Don't fall for emotional blackmail. The Left used this tactic with wonderful success (for them) for about a decade. Fortunately, it doesn't work anymore, but we must be aware when they try.
Hey, welcome to Politics by Faith. We're talking a lot on the SiriusXM show about ending the Department of Education. Out of that, of course, is coming a ton of emotional blackmail. That's what I want to talk about in this segment, the end of the effectiveness of emotional blackmail. They'll keep trying, but it won't work anymore. What we're seeing out of the end of the Department of Education is, oh, they're going to eliminate school
lunches. Here is a Democrat in San Diego, Democrat Congressman.
Millions of children rely on free and reduced lunch programs to get through the school day without going hungry. These meals help kids focus, improve their grades, and keep them healthy. And here's the kicker. For every dollar invested in school meals, society gets nearly double that in economic benefits. But unfortunately, the president and his billionaire allies don't care. They want to cut these programs entirely.
No more meals for kids who need them. No more investment in their future. Just another cruel decision to make life harder for those who are already struggling. I'm going to do all I can to make sure no child goes hungry at school because some politician or billionaire decided
their meal wasn't a priority. So you see the emotional blackmail. You can't cut billions of dollars from the Department of Education because kids will go hungry. All right here's what I said on Sirius XM this morning. I believe it is appalling and shameful that parents do not feed their kids breakfast and lunch. You should feel shame if you do not. I'm using shame as a tool here.
Shame is a tool that we have taken out of our toolbox in our culture and it needs to be put back in there and used appropriately in the right time. And this is one of those times. In the hierarchy of needs, food is top priority, food and shelter. Feeding your kids is a number one priority of you as a parent.
Then the hierarchy of needs, you go up the pyramid, right? And then you get to emotional love. And it's the emotional love that your child feels knowing that he or she can count on his parents to feed him.
They know that if I need food, because I'm hungry, I go to my parents to provide that for me. We are, this is the insidiousness of it, this is the wickedness of it, we are rewiring our kids to not have that connection with parents and instead to get that primal need satisfied by the government. We are training kids from the youngest of ages to turn to the
government for the most basic of needs, like food. It is a wicked scheme, and we need to eliminate it immediately. All parents should act like every other parent in every other country and culture for all time and feed your child.
Humans are not animals, but every animal in the entire world feeds their offspring, except for Americans in the year 2025. For some reason now, can't be done. Can't expect that out of anyone. So I made that point on the radio today.
I could go on forever, but I think I'm clear. So we had a guy call in, 30-year educator, who was like, oh Slater, what do you want? Kids to suffer? We have to make kids suffer and starve because their parents can't feed them? No, no, not can't. Don't. Don't feed them. If you believe the government must feed our kids, I would
argue that you have been captured. You've been captured. If you would support the this insidious program and frame it as love, you've been captured in that you believe you need to support this in order to be considered a caring and loving person. But I would argue that like all welfare programs, the opposite is true.
Let me make an analogy here and then we'll broaden it out.
USAID funding, we were told USAID funding, if we cut this, then 6.3 million Africans will die from AIDS. It's a riddle. Now I don't know how they made up that number, they just made it up, whatever, well, let's go with it, 6.3 million. Okay, well, how often do we, how long do we have to be responsible and spend hundreds
of billions of dollars in Africa to prevent this most preventable of diseases? Okay, well, I guess forever, okay? But maybe this isn't the right thing to do. Maybe we're actually not helping. This is the president of Rwanda, smack dab in the middle of Africa.
unconventional ways of doing things. I completely agree with him on many things.
Even though it will hurt you as Rwanda, which depends on some U.S. aid to fund your health care and development?
I think from being hurt, we might learn some lessons. I think by being hurt, we might learn some lessons to not do things we don't do that we should be doing.
We're not doing the things that we know we should do. The emotional blackmail doesn't work anymore. Chris Murphy, Senator from Connecticut, said they're planning to slash Medicaid, okay, like trillions of dollars of fraud, which covers cost of nursing home care for 1.4 million frail elderly Americans
to finance a tax cut for billionaires. This would be, I suspect, not super popular. Listen, great try, Senator, like, that just doesn't work anymore. I want you to keep doing it because I don't want you to learn your lesson,
but it's not gonna work anymore. That emotional blackmail will not work. So this teacher who I was talking about, he called in about these kids. He said, oh do you want kids to suffer? Do you want the kids to suffer? Honestly, CPS should be called on these parents who are not feeding their kids. But the deal is this man thinks he has compassion. He thinks he has compassion,
but he doesn't really. Compassion literally means, the Latin word, passion means to suffer, calm means with. So it means to suffer alongside someone. Voting for the government to pay for the slop that we even call food that we give our kids at school, that doesn't get you any bonus points in the name of compassion. Let's just imagine a different scenario where instead of the government feeding kids, we have a local church feed kids.
