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Mandeville, LA â Exclusive Transcript â “Martin Luther King, Jr. said it best in 1965 when he was asked about the Vietnam War. [mocking] âArenât you being un-American by questioning our involvement in the Vietnam War? This is a powerful nation. Weâve got to get involved in the worldâs affairs.â” Â Check out todayâs transcript for the restâŚ.
Begin Mike Church Show Transcript
Mike: âHow Lenin Beat Reagan.â Now, this is a story about where did the Russian commies go? Where did the attitude or the swagger of Russian commies, whereâd they go? By the way, a side note, Pope Francis is in Cuba today and then will be in the United States tomorrow. Heâs doing two masses, one at the cathedral in D.C. and one in Philadelphia, I think. Thereâs an outdoor one that theyâre doing, too.
Paul: I have the — letâs see. The one that I have is from — as far as here in D.C. goes, heâs arriving tomorrow. And then he gives, I believe, a mass on Wednesday. He does — youâre correct. Here in D.C. thereâs two separate masses.
Mike:Â Thereâs one outdoors and thereâs one at the cathedral.
Paul: Correct. And then heâs giving his big address to Congress on Thursday before he heads out of town.
Mike:Â Joint session of Congress?
Paul:Â Correct.
Mike: Many people are theorizing on what the Holy Father is going to say.  I wonât comment on it because I donât know. I will comment on what he has already said and a couple other things in a moment, but I want to do this first.
[reading]
Russians, raised on a steady diet of Soviet exceptionalism and âcreaking camaraderieâ (Orwellâs phrase), could conceive of no effective opposition to such dynamic dysfunction as America presented. Tanks, slogans, and ICBMs were useless against âLike a Virginâ cassettes and boxes of rubbers brought into the country by unwashed American undergrads whose criticisms of their own government were little different in kind from their head of stateâs. The moral of the story
was not so much that our brand of patriotism, our brand of ideology, was superior. Rather it was that we largely eschewed such things, or kept them to a decent minimum, lest they bog us down in the sort of ritualistic affirmations we so readily mocked in the Soviet bloc.
So itâs ironic that in the 25 years since the USSR went poof, and especially in the dozen-plus years since 9/11, the American right has increasingly adopted the style of the old Soviet Union, starting with the znachki. Reagan didnât wear a flag lapel pinânot when debating Carter, not when debating Mondale, not when negotiating with Gorbachev. Outside the circus atmosphere of a political convention, virtually no one wore flag lapel pins back then. Nowadays theyâre nearly compulsory in political circles and are a common enough sight on everyone from newsreaders to sportscasters to talk-show hosts: a society-wide assimilation of nationalist kitsch worthy of the USSR and, accordingly, so perfunctory as to have meaning only in absence.
Then thereâs the pure, uncut tovarishch talk of âyouâre a great American,â the salutation Sean Hannity exchanges with favored guests and callers on his radio show. His book covers, tooâwith their abundance of reds, whites, and blues, and titles like Let Freedom Ring and Deliver Us From Evilâare enough to make one appreciate the graceful understatement of old Socialist Realist propaganda.
And one canât avoid mentioning Fox News when discussing Orwellian uses and abuses of language. The mock-heroic âFair, Balanced, and Unafraidâ and âNo-Spin Zoneâ are splendid examples of Ministry of Truth doublethink, insofar as youâre supposed to believe them and not believe them at the same time: believe them because they proclaim noble ideals and not believe them because if youâre a typical Fox News viewer you tune in precisely because youâre sure to encounter a gratifying and unembarrassed partisanshipâsometimes known as spinâdelivered with patriotic-hued backdrops, exhilarating denunciations of enemies of the state both without and within, and of course, flag lapel pins.
Part of Fox Newsâs charm, however, is that the network has set itself up as a kind of government in exileâdefending the faith on a cable redoubt from which it can conveniently deprecate as un-American anything the actual American government does or doesnât do. Hence Foxâs sensibility: a heady cross-purposing of Radio Free Europe and old-school Vremya. This seeming paradox, though, has roots that predate the Eisenhower administration, as Mary McCarthy, confessed anticommunist, noticed in 1952 in that yearâs response to the countryâs perennial Red anxieties: âThe strange thing is that this current indoctrination for democracy has very much the same toneâpious, priggish, groupyâthat we objected to in the Stalinism of the popular-front period.â The tone is no less successful now.
Where Orwell is concerned, however, itâs not really 1984 but rather his 1945 essay âNotes on Nationalismâ that gets nearest the tenor of the times and best captures the paradox of ardent democrats sounding like New Soviet Men. Orwell applies the term ânationalistâ less to jingoes from this or that geopolitical entity and more to a habit of mind whose main identification might be ideological, racial, religious, or based, for instance, on party or class. Whatever the affiliation,
âA nationalist is one who thinks solely, or mainly, in terms of competitive prestige . . . .â
[/private]
[end reading]
Mike: Folks, this is what drives all this insanity that we see around us with the war hawks.  One of the last callers that was on this show last hour said something to the effect of, [mocking] âAnd Obama lets Iran menace the rest of the region and acquire a nuclear weapon.â One, they havenât acquired a weapon yet. Number two, they havenât menaced the region any more than the United States has menaced the region. But I would also add the caveat here when I hear American exceptionalism, hyperbole, and arrogance. I mentioned this but I only had ten seconds. There were five or six other parties that signed this agreement that Secretary of State Kerry signed or Obama signed or whoever signed it. Why arenât they to blame? Why arenât the Krauts to blame? Why arenât the French to blame? Why arenât the English to blame for Iran? Why is it only the United States thatâs to blame? Itâs because weâre âMurica. [mocking] âWhere America doesnât lead, thereâs a vacuum.â
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Martin Luther King, Jr. said it best in 1965 when he was asked about the Vietnam War. [mocking] âArenât you being un-American by questioning our involvement in the Vietnam War? This is a powerful nation. Weâve got to get involved in the worldâs affairs.â King correctly stated that: No, we need to speak with a moral authority and waging unjust wars to the sacrifice of tens of thousands of our boys is not just and itâs not moral. Itâs been downhill ever since. Downhill ever since.
Mandeville, LA â Exclusive Transcript â "Abortion, and even contraception, even in the prevention of pregnancy, is verboten in church teaching. This goes all the way back prior â this is taken directly from the gospels, directly from the Old Testament, and then passed on traditionally." Check out todayâs transcript […]
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