Rebel Yell & King's Dominion: A Wall of Separation

2 years ago
38

DAREDEVILS AND DELICATE SENSE ABILITIES

At the time, in the creative process, of crafting the title to this newest video, while I was aware that during the pandemic the theme park just north of the former capitol of the Confederacy had been closed, I was entirely unaware that the old-fashioned wooden roller coaster that had already abandoned the racing concept to rather provide a chance for one track to go forward, whilst the other had riders racing backwards at 56 mph, so as not to have any daredevil in the theme park depart with the feeling of being a loser, had even changed the name of the old Rebel Yell to Racer 75. Daredevil just ain't what it used to be, not afraid to burn in Hell, notwithstanding.

As a former commander during the summer surge sessions at U.S. Army Basic Training, and as a former strategic counterintelligence officer with a little more experience than others in smoke munitions, I know that given any group of 12 initial entry soldiers, given the opportunity to don a military grade protective mask and create a proper seal, at least one, if not more, will fail in the task and then go on to try to play it off like they are perfect in a gas chamber filled with CS gas. It's like a science.

And, at least by 2018, the reporters at the Scientific American, which had unprecedentedly given its endorsement to the current President, during an unprecedented pandemic, during which, throwing caution to the wind, over 4.2 million Virginians rushed to the polls to do their duty to vote, like democracy depended upon it, while less than a quarter chose the option to submit a ballot by mail, despite all of the clamor about an election being stolen by mail in ballots, knew that, given any 1,000 average Americans, watching a magician, of average skill and ability, toss a ball in the air two times, so as to create an expectancy, on the third feigned toss, as many as two thirds, will have been prepared to be astounded and amazed, testifying on a stack of comic books or by oath with their hands on a Dr Seuss book that they had witnessed, with their very eyes, the ball disappear magically in the air--exactly the percentage of people who believe, despite the empirical science, that intelligent life, at least as intelligent as that on Earth, exists someplace else in an infinite universe, but what if they, too, are wrong, as all probability suggests? Still not afraid to burn in Hell?

In a contentious election choice between two sides of a poop sandwich, as described by the first Negro Governor of Virginia, who had refused to endorse the congressman in Virginia's most diverse congressional district to succeed him when he decided to run for Virginia Governor, I had already lost most of my family and friends; so, if they lost their lives in a once in a lifetime pandemic, I can say I was not invited to the funeral, and public health guidance would have recommended that I stay away to preserve my life, a primary consideration, according to Don Beyer, and his secularist, atheist and humanist allies, is the reason most people decide to embrace religion, church and God, which he is proud as a father to say that all four of his children have rejected. However, when I may have been described as a Negro, and could have testified in a court that I had a younger sibling, I could say that I had a brother who actually worked in a few California theme parks, and had some rather revealing stories about the child age operators on thrill rides and attractions in whose hands we place our lives on rides with warning signs that discourage the pregnant, those afflicted with heart conditions and those with serious mental or emotional issues to avoid. And, if you thought the "insurrection" was a mass violence scene, your eyes would pop out of your head on hearing stories from a typical day at a theme park, with the deadly combination of adults who believe they know it all, and children in charge of keeping everything safe, like the last and continuing pandemic.

And, this video treats another widely misunderstood, but rather simple concept, like the yes or no question, regarding the classification of certain metrics for COVID-19: the definition of "wall of separation between church and state", the cherry picked phrase of Don Beyer and the "not afraid to burn in Hell" atheists who preach for a freedom from religion, and apparently even have their own holiday in January. And despite a wall of separation between the executive, legislative and judiciary powers, I would bet that at least two thirds of Americans do not know what the phrase "wall of separation" means, the phrase spoken by the slave holder, Thomas Jefferson, but that phrase, apparently, is not racist.

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