Now, I'm moving past the fact that apparently parents can't ever be expected to feed their kids for the first time ever, but okay. What if a local church did it instead? It's in El Paso, a lot of Catholics in El Paso, I imagine, right? What about the Catholic church stepping up and doing that?
Think of the difference spiritually that a child will feel. Ideally, you get food from parents. But then, if you can't do that, at least getting it from your local church, your community, as opposed to just this pathetic, this pathetic
mirage, is that the right word? It's almost like, it's almost an idol. Actually, that ties in pretty good to the scripture I want to read in a second. It's this idol of government. And, oh, look how compassionate I am.
I want the government to do this. I'm so great. That's such a rotting influence on our souls. It's rotting the compassion That we should be having for others if you know well Let's let the government do it and the government will provide for everything
And I don't need to do anything because the government will just do it instead The people who support these school lunches they're the ones they actually created the problem Maybe at some point there were some kids who maybe needed help But instead the program grew and grew and grew and grew and grew. And now people are like,
oh, kids wouldn't be able to eat if it weren't for, oh, there's some great quote. The quote's something like, if we sent our kids to school at six months old and taught them to walk, then no one would think that kids could walk
without the government. Isn't that great? It's true.
Here we are today, oh, someone called in? Slater, they wouldn't be able to feed their kids if it weren't for us, really? Or are you making it so they don't have to feed their kids? And then claiming you're the compassionate one. This emotional blackmail doesn't work anymore.
I could share right now the story of Davy Crockett. Maybe I'll save that for tomorrow, because we did that today on the radio, and it was great, people loved it. It's because it is, it is great. I'll save it for another day.
Let me cut right to the biblical point. Psalm 135, 15, just read it this morning. It says, the idols of the nations are silver and gold, the work of men's hands. I went to China many years ago, and they have all these shrines all over the place with these rocks.
They carve these rocks into these figures, like eyes and stuff. They're not people, but they're supposed to represent. People are sometimes really creepy and weird. They have mouths, and they dress them up and stuff. It's weird.
They have mouths, but do not speak. Ears, they have, but they do not see. They have ears, but they do not hear. Nor is there any breath in their mouths. Here's the key. Those who make them are like them, so is everyone who trusts in them.
This is so great.
You become what you idolize, is the point here. And this ties in nicely, all week, it's come up a couple times, let those who have ears hear. That's what Jesus has said multiple times, let those who have ears hear. And here's the psalmist saying,
these things, these figures, these idols have ears, but they don't hear. There was a reverend John Thomas, who was a missionary in India. And he was traveling along and he went to this idol temple, like I was describing. And he went up to it and the doors opened and he walked into the temple and he saw one of these idols. And he held it up in his hand and he put his fingers on its eyes and said,
It has eyes, but it can't see. It has ears, but it can't hear. It has a nose, but it can't smell. It has hands, but it can't handle. It has a mouth, but it can't speak. Neither is there any breath in it, quoting the psalm here. And one of the old leaders of the community in the temple was so convicted by how absurd
this clearly was that the man cried out, it has feet but cannot run away. And everyone realized the stupidity of what they were doing. Here's some Bible commentary on this, it is forever true that man becomes like his God, approximates in character and conduct to that which he yields his homage. If we worship things that people produce, we will become as important and empty as those things, meaning not important, but if we worship God, by the grace of God, we
will become like God. To put anything of our own creation, whether wealth or fame or power, in the place of God is to begin a process of degradation, the end of which is destructive of everything of high possibility in life. We have become a people who idolize and worship the government, all the way down—I should say all the way up to, because this is one of the worst things the government does—all the way up to feeding our children.
And this just begets even more idolization. It's time we reclaim our focus, reclaim charity, reclaim compassion, real compassion, reclaim responsibility over feeding our kids, and reorient ourselves always away from our idols because you will just become more like it
whatever your idol is turn away from the idol and fix your eyes on Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of faith emotional blackmail has no more hold over you
we focus on what is true and what glorifies God as per yesterday's episode. Mike Slater dot locals dot com. Transcript commercial free on the website as per yesterday's episode. Mike Slater dot locals dot com. Transcript commercial free on the website mike slater dot locals dot com