Thomas Williams: Comment-
The Washington DC aristocracy that lived and worked in the Washington DC establishment are very hard for the American people to feel sympathetic over when one of them die. Because they were simply too cold to touch in life so how on earth are we the people expected to feel any kind of remorse for them after they do pass now.
The American aristocrats that were only heard or see on television and given attention and squired by the media and treated as a TV network celebrity. Appearing according to the latest social cause held up in from of the American people to politically support them and their social liberal cause. Like to keep abusing gun control laws even if the American people had a second amendment Constitutional right to do so. Now because of one of the TV personality's liberal social causes that privilege of carrying a firearm outside of one's home is limited to what is authorized by the American aristocrats. That have now passed away over the river of life and into God eternal realm, where their aristocrat’s privilege in life is but a worthless word in death. And only now will they start looking to find the need to be searching for their immortal soul, like all who have died before.
Controlling other people thought and behavior in life seem like a terrible wasted of time looking into the face of God after death.
No my sympathy are still here with the living who are left behind because we can't help her now even if we wanted too.
Only God can help the dead.
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http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/ us/sarah-brady-gun-control- advocate-dies-at-73/ar- AAapGeK?ocid=SKY2DHP
Sarah Brady, gun control advocate, dies at 73
Sarah Brady, who became a gun-control advocate after her husband James Brady was shot during an attempt on the life President Ronald Reagan, died Friday at 73.
“In the history of our nation, there are few people, if any, who are directly responsible for saving as many lives as Sarah and Jim,” said Dan Gross, the president of the Brady Campaign and Center to Prevent Gun Violence, in a statement.
“There are countless people walking around today who would not be were it not for Sarah Brady’s remarkable resilience, compassion and – what she always said she enjoyed the most – her hard work in the trenches with this organization, which she continued right up to the very end,” he said.
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