While watching an old black and white classic movie, Mrs.
Miniver, the idea occurred that there were many similarities with our present
day struggles. The first similarity is
that we are a peaceful people for the most part with no desire to impose on
others, much as the people of Great
Britain during the time leading up to and
during their war with NAZI Germany.
The primary character, Mrs. Miniver, as portrayed by Greer
Garson, quietly goes about sharing her good natured spirit with most everyone
she comes in contact with. The railway
station master, James Ballard, gets permission to name a rose after her, a rose
that exemplifies all that is beautiful as he prepares to enter it in the local
flower show competition.
Mrs. Miniver goes about life observing the challenges of a
nation at war, a war that touches many around her, to include her son as he
enlists in the RAF to do his part. Her concern
for each individual is matched with her concern for their way of life and the
threat to England
as a nation.
A German plane had been seen to crash in the vicinity of
their small village and the pilot was on the loose. Mrs. Miniver came across him in their garden;
but he had the drop on her as he followed her into the house to hide and obtain
much needed nourishment.
Splashing milk down his uniform while consuming what ever food
was available, this arrogant agent of the Third Reich rattled on about how
their military had taken Poland
in only two days. Hate spewing from his
lips as he boasted, “Thousands of people dead in only two days”, and as he railed
on, “We will do the same to you.”
Somewhere in my mind I was seeing a different enemy, arrogant
bullies priding themselves on having created fear among the people, a people
with no desire to impose their will on others.
I was recalling recent images of Antifa and BLM “protestors” as the left
leaning news media called them, doing their best to wreak havoc on our
metropolitan cities.
(Image of Antifa burning American Flag courtesy of redwhiteandright.com)
Antifa and BLM aren’t protesting racial injustices as we
were led to believe; they are domestic terrorists, enemies of our country who’ve
been hiding among us; but with the opportunity of civil unrest have come out in
the open.
They wear face masks to keep from being identified; but they
are openly spreading fear by killing innocent bystanders under the false flag
of racial equality, assassinating police officers, looting and burning
businesses along with tearing down statues or defacing monuments built to honor
those who have fought and died to protect a liberty loving people.
Could an enemy from a hostile country be any more
destructive?
What about governors and mayor who’ve bowed to these
terrorists, those who’ve instructed their police departments not to engage; but
to permit these criminal acts? What
about the judges and district attorneys who release those arrested for looting
and burning down buildings…release them back onto the street with little or no
bail?
Are they acting in our best interests or have they joined
the movement to destroy our nation?
There’s a scene in the movie where the family is hunkered
down in a make-shift bomb shelter while enemy fighters strafe and bomb all
around. Their children are asleep; but
with each passing moment they can be seen clutching tightly to their blankets
while their parents read aloud from Lewis Carroll’s, Alice and Wonderland. Their
world is being blown apart, all that is dear and sacred is under attack.
Isn’t that much the same as our nation right now? Aren’t we praying to survive the next attack,
praying our children will inherit a land of liberty rather than have to submit
to the terrorists trying to destroy our peaceful republic?
Read into Mrs. Miniver’s composure what you will; but there
is strength, dignity and resolve to uphold the standards by which our culture
is built. Win or lose the fight, it is
our duty to stand for what is right and true.
As the movie came to a close, the small congregation meeting
in what was left of their bombed out chapel, their minister addressed them as
he pointed to the empty seats indicating the loss of a choir boy and then
mentioning the loss of Mr. Ballard who’d only two weeks prior had won the award
for his beautiful Miniver Rose. Then he
mentioned the loss of the recently married young Carol Beldon, the camera
focusing momentarily on the young RAF flyer/husband grieving the loss of his
wife and Lady Beldon grieving the loss of her granddaughter.
“We are all in this fight”, the minister proclaims, the roof
of his chapel partially missing as a wave of British aircraft is seen headed
towards harm’s way overhead. It’s not
just the military; but each of us has a stake in this war.
And so Mrs. Miniver, the character and the movie has shown
us all how we are to bear up under this current attack which has all the
earmarks of a declared war on those things we consider sacred and of
worth. Our individual liberty, our
families, religious beliefs and constitutional republic have nothing to do with
racism as has been claimed. Antifa and
BLM are at war with civilized society and it is our duty to stand firm.
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