THE PROBLEM – THE SOLUTION – RESULTS

Instead of the above title,
Currently, the following pattern is repeated daily by conservative media, conservative politicians, and commentators—

THE PROBLEM—THE PROBLEM—THE PROBLEM . . .

Does anyone offer any solutions that stop the bad, rather than more ongoing wishful thinking and wishful talking what “should be done in Washington”—but makes no difference ?

JUST SAY “NO” – – – OR “YES” ?

“Just Say ‘NO’ To Drugs” was a worthwhile campaign against what is bad for kids—and everybody agreed drugs were bad.

Today, nearly everything is turned upside down for kids, AND everything imaginable and unimaginable is given a green light for kids, by adults, and even pushed and forced on kids, by adults.

— Everything gay-accepting, gay-affirming, gay-endorsing is everywhere.
— Boys cannot be left alone to be boys.
— Girls cannot be left alone to be girls.
— Drag queen shows welcome and cater to kids.
— School libraries defend pornography.
— Unrestricted technology gives free tickets to any evil, at any age.
— Murder openly seen on TV breeds a right to unseen medical murder of kids.

And, even the war on drugs to save kids, is turned upside down—by our leaders, BY ADULTS.
Do not think for a moment that the fentanyl crisis is accidental or unavoidable.
Just as surely as the border crossing crisis is totally intentional, so is the companion disaster of the drug crossing crisis catastrophe also by design.

We could stop both at one time by securing the border, like any other sane and healthy country.
But our leadership, adults, don’t want to.
They want to destroy this country, and are pleased to be well on their way by destroying our border integrity and destroying our kids—by doing nothing about it.

We know what needs to be done.
We know it can be done.
But it doesn’t get done.

We watch, and nothing happens.

Sometimes, do we just have to leave things hanging, like when we say, “Why, God?” in our personal lives, without answers ?

LET IT . . .

“Let it hurt.
Let it bleed.
Let it heal.

Let it go.”
—–Peter Rosenberger, Hope for the Caregiver, on afr.net