Every time we allow “just a little” freedom to be taken. Every time we allow a skoshi bit of common sense to escape our laws. Every time we don’t defend a minority. Every time we submit to another little bit of infringement. Every time we allow our neighbor to be hauled off for breaking a law we agree with; but the law is inherently unjust. Our line in the sand… moves.
We all have drawn lines in the sand. We all (many? most?) back away and draw new lines. It is only when our backs are against the wall do we say, “No more!”.
So, next time you read an article in the MSM about some “wacko” who violently opposed arrest because s/he wasn’t wearing a seatbelt; think maybe that person’s line in the sand got backed off once too often?
or something like that…
But when our backs HAVE been pushed against the wall because we moved our line in the sand once too often; reckon we’ll fight like cornered junkyard dawgs? (Think “momma bear protecting her cubs!”)
Ultimately the question isn’t “Do you have a line in the sand?”, the question should be “Where’s your wall, and who’s watching your back?”.
This article is filed under the category(s) Second Amendment and was published January 2nd, 2020 by Herschel Smith.
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On January 4, 2020 at 3:34 am, DonB said:
Something I posted back in ’09:
The line in the sand… moves.
Every time we allow “just a little” freedom to be taken. Every time we allow a skoshi bit of common sense to escape our laws. Every time we don’t defend a minority. Every time we submit to another little bit of infringement. Every time we allow our neighbor to be hauled off for breaking a law we agree with; but the law is inherently unjust. Our line in the sand… moves.
We all have drawn lines in the sand. We all (many? most?) back away and draw new lines. It is only when our backs are against the wall do we say, “No more!”.
So, next time you read an article in the MSM about some “wacko” who violently opposed arrest because s/he wasn’t wearing a seatbelt; think maybe that person’s line in the sand got backed off once too often?
or something like that…
But when our backs HAVE been pushed against the wall because we moved our line in the sand once too often; reckon we’ll fight like cornered junkyard dawgs? (Think “momma bear protecting her cubs!”)
Ultimately the question isn’t “Do you have a line in the sand?”, the question should be “Where’s your wall, and who’s watching your back?”.