This morning this scenario kept playing out in my head - probably due to some awfulness relating to DDIC (Draft-dodger-in-Chief) and immigration on NPR.
Scene: Many years after leaving the earthly bounds.
DDIC, lugging his baggage filled with gold, is ringing the doorbell at the Pearly Gates, and St. Peter is on the other side.
St.Peter:"Passport, visa and birth certificate please."
DDIC: Tweets "Just let me enter!"
St.Peter: "Oops, your mother was born in Scotland, sorry you will have to take the down elevator."
DDIC: Tweets "WHAT?, That's sad, so sad! Let me in!"
St.Peter: "Nope! On your way."
St Peter closes the Pearly Gates.
THE END
Martin Niemöller (1892–1984) was a prominent Protestant pastor who emerged as an outspoken public foe of Adolf Hitler and spent the last seven years of Nazi rule in concentration camps.
Niemöller is perhaps best remembered for the quotation: First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Socialist.
Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Trade Unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.
The quotation stems from Niemöller's lectures during the early postwar period. Different versions of the quotation exist. These can be attributed to the fact that Niemöller spoke extemporaneously and in a number of settings. Much controversy surrounds the content of the poem as it has been printed in varying forms, referring to diverse groups such as Catholics, Jehovah's Witnesses, Jews, Trade Unionists, or Communists depending upon the version. Nonetheless his point was that Germans—in particular, he believed, the leaders of the Protestant churches—had been complicit through their silence in the Nazi imprisonment, persecution, and murder of millions of people.
Only in 1963, in a West German television interview, did Niemöller acknowledge and make a statement of regret about his own antisemitism.
Nonetheless, Martin Niemöller was one of the earliest Germans to talk publicly about broader complicity in the Holocaust and guilt for what had happened to the Jews. In his book Über die deutsche Schuld, Not und Hoffnung (published in English as Of Guilt and Hope)—which appeared in January 1946—Niemöller wrote: "Thus, whenever I chance to meet a Jew known to me before, then, as a Christian, I cannot but tell him: 'Dear Friend, I stand in front of you, but we can not get together, for there is guilt between us. I have sinned and my people has sinned against thy people and against thyself.'"
I posted this about 3 years ago, when we were in the throes of the worst political campaign ever.
It is has become even more poignant today, in light of what our political leaders (maybe NON-LEADERS!) are doing to our country, a country that has lost its mind, its way and the respect of most of our ALLIES!
DDIC and his cronies are attempting to make our country one without morals, without truth without ethics, without compassion and sympathy.
DDIC is trying to dissolve our Democratic Republic, and make it an AUTOCRACY
If you DON'T SPEAK up, if you believe his lies and just roll over, you will become like the slaves of the Russian Communistic Party.
Do you really want to have every part of your life controlled by "THEM"?
WAKE UP!👀