Thoughts on Whatever Became of Sin? By Karl Menninger MD (1973) 8R
For the sins of sensuality and gluttony, Progressive thinkgroup was “on the side of the sinner” in that it largely told the sinner what she wanted to hear.
This began to change in the section on anger.
Progressive cryptotheological thinkgroup justifies rudeness, violence and aggression by the politically correct person.
However, at the same time, Progressive thinkgroup repudiates rudeness against the politically incorrect person.
Progressive thinkgroup projects a thinkincorrect and conscienceincorrect onto the person who commits an act of rudeness, aggression or violence. That is, Progressives presume that the politically incorrect actor adheres to an incorrect ideology and has a false conscience. Thus, the politically incorrect actor should be “scapegoated”.
In contrast, the politically correct actor should be “golden calfed”.
In this instance, thinkgroup does not stand in opposition to thinkdivine. Rather, it casts itself as thinkdivine (or as thinkcorrect) against the empty-set (straw man) thinkincorrect. Thinkincorrect would (theoretically) have to exist if the action were to be politically incorrect.