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"Only America is stupid enough to trash its most able pioneers and slander their name with LaRouche's name standing at the forefront of the slander," I replied.
"Ah, but when you hear slander that's not America speaking, Peter. What you hear is an echo of the senseless noise that comes out of the clown circuses of the traitor-Kings. People latch onto this noise and make a melody out of it."
"That is how we lost all of what we had been," I said to Steve in agreement. "Who in society cares anymore about what we had once been? We were once called the beacon of hope for the world and the bastion of liberty? We've become the opposite, Peter. We've become economic terrorists, the most hated people on the planet. If what you say about LaRouche is true, then LaRouche is the only beacon of hope we've got left."
"Actually, I think we've become worse than the opposite of what we once were," said Steve.
I nodded. "Yes Steve, our present society has become a society of traitors against the very principle that we once fought for and stood for, on which our survival as a nation once depended, even the survival of civilization against the attack of fascism. That was all built on principles that had made America great and the most prosperous in history."
I told Steve that the man that I knew, named LaRouche, was fighting with all the wisdom of the ages to save the present society from the imperial attack against it, which has become a war that society has been coerced to fight to destroy itself. I told him that sadly almost nobody is listening to LaRouche in America. "People call him a fool, but society is the real fool. Those who should support him, most often step on him. We've traitors against our own cause, Steve?"
Steve raised his hand. "Woh, woh! Slow down Peter! If I were the man you are telling me about I would not make this accusation. We, society, are not traitors! We may be fools. That can agree with that, but traitors no. A traitor acts with intent. Society never intends to harm itself. It may do so in an act of utter folly, being misled by people whom it foolishly trusts by not taking the responsibility to discover the truth for itself. But society is not traitorous. As the German poet Goethe has put it in his famous play, Faustus, a good man always has got the divine spark within him regardless of the most foolish acts and desires that a man is duped by blind folly to pursue. Thus society may have become slanderous and riles the man who would save it, and who will save it. In real terms this riling and slandering means nothing, Peter. It has nothing to do with the truth that the man represents and the principles he upholds. Even if the whole of society errs, as it does in rejecting those truths and those principles on which our nation has been founded, the collective error that is involved, no matter how deeply it is accepted as the truth and how widely it is embraced, doesn't cause that error to become the truth. The most tragic error will always remain what it is, but a tragic error. By recognizing that society's deadlock can be broken, it will be broken. Of course people like you, Peter, can prove to be a valuable asset in this fight for the truth."
"Who in society should the President appoint then, Steve, if the corruption of society into utter folly has run so deep that it slander's its most able defenders? If the President were to vacate his office tomorrow, together with that of the Vice President, whom would he appoint in his place? Would he appoint LaRouche, a competent contender, but one who has also become the most slandered man within the walls of the White House? Such an appointment is hardly possible, is it? So, whom would the President put in his place if he were to vacate his office? Isn't society just as bankrupt as he is, by which the field of contenders has become rather narrow? After all, society is complicit in putting a complete idiot into the country's highest office in the first place, and then allows that man to play the role of a traitor-King."
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Stories about
Sex
from novels by Rolf A. F. Witzsche
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