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Erasing History

Have you read the Constitution? Do you know what it says?

The fourth article reads, “A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of our youth to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”

That isn’t what you read?

This is from an image in the Library of Congress. It is a reproduction of the original Bill of Rights, as proposed. Articles 3 through 12 became the first 10 amendments to our Constitution.

For many young people, it might as well be 一個受到良好管制嘅民兵,對自由國家嘅安全係必要嘅, 人民持有同攜帶武器嘅權利唔會受到侵犯。 It is just noise to me. I’m sure that somebody can translate it back to English, but it will lose something in the translation.

There are many people that can no longer read cursive. It is not taught in most schools. The purpose of cursive was to increase the speed that you could write. My son’s legal signature is block letters.

It falls in the same category as counting change. Try this experiment, buy something, then pay in cash, but hand them change to make it a nice return. If the bill is 7.12, hand them 12.12 and watch them try to refuse the extra $2.12.

If you force them, they will be surprised when the cash register tells them to return a $5.00 bill.

I talked about the educational industry replacing words. Pupils became students became learners.

Everybody gets a participation award.

Today, everything is digitized. Photos can be manipulated/faked. Videos can be made by AI from a prompt. People have lost the ability to think critically.

My wife has difficulty in assigning value to different sources. Add to that, her ability to pick up a scary phrase from the talking head and not know the context means that she has difficulty discerning what is likely true, and what is likely not.

Tina Fey said, “I can see Russia from my house.” and today, most people attribute it to Sarah Palin. And if you point out their air, they can tell you that they have heard and seen Sarah say it.

We are on the cusp of losing our history. Words change meaning to fit the wants of those defining it.

It is hateful to speak the truth. So don’t speak it. Nobody else is saying these things, you must be wrong.

Every one in the MSM is saying it, it must be true.

The Supreme Court said this about that. Oh, have you read the opinion? What, it wasn’t an opinion? What was it? Oh, it was an administrative stay.

Did you read the bill? No? Then you don’t know what it says or means.

And, as one lawyer put it, we don’t know what a law means until the courts tell us.

NAZI used to mean a particularly nasty form of socialism. Today it either means a particularly nasty form of socialism, or it means somebody the left doesn’t like.

I just want a win that lasts for more then 24 hours.


Comments

3 responses to “Erasing History”

  1. curby Avatar

    getting Trump elected was the first step in the upswing. We the People saw how liberals fubar every single thing they put thier booger hooks into…
    like it or not, We the People have been complacent in our life.
    now people are getting involved and the more they see the more they realize lies repeated often make some believe them.
    the less msm watched or listened to the more GOOD in this Country is seen
    those that refuse to learn can and should be dismissed.
    help educate the ones willing to learn.

  2. pkoning Avatar
    pkoning

    Um, I’m confused. The image you showed (and a color image of somewhat better resolution I downloaded just now) says “the people”.

    One nice thing about reading US documents is that even the old ones (like this one) are in familiar script and spelling. About the only thing you have to deal with that’s unfamiliar is the “long s”.

    Reading old European documents is quite another matter because they go back much further and when you do, the writing becomes quite different. I spent a bit of time trying to decipher German documents from the 1300s (for genealogy) and had a whole lot of trouble even with official documents meant for the records, never mind less formal notes. It reminded me that my father once took a course on reading old documents, which meant learning various scripts (roughly one per century) and a bunch of conventions (also changing over time) of abbreviations. Take for example the Dutch Declaration of Independence (from 1581): https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2c/Plakkaat_van_Verlatinghe.jpg shows the first page.

    1. I think my point was missed. If you cannot read cursive, how would you know that I was translated it incorrectly? Denis Prager, in one of his chats, pointed out that it isn’t “Thou shalt not kill.” That is a mis-translation. His translation is, “Thou shalt not murder.” Which, to me, makes much more sense.

      But I do not read those ancient languages. I do read a little Latin, but that’s about it. I have to take someone else’s word for what it means.

      Will your grandchildren be able to read cursive? Or will they be dependent on someone else’s translation?

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