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Chimera readability score 58 out of 100, Graduate reading level.

The only positive thing about the Iran war heating up again is that Lindsey Graham won’t be around to enjoy it.
The bloodthirsty South Carolina senator breathed his last on Saturday, succumbing to what his office describes as “a brief and sudden illness” after a political career dedicated to promoting wars, airstrikes and proxy conflicts at every possible opportunity.
People have long poked fun at the hypocrisy of Lindsey Graham living as an obvious closeted gay man in a political party with a virulently anti-LGBTQ platform. I personally have always found Graham’s sexual attraction to men a lot less interesting than his sexual attraction to acts of mass military slaughter.
Ever since the death of Graham’s dear friend John McCain, nobody on Capitol Hill has been able to match his gleeful enthusiasm for the shredding of human bodies using high-priced war machinery. Wherever there was any debate about dropping bombs, launching missiles, toppling foreign governments, arming proxy forces, or imposing starvation sanctions, you could always count on Lindsey Graham to be the first and loudest voice arguing in favor of more death and destruction.
Graham has personally taken credit for persuading President Trump to begin the war with Iran. In the months leading up to his unexpected demise, the senator had advocated for direct US military interventionism in Iran, Cuba, Venezuela, Yemen, Nigeria, Lebanon, and Palestine, and had just returned from a trip to Kyiv promoting the US proxy war against Russia. He was literally pushing for more war and military expansionism until the very end of his life.
All the world’s worst people are publicly expressing their grief about the loss of their beloved war slut, from Trump to Benjamin Netanyahu to Itamar Ben-Gvir to Tom Cotton to Mike Huckabee. Meanwhile, everyone who’s not a warmongering psychopath is having a splendid day.
Of course we’re seeing imperial narrative managers like Piers Morgan wagging their fingers and chiding their audiences not to speak ill of the dead, but the hell with them. We’re not doing that. Politeness is not more important than Lindsey Graham’s victims. The liberal desire for propriety and nice feelings does not outweigh the importance of naming and shaming Graham’s frenetic scramble to murder as many human beings as he possibly could throughout his evil, miserable life.
Lindsey Graham is dead, and it is good that he is dead. May his omnicidal ideology soon join him in the arms of the cold, cold ground. May the insane, insatiable god he worshipped cease to gain recognition on this planet.
Lindsey Graham is dead. At least that’s one good thing. No matter what else happens today, they can’t take that away from us.
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Facts Only

* Lindsey Graham died on Saturday.
* His passing was attributed to a "brief and sudden illness" by his office.
* Graham advocated for direct US military interventionism in Iran, Cuba, Venezuela, Yemen, Nigeria, Lebanon, and Palestine.
* Graham returned from a trip to Kyiv promoting the US proxy war against Russia.
* Graham personally took credit for persuading President Trump to begin the war with Iran.
* The author notes Graham's advocacy for dropping bombs, launching missiles, toppling governments, arming proxy forces, or imposing starvation sanctions.
* Several public figures are mentioned as expressing grief over Graham’s loss.

Executive Summary

Lindsey Graham passed away following a period where he was a prominent figure associated with advocating for military interventionism in various regions, including Iran, Cuba, Venezuela, Yemen, Nigeria, Lebanon, and Palestine, and promoting US proxy wars against Russia. The text contrasts Graham's political stances on conflict with personal views on violence. The author suggests that public grief is directed at Graham for his role in promoting wars, while the author contends that this reaction overlooks Graham’s promotion of military action. Furthermore, the piece discusses the hypocrisy perceived in Graham's public stance regarding LGBTQ+ issues within a politically opposing party and juxtaposes this with an assertion about the prioritization of public propriety over addressing the pursuit of violence by Graham. The text concludes by asserting the importance of acknowledging Graham’s role in promoting conflict and death.

Full Take

The narrative constructs a framework where the value of a life is judged by its alignment with a specific moral framework concerning conflict and violence. The structure relies on an appeal to moral outrage, shifting the focus from the personal tragedy to the perceived historical legacy of the deceased regarding war. This pattern attempts to establish a hierarchy where acknowledging the promotion of mass death supersedes concerns about social propriety or individual character. The manipulation functions by leveraging established societal discomfort with conflict and hypocrisy to frame specific political actions as inherently evil, thereby justifying an extreme moral condemnation directed at the subject's historical engagement. The rhetorical move is to equate public morality (propriety) with the responsibility to name and shame past actions related to violence. This suggests a pattern of imposing a singular, highly polarized moral judgment onto complex political figures. The unstated assumption is that certain types of action—namely promoting military expansionism—carry an absolute moral weight that overrides other considerations when evaluating a political life.

Sentinel — Likely Synthetic

Confidence

LIKELY_SYNTHETIC (confidence: 0.85)

Well, At Least Lindsey Graham Is Dead — Arc Codex