutional framework that supports it. We, on the other hand, love this country, warts and all. We don't want to see it burn if we can save it. But there comes an inflection point where enough of us stop believing that the mechanisms remain in place for us to maintain or recapture our republic. This is but a glimpse of that.
You keep thinking people who are die hard Trump supporters are domesticated tadpoles if you like, but you're a fucking idiot if you do.
The laws are meaningless when commie nut-jobs issue "stand-down" orders to the police ... doing so should be illegal.
Agreed, and that realization is what's is propelling otherwise law-abiding people to start becoming violent and forcefully resistant. If the rule of law no longer matters, conservatives and Trump supporters in general have a very weak tether to the principles of lawful conduct.
Sounds like you don't understand what you're supporting, or who you're conversing with. I agreed, I believe in this very thread, (if you enjoy reading perhaps you'll discover it as it's pretty close to this exchange), that a violent response is both appropriate and necessary. My point had nothing to do with throwing shade on the video here, it was to point out that the reason why we hadn't gotten there as a movement in general yet has nothing to do with being domesticated like dogs as you claim, it's because as a core belief, conservatives believe in exhausting the rule of law first before we paint the tree of liberty with the blood of tyrants. This video is a glimpse of what starts to happen when conservatives start feeling like they've exhausted the rule of law.
Rule of law hasn't existed since at least 2015