Tuesday, September 6, 2022

Hal Lindsey: War On The Poor

War on the Poor
Hal Lindsey



Over the last few years, something awful happened in America. The war on poverty morphed into a vast, shameless, and cruel war on poor people themselves. Governments created a regulatory environment where the well-heeled thrive, but the poor haven’t a chance. People without the means to go to college are forced to help pay back the student loans of the affluent. People who can’t afford electric vehicles are forced to help rich people pay for their Teslas.


The government subsidizes companies for manufacturing electric cars, and it gives tax breaks to their investors. The federal government and most states also get involved at the point of sale, giving large tax breaks and other incentives to people who buy electric.


But even with all that help from the government, the average electric car still winds up costing $66,000 dollars. That’s about 40% more than the average gas-powered car. Yet in August, California passed a bill banning the sale of gas cars by the year 2035. Several other states expect to follow.


What if a weak power grid and not enough generating capacity make electric cars unsustainable? What if the communists running China decide to get tough with America and slow down or cut off the supply lines of rare earth minerals needed for the manufacture of electric vehicles? The effect will be to force the poor out of all personal automobiles. That cuts them off from countless opportunities to escape poverty. It keeps them poor. And it doesn’t help anyone else either.


Jonathon Tobin recently wrote about the new California law in a commentary for Newsweek. He said, “This ban strikes one more blow against the poor and working class. It panders to the fears of the most educated and richest people about global warming while ignoring the needs and the welfare of those on the lower end of the economic spectrum.”


 And we’re just beginning to see how far that will go. Fear of global warming is about to change all our lives in profound ways. For instance, meat may soon become like fur — a luxury only a few can afford. And those few will be looked down on as enemies of the environment. After all, cows burp, and we’re told those burps are a big source of greenhouse gases and global warming.


That’s why they are already advocating that we abstain from certain foods — just as 1 Timothy 4:3 said would happen in the “later times.”


It’s important for us to take note of the hypocrisy and deception shown by our leaders. Jesus told us to watch for certain end-time signs, and this touches on several of them. But He also said to “look up.” Make sure that your perspective does not center on bad news or ugliness, but on the God who loves and cares for you.




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