"Thomas Paine came to America from Great Britain in 1774 when he was 37 years old. He burned with righteous indignation at the cruel tyranny of kings. Half a million copies of "Common Sense," his plainspoken call for rebellion, flooded this fledgling nation of three million people. His rhetoric so moved and persuaded George Washington that he read Paine's words to the troops at Valley Forge. After America won its independence, Paine found himself in another fight, the French Revolution, and wrote another best-seller, "The Rights of Man." But he got into trouble in France and was thrown into prison, narrowly avoiding execution. He returned to America in 1802, a prophet without honor in the nation he helped to create." Watch this video .
He's quite foul. And hides it with humor. I'll stick with Glen. :) Are you moving here yet?
ReplyDeleteIt is a problem that liberals tend to use vulgar language and are sometimes blasphemous.
ReplyDeleteBut I feel as Joseph Smith, "I love that man better who swears a stream as long as my arm yet deals justice to his neighbors and mercifully deals his substance to the poor, than the long, smooth-faced hypocrite."
Glenn Beck may be a Mormon, and he may clothe his words in patriotism and love, but he spreads hate and ignorance. Such is the way of the hypocrite.