January
28th 2009
A Spartan’s guide to Border Security
HarrisonBergeron2

Posted under Culture & Globalism & Immigration & Uncategorized

Who knows more about keeping out invaders, Michael Chertoff and Ted Kennedy, or Lycurgus and Leonidas? Read this and decide for yourself who has the best approach.

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4 Comments »

4 Responses to “A Spartan’s guide to Border Security”

  1. Weaver on 28 Jan 2009 at 6:11 pm #

    Brilliant example!

  2. roho on 28 Jan 2009 at 7:09 pm #

    And also like “Troy”, who was so full of themselves that the “Horse” could only be a gift?

    The illegal alliens were not a gift to “Democracy”, but they still are inside the gates!

    Just imagine what that wall would look like had the moneys for “Dubya’s” war been spent on bricks? (Southern Interstate Five?)

  3. Bill Lussenheide on 29 Jan 2009 at 6:49 pm #

    Some lessons from nature-

    * Cancer attacks a body that is compromised and weakened.

    * Weeds prosper in soil that is uncared for and lacking proper ballance of air, water and nutrients.

    * Flys and worms are attracted to decaying material.

    A strong border is a good thing, but is in a sense reactionary, not preventive, much like the way medicine today only attempts to treat the symptom.

    A healthy understanding of our heritage, our history, and our responsibility as a “God Breathed” people, being a “light on the hill” for the whole world, is the only true natural immunity to stop the incursion of destructive predatory opportunistic events and ideas.

    The “Good Book” in Deuteronomy speaks of “Blessings and Cursings” based upon our righteousness as a people. A worthwhile read, even for the unbeliever, as their is great wisdom there about “Cause and Effect”

  4. HarrisonBergeron2 on 29 Jan 2009 at 8:17 pm #

    Bill Lussenheide,

    I think the nature analogies are right on target. And the reference to the harmful effects of a loss of righteousness are even more so.

    Now if we could get people to listen …

    Sadly, it looks like it will take total system failure before enough people realize there’s a problem.

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