Cookie Monster - A Hoodie Away From Joining The Trayvon Martin Protestor Mob
Russell Moore, the Southern Baptist Convention’s apologizer
in chief, says white taxpayers are “missing the point” regarding the “Justice
for Trayvon” mob. I don’t know that the
Justice for Trayvon mob is actually articulating a point at all, but I’m
willing to try to distill the point.
Lord knows, I’d hate to miss a point being made by a mob wearing
hoodies.
When I look at a mob of low information voters wearing
hoodies and repetitively chanting nonsense, I am reminded of Justice
Rehnquist’s dissent in Texas v. Johnson.
My impression of the Justice for Trayvon gatherings is that they articulate
“no essential part of any exposition
of ideas” but rather are merely “the equivalent of an inarticulate grunt or
roar”.
But Russell Moore
insists I am missing the point. So, if I
were to distill a point from the Justice for Trayvon mob, the point I get is: “Me
Want Cookie!”
It strikes me
that the Cookie Monster is more articulate, and certainly more to the point,
than any Justice for Trayvon mob or race huckster. It also occurs to me that both the Cookie
Monster and the mob want the same thing: to take something that does not belong
to them, which they did not earn, and consume it.
If you dressed the Cookie Monster in a hoodie, put a cookie
on a covered plate and placed it before the Cookie Monster, I am certain Cookie
Monster would say “No Justice, No Peace”, smash the covered plate, and eat the
cookie.
So what point am I to distill from Cookie Monster and the Justice
for Trayvon mob? They want what they
want, without paying for it, and won’t even say “thank you” when they take
it. Their desires are sufficient enough
excuse to engage in any behavior. Facts,
property rights, and laws do not matter to them. Their behavior is simply childish.
It is Russell Moore who does not “get the point” that we
already get the point. Begging hands and
bleeding hearts always cry out for more.
There is no limit to Cookie Monster’s appetite. And at some point, children must be told “enough”.
The fact is Trayvon received his justice - both on earth and
before his Maker. Russell Moore should
know this – Baptists do believe in Heaven and Hell.