So let me get this right. According to the farce of the hearing that was held in the Congress Wednesday, it’s your thoughts that make you guilty and not the actions you take.
Okay. That’s what the Democrats would have you believe.
I worked as a teacher for more than thirty years. I worked as a cook and chef for about twenty-five years. I’m a male. I’m retired. I’ve been married most of my life.
I can honestly say that there’ve been at least 100 women I looked at and thought to myself that I would like to get them. Some of them I undressed in my mind, some of them I had detailed fantasies about. Not one of them did I get with, not one of them did I approach, not one of them did I discuss any of my thoughts or fantasies with.
So am I guilty of adultery?
Next case. There were at least 100 times in my teaching career that I wanted to take a student who was disrupting my class and throw them out the window. Am I guilty of assault? If I’d done that they would have fallen to their death. Am I guilty of murder?
And that’s just in regard to students.
There are at least 100 other times when I knew that my boss was wrong, didn’t know what s/he was talking about, was lying to me, was lying to the whole staff, had a political motive for what s/he was doing, and/or was just plain outright being stupid. Does thinking these things make me guilty of insubordination?
Next case.
In the kitchens there were a good twenty times when I wanted to stab the chefs with my knife. I pictured in my brain not slitting their throats but just sticking them, cutting them a little bit, telling them they were assholes. Does that make me guilty of assault with a deadly weapon? Should I have been fired even though I never expressed my views outwardly to them? Because I told the cook next to me that I’d like to kill “him,” does that make me guilty? When one of the chefs came every night to the sauces that I made and put just the slightest pinch of salt in them, not in any way enough to effect the flavor of the sauces at all, and I told the cook next to me that I’d like to shove the sauce down his throat, did that make me guilty of assault with a deadly sauce? Insubordination? Anything?
Got the point?
So as we look at what’s happening on TV led by our Trump-Derangement-Syndrome-crazed Democrats, the party with the most outstandingly evident failure record in our nation’s history, remember, they would have you believe that political correctness police (PCP) is not enough, that Thought Police is even better. According to them, it’s not what you do, it’s what you think.