It’s brick wall time when we cross the border between people and the rest of the animal kingdom. Most of our morals and values no longer hold on principle. Slavery, forced breeding, and dominance become OK even for the most progressive college professors and journalists. Christians can at least claim God’s authority as giving “dominion” over the rest of creation, but the left can’t do this.
On one side of the border racism is taboo, on the other it’s quite all right. Most Ivy Leaguers and Antifa activists easily sidestep contradictions in their own values. There’s no problem with double standards because they aren’t even allowed to be considered. They can go home to their artificially bred pet or livestock without a moment’s pause.
Because two and two are never put together, it’s likely that the next target will be the German Shepherd. All the superficial symbolism fits, according to a Brigham Young University history professor in “Breeding Racism: The Imperial Battlefields of the ‘German’ Shepherd Dog”: “During the first half of the twentieth century, the Shepherd Dog came to be strongly identified with Imperial and Nazi Germany, as well as with many other masters in the colonial world. Through its transnational diffusion after World War I, the breed became a pervasive symbol of imperial aggression and racist exploitation. The 1930s Japanese empire subtly Japanized the dogs who became an icon of the Imperial Army. How could a cultural construct so closely associated with Germany come to represent many different colonial regimes?”
Colonial, imperial, Nazi, German—such buzzwords are the jargon peppering politically correct speech these days. The idea is to act reflexively, without thinking, but full of self-righteous indignation–or at least enough to deflect attention away from whatever sordidness might otherwise exist in their own lives, especially in connection with confused sexual identities. The BYU article further asserts that “The history of the ‘German’ Shepherd also reveals how notions of animal breeds and human races, and therefore ‘breedism’ and ‘racism’ are interconnected. Both breedism and racism assume that there is a necessary link between biological character and behavior and an inherent inequality among the human races and among animal breeds.”
Recent attacks on the American Confederacy might seem just as superficial, but colleges and the mainstream media know that their captive audiences will take it all in without question. Perhaps the biggest symbol of racism in the world today is sugar, responsible for bringing slaves to America, but who would dare challenge this beloved mainstay of our diet? See you at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show in New York City.