The website just mentioned is again providing insight and advice on how to end a relationship. One glaring similarity between the last two websites critiqued is the Liberal-ness of their views and advice. Yes Liberal-ness. They both assume that there is no right or wrong, that both parties in a relationship are have equally legitimate positions and that both deserve respect. Moral Relevancy is rearing it’s ever ugly head. The flaws of moral relevancy are most apparent when discussing relationships.
The reality does not bear out the assumptions made by liberals about relationships. There is a right and wrong, and one party is wrong. Consider the case where one party is physically or emotionally violent. A Liberal diseased by moral relevancy says that both parties have a valid position, and the relationship should continue as a friendship after the break up. A Conservative who holds a moral imperative that defines all violence in a relationship as wrong, would disagree. If the violence were destructive enough, a Conservative would even arrest the wrong doer.
To extreme an example? Well, not according to the national statistics on violence against woman in our society, but Liberals do not like facts do they. The relationship created by Obama’s election also creates a similar divide of right and wrong. As a part of an ongoing discussion of civility in society; The outrage of Obama’s election, (fraud, ACORN, lack of Citizenship,lies et al), this divide has a clear right and wrong. Conservatives are right, they are the Right. Liberals are wrong. Is this divide going to be healed by compromise. I do not think so. Why would those who are right want to compromise with those who are wrong? Why should those who were attacked for the last eight years, not take the opportunity to attack now. Why should Conservatives today not use the techniques of the Liberals of the past, or even invent a few new ones.
Here is a new one—do not donate to charities. Remind them that with Obama they not longer need handouts, they have hope. And to handled those beggers in front of stores and on the streets—print this position on a business card and hand it to them instead of money.

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