There’s something rotten about the way leftists behave whenever a conservative Republican passes away. You don’t have to look far to see it—the second rumors about Lindsey Graham’s death started swirling, the usual suspects on the left were already crawling out from under their rocks, spitting hatred and celebrating. The same people who lecture the rest of us about “compassion” and “tolerance” are, predictably, the first to drag someone through the mud simply because they dared to disagree with them politically.
Let’s get one thing straight: Ali Khamenei—an Iranian dictator responsible for countless deaths and decades of brutality—died recently. You’d expect decent people to recognize the difference between a blood-soaked tyrant and a sitting American senator. But not the modern left. For them, tribal hatred takes priority over any sense of decency or patriotism. When a conservative dies, they dance on the grave. When a socialist strongman dies, they shed crocodile tears and find ways to blame America for his crimes.
How can anyone take these progressives seriously? One minute they’re screaming about “hate speech” and demanding safe spaces. The next, they’re howling with glee at the idea of a political enemy leaving this earth. The hypocrisy couldn’t be more obvious. It’s a game to them—if you’re not chanting their slogans, you’re not even worthy of basic human respect.
But this is what happens in a culture poisoned by globalist propaganda and the shallow virtue-signaling of radical progressives. They’ve lost all sense of perspective. They don’t care about the country, or about unity—they just want a world where only their voices are allowed, and anyone who disagrees is treated like a subhuman villain. They claim to be the “good guys,” but their actions reveal a twisted, anti-American mindset that only emerges at its ugliest when someone they oppose dies.
Let’s remember what really matters: Americans can disagree—loudly, passionately, even angrily. But rooting for the death of your fellow citizen just because they dared to stand on the other side of the aisle is a sickness. Maybe the left should spend less time policing pronouns and more time finding their moral compass. This isn’t just another political fight—it’s a look at what really lurks in the heart of the radical left. And the picture isn’t pretty. When did simple human decency become a partisan issue?
Source: Redstate
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