Comments by "craxd1" (@craxd1) on "Ingraham: Liberals are now the intolerant ones" video.
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They have to keep pushing the myth that started during the Civil War, which hides the truth about what became two-party politics and nationalism. They can't have the world knowing that Lincoln was an intolerant despot, and was really a Federalist from the Whig Party cult of Clay (there's your owl origin), who was called a Liberal. It was never about parties as much as political philosophy, which was the freedom, anti-taxation, and state's rights of Jefferson verses the big brother totalitarianism of Hamilton's Federalists. By 1900, Federalism (authoritarian Nationalism or Unionism) had infected both parties, and it was all tied to social control, tax, tariffs, banking, and fiat currency, creating a right and left inside both parties. 45 is from the Jeffersonian philosophy, not the latter, which is why they hate him. This sewer swirls around NYC and in DC.
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@NinaWassamatta I've told several people that we're in the middle of Reconstruction 2.0, which is not only nationwide, but in almost every other western nation as well. They're practically using the same federalist Lincolnian playbook, where three years into the Civil War, Lincoln played the race card to counter the southern states offering emancipation to anyone that would fight for the south, and many did. The secession and war was over state's rights, banking, taxes, and the harsh tariffs being imposed by northern Whig federalists led by Clay, and later, Lincoln.
People really don't get it, in that it's nationalism, no matter what else they call it, whether it's federalism, socialism, communism, fascism, or what occurred in Germany. They were all nationalist despots with a big brother government.
They all had one thing in common, and that was their Hobbesian and Hamiltonian philosophy of a overreaching, centralizing and collectivizing government, which was against state's rights and natural rights.
They hate anyone who supports the Aristotelian and Jeffersonian conservative philosophy of state's rights, liberty, and natural rights.
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