Thankfully, the task of the next president is to put an end to these crimes against humanity.

***DISCLAIMER***|***DISCLAIMER***|***DISCLAIMER***
I apologize if I offend anyone with my preceding comments.
***DISCLAIMER***|***DISCLAIMER***|***DISCLAIMER***
Although somewhat unrelated, I want to share another train of thought that really isn't all that disconnected from the commentary above. It begins with a question...
Why aren't we all anti-war activist? Is the war something we really cannot change?
!!!Incoming!!!|!!!Incoming!!!|!!!Incoming!!!
Another post, at another date (probably July 4th) is about how we, as Americans, shape America. After all, America is a democracy, as much as some of you may want to deny it, and a democracy is shaped by its people. (That's gonna hurt, comrade.)
Sometimes I feel like the "The Serenity Prayer" breeds passivity. Because of this particular prayer, many people choose not do anything when things aren't quite right. I think there's a door of ambiguity that is opened that is easily overlooked. What if the prayer was read in reverse? Bottom up? Something like this:
God, grant me
The wisdom to know the difference
The courage to change the things I can
The serenity to accept the things I cannot change
If it were read like this, would you get a different message? Is it something along the lines of trying the "change" before accepting the "cannot change"? Do you know what I'm getting at, or is there a different door of ambiguity that must be resolved in another post?