The left's culture of death eagerly guides, counsels and assists the weak and vulnerable

A Pride of Predators

By Jeannie DeAngelis
Wednesday, August 26, 2009

The Battle at Kruger is a video depiction of lions and crocodiles attacking a Cape Buffalo calf at a watering hole at Kruger National Park in South Africa. The youngest and weakest in the herd is ambushed, dragged into the water where a fight ensues as two crocodiles attempt to snatch the prey from the lion’s jaws.

Eventually the lions wrest the buffalo from the reptile clutch and prepare to devour the prize. In an uncharacteristic turn of events the scattered herd regroups charging and tossing one lion into the air — freeing the little calf. A vitalized buffalo family chases away the remaining strays and surrounds the unsteady baby within the safety of the herd.

A lesson can be gleaned from the Battle at Kruger about liberal propensity to isolate children from parents and the elderly from loved ones. The left’s culture of death eagerly guides, counsels and assists the weak and vulnerable if the effort assures empty cradles and prematurely occupied graves. With that in mind, it would be best for young and old alike to remain alert and avoid liberal watering holes if not encircled by a drove.

Hiding in the tall grass, the left cloaks eugenics in compassion, promoting death under the pretense of caring. Like all thriving hunters liberals are aware that isolation insures a successful kill. In response, they plant seeds of alienation to sway the defenseless into believing government proxies are better equipped than family to decide whether to dispose of the unborn or decline nutrition or hydration.

Take for example, Linda Douglass, communications director for the White House Office of Health Reform, separating prey from the pack by parroting pro-choice rhetoric targeting elderly Americans. When referring to end of life counseling outlined in HR3200, Douglass plants lack of confidence in the minds of vulnerable seniors by saying, “these are such hard conversations for people to have inside their families.â€