10 minute read

Welcome to 1938

Your papers, please

By Wayne Allyn Root, WND

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This is the most important commentary I've ever written.

It's time for alarm bells. It's time for me to play the part of Paul Revere: "The communist tyrants and dictators are coming! The communist tyrants and dictators are coming!" They're coming first for unvaccinated Americans.

This is 1938. I'm a Jew. I now understand just a little of what it felt like to be a Jew in 1938. No, it's not the Holocaust. Nothing can be compared to the Holocaust. Ever.

But 1938 was not the Holocaust. It was the pre-Holocaust. It was the time before the nightmare, when the foundation was being laid to destroy the freedom, free speech, businesses and lives of millions of Jews.

Everything happening today to the American people … to the U.S. Constitution … to freedom … and particularly to unvaccinated Americans reminds me of 1938. This is only the beginning. It gets much worse from here.

First, "the papers." Vaccine mandates and vaccine passports are just like 1938, when the Gestapo demanded papers from every German.

Republicans asked for "papers" from migrants who had broken into our country. Criminals. Democrats said, "No, that's racism." Republicans asked for "papers" once every two years for federal elections, to prove you have a right to vote. Democrats said, "No, that's racism."

Now Democrats want American citizens, not illegal aliens, not criminals, but patriots born in this country, to produce papers 24/7. We'll need papers to enter restaurants, bars, nightclubs, concerts, casinos, conventions and hotels and to board a train, plane or bus. We'll need papers to enter a supermarket, or we'll starve to death. All for the crime of being unvaccinated against … wait for it … The flu.

All for the crime of being unwilling to inject an untested, rushed to production, experimental, "for emergency use only" shot into our bodies.

What happened to the war cry of Democrats: "My body, my choice"? It only applies to murdering babies, but it doesn't apply to dangerous experimental shots we don't want injected into our bodies.

Weren't Jews injected with experimental drugs by the depraved Nazi government? Wasn't that a key part of the Nuremberg trials? That no government could ever again inject experimental shots into the bodies of unwilling citizens? Isn't (Continued on page 9)

Howe’s Carson Daniels (20) carries the ball early in the game. Photo by Michelle Carney.

August 30, 2021 the second quarter. Howe drew Callisburg in the neutral zone which allowed Haley essentially a free play. He launched an air missile to receiver Kaleb McNutt who hauled it in over the cornerback A.J. Cowger for a 36-yard gain to near midfield at the 43 yard line. Haley moments later snuck a crucial sneak for a first down to keep the drive alive. He then threw a 20-yard strike to slot receiver Ethan Lopez for another first down. A bullet throw from Haley to McNutt across the middle set up Howe at 1st-and-goal from the five yard line. Three plays later Jones scored on a 2yard plunge as he took the direct snap. Del Angel’s kick gave Howe their first lead at Bulldog Stadium of the year at 14-7.

with in 2021.

The game began with an “uh oh, here we go again” moment as Callisburg mis-hit the opening kickoff which resulted in a bounding ball between the two lines of Howe and into the lap of the Wildcats. However, the Bulldog defense forced a punt on the opening possession of the year. Trapped deep in their own territory, Howe was also forced to punt. The field position was the main factor in the first quarter as Howe’s punt gave the ball to Callisburg at the Howe 30 yard line which they were able to turn into points on a 1-yard touchdown by Carl Moore. The initial touchdown on the Bulldog Stadium turf gave Callisburg a 7-0 lead with 4:32 remaining after the successful PAT by Domingo Mata.

Howe took exactly 11 seconds to answer right back when Cooper Jones raced 76 yards on the ensuing kickoff to the south endzone. Daniel Del Angel gave Howe the point after and the game was tied, 7-7 at the 4:21 mark in the first.

Callisburg then began an 8-play drive that looked to result in a touchdown when Caden Flanagan broke free on a reception and appeared to be on his way to score until All-Texomaland safety Austin Haley tackled him at the six yard line. Moments later on a 4th -and-goald from the one, Haley along with Luis Gonzalez combined to force a turnover on downs when they tacked Wildcat quarterback Colton Montgomery for a yard loss.

Howe took possession at their own two yard line seeking away to turn the field position somehow in their favor. The result was a 12-play, 98-yard drive that took nearly half of the clock in But just as Jones returned the ensuing kickoff to stop Callisburg momentum, Colton Simpson did the same the for the Wildcats as he raced 74 yards for the score to tie game at 14 all after the PAT with 6:54 remaining before the half.

Howe’s next drive chewed up the remainder of the clock by logging an incredible 18 plays over 52 yards, however, a 28-yard field goal attempt by Del Angel said barely to the right and Howe settled for a tie ballgame as they entered the half time locker room.

Callisburg opened the second half with the ball, but Carson Daniels caused a fumble of Montgomery where it was finally recovered by Haley after a dash for it covering 10 yards.

