According to a first-time commenter on the site named Terry, I’m apparently part of the “main stream (CFR influenced) Liberal media.” Those who regularly read the site probably find that just as amusing as I do, but I’m not mentioning it just to entertain us all. I’m mentioning it because of the sad point that Terry illustrates.
It seems as though it’s human nature to see the world in terms of “us vs. them.” There are many different positions that we can take — on political issues and most other things — but most people narrow it down to “what I believe” vs. “what the wrong people believe.” It’s just that the ways in which they segment the world are radically different. So even though most people see the world as “us vs. them,” they define “us” and “them” in very different ways.
Terry’s comment about me is a perfect example. He’s a Ron Paul supporter, and he took exception to my comments last week that straw polls are meaningless. It apparently would make his head explode to realize that there are more positions other than “Ron Paul is going to win and straw polls matter” vs. “the mainstream liberal media who are in lockstep with the Council on Foreign Relations.” It doesn’t seem to occur to the guy that someone could be in favor of liberty enough to reject the statist system he supports — and is actually much further away from the mainstream than he could dream of being.

Love & Hope — Episode 6:
Steve Jobs goes out as iconoclastic visionary many of us long to be
My books are time machines that tell you where (and who) I’ve been

If the kids are confused in school, maybe it’s the system and teachers
For all my life, I’ve hidden anger in order to be ‘perfect’ to others
Too many voices with little to say: Politics matters less and less to me
Angry reactions to others can make us wrong even when we’re right
Herman Cain’s GOP support causes confusion for Demos’ race narrative
Obama’s delusion about ‘explaining’ illustrates all-too-common narcissism