dissent

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    When Facts Fail, Faith Prevails: Truth Is Treason, Doubt Is Weakness

    When truth is treated like treason and doubt gets stamped “weakness,” the whole operation stops being politics and starts being liturgy: keep nodding, keep praising, keep pretending the receipts are holy. Peace be with you comes right after it trains people to call “I don’t understand” a character flaw and “you were wrong” a personal attack.

    And the neighbors who actually need answers—workers, voters, tenants, the folks paying for the miracle—get handled like security threats for asking for basic reality. Meanwhile the cult’s devotion stays “unbroken,” the way a preacher’s collar stays crisp: the golden calf doesn’t need facts; it needs obedience, and somehow the merch always sells.

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    In Praise of the Dusty Patriot’s Library Card

    Brothers and sisters, meet the Dusty Patriot, a curious soul armed with a library card rather than a megaphone. He faithfully paces the halls of learning while others race to the nearest echo chamber. Raised on a diet of Tom Paine and George Orwell, he dares to challenge power, believing democracy should be a rowdy dinner table, not a monologue commanded by the mighty. In an age when questioning authority is often mistaken for heresy, our dusty friend shines a light for the path of thoughtful dissent.

    Contrast this with the so-called patriots whose idea of freedom seems to be freedom from thought. They wave flags but flinch at scrutiny, forgetting that real democracy thrives on debate, not mere consensus. The Dusty Patriot understands that it is in the study circles and community discussions where the true spirit of democracy unfolds. Peace be with you, dusty traveler, for it is in the humble library, not the grandstanding narrative, that democracy finds its enduring home.

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