Howe then committed their first penalty of only two on the evening (two false starts), but a first down pass to a streaking Ryan Hough made up for it. He then hit Lopez for a 12-yarder and hit Jones on a pass over the middle where he slammed down to the turf the would-be tackler Moore. On a 3rd-and-goal from the three, Haley found McNutt five yards deep in the endzone on the near the middle of the field for the touchdown. Del Angel’s kick was good, and Howe took a 21-14 lead with 5:15 remaining in the third quarter.

Again, Callisburg answered back with a 5-play, 30-yard drive that ended on a 7-yard touchdown by Moore. The Wildcats instead of attempting to tie the game, went for a 2-point conversion which was successful when Jake Pollard took the snap in the swinging gate formation and broke the tackle of McNutt to score in the front corner of the southwest endzone. That gave Callisburg a 22-21 lead with 3:44 left in the third.

Daniels ripped off a 23-yard run for Howe on the next possession, but the drive stalled after three straight incomplete passes. Haley punted to Callisburg which trapped them at their own seven yard line.

The Wildcats put together a 13play, 93-yard drive that would give them some breathing room. It also took 6:18 off the clock before Montgomery punched it across the line from the five yard line with 7:01 remaining in the game. Callisburg’s PAT was blocked by Bryce Crosby and recovered by Haley. That left it a one-score game at 28-21. (Continued on page 8)

Haley and company began the ensuing drive at their own 25 and quickly marched down the field with runs by Daniels and passes to Hough and McNutt. But at the Callisburg 20 yard line, Moore came on a blitz untouched and sacked Haley which caused a fumble which was recovered by the Wildcats.

From their own 32 yard line, Montgomery caught Howe napping and hit Simpson in stride for a 68-yard touchdown which put the final touches on their 35-21 win.

Kaleb McNutt hauls in a touchdown in the third quarter of Friday’s game. Photo by Michelle Carney.

Haley finished the night 23-of-36 passing with 254 yards, one touchdown and one interception which was late in the game. Daniels led Howe in rushing with 10 carries for 46 yards. McNutt finished with five receptions for 84 yards and a touchdown while Jones finished with seven catches for 68 yards, however, only one catch in the second half. Ryan Hough caught five balls for 55 yards. Lopez added four catches for 45 yards.

Howe’s losing streaking reaches 13 games, but Friday night saw a different team than what strolled out in the previous 12 games. Howe amassed 307 yards of offense which is the most since the final game of the 2019 season. Haley’s 254 passing yards is the second most of his career behind the 301 he had his freshman year at Bonham. It was the most passing yards for a Bulldogs quarterback on opening night. Jay Skipworth held the previous mark with 200 passing yards at Cooper in the 1989 season opener.

Howe will face Bells next Friday night at home. They opened the season with a 41-37 overtime loss at Whitesboro Friday night.

that a basic human right?

By the way, this isn't about vaccines. If you want the vaccine, take it. I'd never stop you. I'd never limit your freedom, your choice. This is about vaccine mandates – forcibly injecting Americans who don't want it. That's 1938.

But there's much more in common with 1938. Mask mandates. If you're scared, wear them. I'm not scared. I don't want to wear them. Mandates are about forcing individuals to lose their freedom, choice, individuality and human rights. That's 1938.

Lockdowns are a match with the Warsaw Ghetto. Jews were locked down. Jews couldn't work. Jews couldn't travel. Jewish businesses were labeled "nonessential."

If government can force us to close our businesses, to kill our jobs, to decide who is nonessential, then this is 1938.

Stars on clothing. It's coming. The vaccinated get into restaurants, bars, concerts, supermarkets, planes and trains. They keep their jobs. The rest of us are marked as "subhuman" for life. That's the star. That's 1938. servatives, patriots and specifically the unvaccinated. We are silenced. Our facts are labeled "misleading." Only the facts that agree with big government's agenda count. That's 1938.

Door-to-door intimidation and making lists of those who disagree with "government knows best." Trust me, that army of door -to-door vaccine brainwashers will soon be turned into a Gestapo of gun-grabbers. 1938 was the year Nazis banned Jews from owning guns. They took them door to door. That's 1938.

Only days ago, a former Department of Homeland Security official said the unvaccinated should be on the federal no-fly list. That's exactly how Nazis attacked the Jews and others who disagreed with their agenda. It was always lists. Lists of people to be disappeared in the middle of the night; lists of those to be sent to reeducation camps; lists of those to be sent to concentration camps; lists of enemies of the state. It's happening again. Maybe this time you'll only lose your job or free speech. This is, again, 1938.

It's all disgusting and disgraceful. But I'm warning you, this is just the start. It's all going downhill from here – fast. This is the end of America. This is 1938.

Media and social media as the public-relations wing of the government. That's called propaganda. Remind you of 1938? Back then, the Jews' books were burned. Today, it's those of conUnless we stop it now. Unless we take a stand now. Unless we draw a line in the sand now.

First, they came for the unvaccinated. Trust me: Next, they're coming for you.

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