“We are Forerunners. Guardians of all that exists. The roots of the Galaxy have grown deep under our careful tending. Where there is life, the wisdom of our countless generations has saturated the soil. Our strength is a luminous sun, towards which all intelligence blossoms… And the impervious shelter, beneath which it has prospered.”

Cthulhu 2016

by | Mar 7, 2016 | Uncategorized | 1 comment

Inspired by a quote from the inimitable John C. Wright’s post today:

It’s a serious question. After all, choosing the lesser evil still comes down to choosing evil. And Americans appear to have gotten really really good at picking the lesser evil. (See: Bob Dole 1996; John McCain 2008; Mitt Romney 2012; undecided as of 2016.)

How’s that working out for you people?

Your country is bankrupt. Your people are addicted to welfare. Your men are becoming soft and weak and effeminate. Your women are becoming ugly fat tattooed and pierced harridans. Your politicians send your sons to die in pointless, endless wars in foreign lands. Your borders have more holes than a colander. Your Constitution is used for toilet paper every day by the elites that you appointed.

Given all of the above, it’s hard to imagine how a death-cult worshipping the epitome of alien extragalactic evil, could actually be worse.

Actually, that might not be strictly true, especially since that last sentence seems to be a rather good description of the modern Democrat Party’s platform. There is the Hilldebeast to consider, after all. That is the one person that I genuinely think could be more terrifying as President than Cthulhu.

Subscribe to Didactic Mind

* indicates required
Email Format

Recent Thoughts

If you enjoyed this article, please:

  • Visit the Support page and check out the ways to support my work through purchases and affiliate links;
  • Email me and connect directly;
  • Share this article via social media;

1 Comment

  1. Dire Badger

    The only thing worse for a group of humans than constant war, is constant peace.

    Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Didactic Mind Archives

Didactic Mind by Category