Is there a difference between Obozo's threats and that of the NVA prison-masters?
You be the judge.
...I experienced something while I was a prisoner of war that gives the
religious liberty protected by the First Amendment a special value to
me.
On January 1, 1971, the North Vietnamese Communists announced that we
were not allowed to practice religious observations in our cells. The
decision of the rank-and-file was that under no circumstances would we
go along with this new regulation, as we would not accept that any
government has the authority to enforce such a rule. This led to a
period of increasing tensions...
... At mid-morning the next day, the men in the next cell sang, at the top
of their lungs, “Onward Christian Soldiers.” At noon, they sang every
verse of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” When they reached the stanza
with “ … in the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea, as
he died to make men holy let us die to make men free,” I heard it and
understood. I cannot sing this song now without choking up, remembering
my comrades willingly taking an action which might amount to signing
their own death warrants....
There are a lot of other similarities between Obozo and the (NVA) Communists. This is only one example.
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