November 15, 2024 1:26 PM ET
Actor Sylvester Stallone came out with a ringing endorsement of President-elect Donald Trump at a Mar-a-Lago event Thursday night. It was so good, in fact, that I’ll forgive him for not making it before the election.
“We are in the presence of a really mythical character,” Stallone said in his speech introducing the president-elect.
“This individual does not exist on this planet. Nobody in the world could have pulled off what he pulled off,” he said of Trump.
“When George Washington defended his country, he had no idea that he was going to change the world — ’cause without him, you could imagine what the world would look like. Guess what? We got the second George Washington,” he concluded, in what is probably the best public endorsement of Trump in his nearly decade-long political career. (Watch Daily Caller documentary ‘Cleaning Up Kamala’ here)
JUST IN: Sylvester Stallone introduces Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago, says Trump is like the “second George Washington.”
“We are in the presence of a really mythical character. I love mythology.”
“This individual does not exist on this planet. Nobody in the world could have pulled… pic.twitter.com/3SZn7bOjsM
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) November 15, 2024
But it’s not really even hyperbole. We live in a vastly different country than what George Washington first envisioned. We live in a far different country than our forebears had even three generations back. In fact, America underwent a fundamental transformation in the 1960s, the culmination of our very own Cultural Revolution.
The New Left student movement ushered in a new conception of civil rights and sexual liberation, but it wasn’t just confined to the culture; it was a revolution in law and bureaucracy as well. The Civil Rights Amendment of 1964 ushered in provisions like disparate impact, which morphed into a DEI staple. The Reagan Revolution, far from rolling back the tide, actually facilitated the rise of this cultural Marxism by accepting the government had no role in fighting back in the culture. All the while, the left marched on, as empowered activist-lawyers consolidated and advanced their gains over the decades, resulting in the federally enshrined DEI insanity that we see today. As Chris Caldwell argues in probably the most important social criticism of the 21st century, this was effectively a re-founding of America.
This is the yoke we now live under, colloquially known as wokeness in its advanced and totalizing form. Trump was elected to do what Reagan and generations of Republicans could not: fight back. If he succeeds, he will indeed be just as much a Founder as George Washington.