Shortly after learning to speak and read English, there was a
period wherein I was fascinated by mystery novels. I went through countless dog
eared copies of the Hardy Boys, which I picked up at the local public library,
and the thing that always stuck out in my young, teenage mind, were the plot
twists.
Every book had at least two plot twists, some far more, and
I’d always walk away with the sense that I hadn’t seen that coming. Just when
you thought you knew who done it, just when you thought you knew how it would
end, one well-placed plot twist would upturn the entire apple cart and lead you
in a new direction.
The world has recently experienced one such plot twist with
the death of arguably the number two power center of the entire Iranian regime,
General Qasem Soleimani. By all accounts, this was an unrepentantly evil
individual, never to be confused with someone running a cat shelter or a puppy
pound. He actively orchestrated, plotted, and carried out attacks that have
left American armed forces personnel either maimed or killed and for such a man
to have lived by the sword for so long, it was expected that he would
inevitably die by the sword. Qasem Soleimani’s sword came in the form of an airstrike
at Baghdad airport.
In an instant, a breath, in a moment in time the world turned
on a dime, and what seemed like a relatively mundane start of another year
turned to talks of a third world war, the reinstituting of the draft, every
American citizen now being a walking target, and other such life-altering
issues.
Before cooler heads could prevail, or anyone checked to
verify that what they were spreading did not originate from the Babylon Bee,
people were trying to rent bunkers, buy water, and go underground.
We have become a reactionary generation that doesn’t take the
time to think things through anymore.
That is dangerous, because even a halfwit
that understands human psychology, and understands that in the heat of the
moment they can convince you to do something against your own best interest,
can piggyback off of uncertainty, and make you do something utterly, undeniably
dumb.
I can’t say I didn’t see some type of action against Iran
coming. They’ve been pushing the envelope for some time, seeing whether or not
we would react, and each attempt at goading the United States made them bolder
when no significant blowback occurred. This was a well-timed response and one
that sends a clear message.
What I didn’t see coming was almost half of this nation’s
political class siding with a terrorist and the nation that is the world’s
foremost funder of terrorist activity. The plot twist in this story is elected
officials calling the removal of someone like Qasem Soleimani from the chessboard
a war crime, something worthy of an international tribunal, and subsequent
conviction.
Whichever angle you look at this from, the conclusion you
come to is the same every time: Jesus was right! A house divided against itself
will not stand, and every kingdom divided against itself is brought to
desolation.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea Jr.
Good point about a kingdom divided!
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