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Thanos reconsiders destroying half of humanity after learning THIS about the World Economic Forum...
Julius Nyerere sold Tanzania on gentle “Ujamaa” African socialism—a softer vision of communal brotherhood rooted in mythical African tradition.
In practice it led to Operation Vijiji: the 1973-76 forced march of over 13 million peasants (~95% of the rural population) into collective villages, often at gunpoint by army, police, and party militias who moved people like cattle in the dead of night.
Homes were torched to prevent return. Ancestral plots were abandoned overnight. Traditional knowledge of local soils, seasons, and crops were discarded for half-baked Marxist theories that saw farmers as interchangeable cogs in a state machine.
Agricultural output swiftly collapsed. Cash-crop exports halved within a decade, food imports exploded from 50,000 tons in 1970 to 400,000 by 1974, and once self-sufficient villages faced shortages while the Party preached self-reliance from Dar es Salaam.
Fertile land became dust under central planning. The philosopher-president’s paradise delivered only death, dependency, and a generation that learned the hard way that socialism is just a synonym for starvation.
Julius Nyerere’s gentle “Ujamaa” socialism was nothing new. It was the same blueprint for mass murder the world had seen before, in a Gandhi Peace Prize-winning smile.
We do not need more people claiming to be the only conservative. We need more people willing to stand together on conservative principles, without tearing each other down to get ahead. Stay grounded. Stay genuine. And do not trade your integrity for influence or a title.
The political world can be cutthroat, and if we are honest, it often rewards the loudest voice claiming, “I am the only real conservative.” That mindset has become far too common, and it should concern all of us.
But real character is not revealed in how loud you are or how high you climb, it is revealed in how you treat others who are fighting the same fight and whether you stay true to your values when it costs you something.
In a culture addicted to outrage, fueled by division, and rewarded for cruelty, simple respect has somehow become controversial. The question is no longer how should we treat one another, but which side are you on before I decide how to treat you? That’s a dangerous shift.
The Jewish leaders in Minnesota are wrong on this issue!! The Bible is clear when it speaks about caring for “the stranger,” but it is just as clear about what that care looks like. “The stranger that dwelleth with you shall be unto you as one born among you” (Leviticus 19:34). Those words matter. The stranger in Scripture was someone living among the people, not outside the community or its standards. They were protected from abuse, welcomed with dignity, and treated fairly; but they were also expected to live under the same laws and authority as everyone else. Compassion in the Bible is never disconnected from responsibility. God’s design was never chaos disguised as kindness. Israel had borders, laws, and expectations, and the stranger who lived in the land was accountable to them. This wasn’t cruelty it was order. A society without structure eventually harms both citizens and newcomers alike. Biblical compassion creates stability, not confusion, and protection, not disorder. That balance is reinforced in Romans 13:1): “Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God.” Authority is not man’s invention it is God’s instrument to restrain evil and preserve peace. Obedience to lawful authority is not a lack of love; it is part of God’s plan for justice and safety. Scripture never forces us to choose between mercy and truth. It calls us to hold both at the same time. We can love people deeply, care for the vulnerable, and extend grace while still honoring the order God established. Compassion without truth leads to chaos, but compassion guided by God’s Word leads to peace, justice, and a society that truly flourishes.