Do you remember the old days? Back when America was fighting a Cold War for freedom and democracy against the godless Reds? Back then, Russia went to the Communist Manifesto for guidance, and we were against that.
The Communist Manifesto is famously against the "bourgeois claptrap of the family," and so were the Reds, who encouraged abortion, no-fault divorce and "free love."
Modern America stands for gay marriage, and it's fast becoming a hate crime to be against it. In Russia, "gay propaganda" is illegal.
So who's more Red these days, America, or Russia?
You be the judge,
LSP
The Russians think that Barack is gay...
ReplyDeleteWeird, isn't it, that they would think that.
ReplyDeleteYou'd think that the SVR (successor to the KGB) would have assured the Russian people that Barack is heterosexual -- but that's not what the intelligence service says. They must be really incompetent and deluded. Barack is about as butched-up as they come.
ReplyDeleteLL, are you getting Barry and 'Chelly mixed up again?
ReplyDeleteIt's telling that the Democrat/Commies used to cheer for tyrants around the world if they were of the same anti-US stripe, but they aren't cheering for Putin, as if he's not really a retro-commie, despite what our media claims. It certainly is a Bizarro World were living in!
During the War, the Russians also used homosexuality as a weapon of subversion against the West,to compromise officials and politicians. It was used as espionage and as propaganda to undermine Western values. This may have been one reason why the softer Eurocommunist agenda also embraced gay ideology.Certainly it is from the Eurocommunist campaigns of the 1970s that so much of the current gay ideology in Britain and the is derived and why it spread so widely.
ReplyDeleteInteresting point, Anonymous. I'd forgotten about "soft eurocommunism." They certainly succeeded with the gay thing...
ReplyDeleteKiss the ring of shiny shiny Runcie, lift his cassock and lard his nads......
ReplyDeleteI'd forgotten that, ahem, nursery rhyme, Lukeya.
ReplyDeleteThey say Runcie lost his faith by the time he died.
I wasn't aware that he had any to begin with.
Be that as it may Padre, he was a very brave and decorated tank commander in WWII, and unique amongst leading churchpeople, in that he had taken a number of lives in combat.
ReplyDeletePerhaps we should not think too harshly of him.
True -- got an MC, which isn't shabby by anyone's standards. I used to see him around the cathedral in Canterbury, from time to time.
ReplyDelete