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R O B E R T M O R L E Y C O L U M N I S T

The Riots Will Come


August 11, 2009 | From theTrumpet.com
When times are good, it is far easier for everybody to get along. But times
are changing.

T he economy is changing life in America. Popular daytime shows and print and

online articles are about the topics that are on people’s minds the most: people losing
their jobs, families with home foreclosures, how to feed a family for less in these hard
economic times, and so forth. Many Americans are finally being forced to make lifestyle
changes—some of them very unpleasant. Tension is building with every foreclosure.

Yet, while many families are hurting, much of the American population still has the luxury
of remaining apathetic—sung to sleep by sweet-sounding political soundbites. Our leaders
tell us that the recession is over, the bottom is in, a V-shaped recovery has begun.

America’s leadership is setting America up for full-scale disillusionment.

At the time of America’s most perilous economic predicament in 233 years, the White
House and Congress are pushing universal health care and carbon taxes. Could America’s
leaders be more economically suicidal or out of touch? At a time when legislators have
asked people to dig deep and borrow trillions of dollars to keep the big banks and the
economy from imploding, politicians are pushing welfare-state handout programs that are
practically guaranteed to crush every taxpayer under their ponderous weight.

If universal health care follows in the dubious footsteps of Medicare and Medicaid, the
true cost of government-care will be many times what the salesmen in Washington claim.

Meanwhile, if you fine companies for emitting carbon dioxide, those companies will pass
down the costs to their customers (you and me). If they can’t do that, they will move out
of the country. If they can’t do that, they will close.

Lies about no taxes and more jobs are being exposed. And trust in Washington is
breaking.

The reaction to the Obama administration’s request that people report any e-mails, news
articles, or web pages of people and organizations critical of the government’s universal
health-care plan is a prime example. It stirred up a hornet’s nest. People fear big brother.
They fear government.
Much of this fear is manifested in the widespread volatility of the town hall meetings in
recent days. Across the country, crowds of people turned out to learn more about the
health-care reform proposals. Scuffles have erupted, and angry listeners have regularly
shouted down politicians in what has turned out to be a hugely sensitive issue for many
people.

Health-care proponents claim that Republicans are sabotaging the town hall meetings by
sending protesters. Although some of this may be occurring, high-ranking Democrats
have jumped on this as an excuse to label anyone who speaks out against taxpayer-
funded health care as a radical right-winger. Big media too has joined the bandwagon,
insinuating that people who listen to talk radio are extremists and somehow not
American.

Right now the clash is between political ideologies. But how much would it take for the
fighting to turn into something much more dangerous?

Look at what happened in Britain on Saturday. The BBC reports that people couldn’t go out
onto the streets of downtown Birmingham for over two hours as a full-blown race riot
took place. Apparently a group was demonstrating against violent Islam when a larger
group of black and Asian people turned up and violence ensued. “You had people burning
the Union flag. People were being kicked—some of them weren’t anything to do with the
protests,” said Gary Nichols, who watched the disturbances from his city center
apartment. “It all seemed to be very systematic—groups were arriving in cars and getting
involved in the violence ….”

According to Mirror.co.uk, “the rival groups fought a terrifying pitched battle …. Families
ran for cover as the yobs laid into each other with planks, bottles and placards. Officers in
riot gear struggled to control the violence.”

See what happens when people no longer trust or respect those who rule the land? They
start taking the law into their own hands.

How much would it take to set off Birmingham-type riots across America? As the
economy continues to grind down, the answer is: less and less.

Hope is going to be smashed by reality. When the shape of America’s recovery is more
like a staircase to the cellar—that is, no recovery, only small respites on the way down—
then America’s lack of social cohesion will really be revealed.

Remember New Orleans? After Hurricane Katrina broke the levees, thousands remained
stranded without electricity or communication, enclosed by rising waters. With police
stretched to the limit, society simply fell apart. Soon the city descended into a cesspool of
criminals. Mobs ransacked shops, stealing anything and everything of value that wasn’t
submerged. People armed themselves with knives and guns from weapons dealers and
pawn shops, or with whatever they could find.

“Many of these people under normal circumstances wouldn’t think to do such


things,” wrote columnist Joel Hilliker. “But desperation drew them toward depravity. They
watched others do it—they felt abandoned by the government—they became intoxicated
with bitterness and a sense of entitlement—and they convinced themselves there was
nothing wrong with their criminality. Thus, the city plunged into lawlessness. Within two
short days, thugs and gangs held siege. Arsonists arbitrarily set buildings ablaze; snipers
fired at military helicopters; crooks assaulted trucks trying to reach survivors with
provisions. The chaos was so violent that beleaguered national guardsmen were given
shoot-to-kill orders—against ungovernable American citizens.”

Here’s the take-home lesson. When times are good, it is far easier for everybody to get
along. Times of crisis reveal people’s hearts. And the reality about human nature is,
people are not naturally good (Jeremiah 17:9).

Unfortunately, America is heading into the worst economic times ever. What some
commentators have called the Greater Recession is really just the early stages of a
Greater Depression. Expect devalued dollars and soaring interest rates. Sky-high oil
prices and hyperinflation. Wheelbarrows of money for loaves of bread. This is the future
of the U.S. economic implosion.

Economic catastrophes such as the one we’re beginning to experience don’t just affect
the economy. We are sitting on a social powder keg. The public disillusionment and social
disruption when the green shoots and imminent economic recovery fail to materialize will
be a tragic spectacle. Expect social discontent and race wars to flare. The town hall
meetings are just the first sparks of a greater social powder keg ready to explode. •

Robert Morley’s column appears every Tuesday.


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