
Author and historian Vince Everett Ellison has pointed out that simple misunderstandings are contributing to America’s growing political divide.
Who or what is the source of our rights and freedoms?
In his documentary Will You Go to Hell for Me?, Ellison convincingly argues that this country’s founding documents, the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution, are of divine origin. It is claimed that Furthermore, he argues that modern political progressives believe that government laws determine our rights and freedoms. Ellison believes that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was the second law based on the premise that federal legislators would control the unalienable rights that Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, and Ben Franklin granted to our Creator. It points out that America was founded.
I’ve been thinking about Ellison’s work for the past three weeks. It started when I saw an interview Ellison did with TPUSA founder Charlie Kirk about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy. Ellison is a critic of the symbols of the civil rights movement. He accuses Dr. King of convincing black Americans to seek help from the government rather than God. Ellison points out that Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” was a defining moment in the lag of faith-based thinking among black Americans.
Those disconnected from a Biblical worldview will draw the wrong conclusions from Wednesday’s mass shooting. They will blame the gun. Or they’ll blame it on the color of their skin.
One line from Ellison’s 1963 speech that stuck with him was, “But 100 years later, black people are still not free.”
If freedom truly comes from God, and it does, then how can a person who believes in God expect freedom from men or governments? If people acknowledge that they are children of God, how can they define equality based on the attitudes and treatment of others?
For black Americans, King pointed out that the government and white people were the source of freedom and salvation. This is at the root of America’s political and racial divisions. There are two groups of Americans. 1) People who truly believe that God is the ultimate provider of freedom, truth, and all other essential needs. 2) Those who believe that humans are the masters of the universe, the arbiters of freedom, the controllers of the weather, and the definers of truth.
God vs. Man, American Exceptionalism vs. Marxist Theory explains the fundamental discrepancies that confuse American culture.
I thought about this Wednesday in the aftermath of the mass shooting that left one woman dead, 21 others injured, and marred the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory parade.
As we tend to do on social media, this incident sparked a debate over “gun violence” and “gun control.” Given the high melanin levels of the three known suspects, it also sparked a publically silent but privately widespread debate. About race. Are black Americans more likely to resolve conflicts with gun violence?
Those disconnected from a Biblical worldview will draw the wrong conclusions from Wednesday’s mass shooting. They will blame the gun. Or they’ll blame it on the color of their skin. They will do so out of genuine ignorance or a desire to subvert our founding principles.
“Our Constitution was designed solely for a moral and religious people,” said our second president, John Adams. “That’s just not enough for other governments.”
Our Constitution does not adequately govern a secular society, a populace that rejects God as the source of freedom and all other essential needs.
The First Amendment prohibits the government from enacting laws that interfere with the exercise of religion, free speech, free press, freedom of assembly, or the right to complain to the government. The Second Amendment backs up these rights with guns. There is no human freedom on this earth that humans would not want to protect with guns.
Guns protect our God-given rights. You don’t have to like guns. But it is important to understand why it is needed on this planet. Your God-given rights depend on the Second Amendment.
We believe that Karl Marx’s political theory is relatively benign compared to “racism.” Nothing could be further from the truth.
If humans and governments are the source of your freedom, you don’t need guns.
Many Americans, especially black Americans, have believed that the government is their master and savior. This includes many Americans who attend church on Sundays and Wednesdays. God is their insurance, not their primary provider. His 401(k) is a savings account he hopes to tap into in the event of hospitalization or death.
On the surface, it’s a smart strategy. In reality, it’s a penny stock with no real value.
Thanks to Dr. King and his promotion of racial idolatry, many black Americans have been seduced by Marxism, communism, socialism, and feminism. Marxist theory pervades popular culture, corporate America, academia, and mainstream media. Affirmative action, diversity, equity, and inclusion are the fruits of Karl’s Marxian tree.
We believe that Karl Marx’s political theory is relatively benign compared to “racism.” Nothing could be further from the truth. In the eternal kingdom there will be former slaves and other victims of injustice. There will be no Marxists there. Marxism’s ban on religious belief forever deprives souls and forces its adherents into a defeatist mindset on Earth.
A high percentage of black Americans adopt Marxist ideas. They believe in matriarchy, feminism, and the “broken” nuclear family. Like misguided or bigoted white people, many black Americans believe that their dark skin is an obstacle to success. They have not yet grasped the fact that they are lab rats in the most dangerous social experiment in human history.
Those who reject God as the ultimate source of life and freedom have funded and encouraged the destruction of the family structure God designed. The matriarchal culture imposed and accepted by black Americans produces chaos, violence, decadence, and sexual perversion.
The shooters at the Chiefs parade share the same worldview as the women marching for the right to slaughter their babies. Connected to wrong power source.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood, were allies.





