If there was ever a year for Lysander Spooner’s wisdom to be proven true (yet again) it has to be either 2020 or 2021. While only a minority of historians recognize that the US Constitution was effectively a coup d’etat, it is none the less a very true statement. The only effective measure against tyranny that destroys the effective rights that God gave us is decentralized, less powerful, non-empire states or city-states. Should the 13 colonies have remained under the Articles of Confederation, what we have seen today would not have happened.
Imagine a Texas or Florida connected only to a centralized federal government by an agreement verses a financial-based web of co-dependency and you would have seen early in 2020 the withdrawal from the pact that has the states act together. Medical tyranny would have been thwarted and medical freedom would have reigned.
How does this look here in 2021? Dr. Simone Gold explains using the failed US Constitution as a reference point:
“We have lost many of our Constitutional rights.
Freedom of Religion? Only if you follow the Religion of Public Health.
Pastors, Priests, and Rabbis bowed down to the false god of government when tyrannical governors prohibited or limited in person religious events.
Free Speech? Not anymore.
Controlled and censored speech is the order of the day. Critical thinking is mocked. Doctors are threatened by the medical establishment for asking scientific questions about COVID early treatments and vaccine related illnesses.
Free Press? Wiped out.
Five corporations control 90% of Americaâs news outlets: Comcast, Disney, Viacom/CBS, News Corp, and AT&T. The official narrative is parroted verbatim and incessantly. Just like China. Just like North Korea. It is no wonder a recent Rasmussen poll found that over 60% of the American people view the press as: âThe Enemy of the People.â
Freedom of Assembly? The government is threatening organizations who donât âsocial distance,â who refuse to wear a mask, and who wonât abide by limits on the number of people who can attend rallies-groups like Americaâs Frontline Doctors.
Freedom to Petition the Government? I am, for all practical purposes, under house arrest with no formal charges brought against me. Why? Because I petitioned my governmentâand now I have lost my Constitutional rights. And I am not alone.
Fourth Amendment: Right to bodily integrity. This is essentially gone, through coercive tactics to force Americans to accept an experimental treatment they donât want and donât need.
Fifth Amendment: Due process. Donât get me started. There are good people, Americans who are languishing in jail as I write you â pretrial â based upon accusations only!
Sixth Amendment: Speedy and Public Trial. Gone. No longer will the US government promise to give us our day in court, much less before a jury of our peers for all to see. So-called secret courts.
Seventh Amendment: Trial by Jury. Due to lockdowns, the accused are held without a trial by jury for weeks or months.
I always thought I lived in the United States of America, not in some communist dictatorship.
And what are the excuses for erasing our Constitution? Medical safety, economic security, and religious duty.
But we cannot afford to overlook the underlying theme to all three: TYRANNY.
The reason the communists decided to use medical tyranny is because it is the most effective: it is silent, stealth, and insidious. It causes great fear, cowardice, and a hyper-reliance on authority. It also distracts people from the REAL enemy: the tyrannical overlords who seek to divide us.
The tyrannical overlords pit black against white, male against female, rich against poor. Vaxxed vs. normal is just another exploitable division…”
The US citizens trusted the government in 15 days to flatten the curve, gave the consent to mask up (95% at its peak), to social distance (the magical six foot) and to get the jab (approaching 70% if you can believe government statistics). The learning curve is pretty steep for sheep!!!
I know this is extremely OLD news, but remember when the US Deep State accused Bin Laden and his gang (of 50-200) in Afghanistan of orchestrating 9/11? Remember when GW Bush accused Saddam Hussein of possessing WMDs (WMDs that we gave Iraq during the Iraq-Iran War 1984-1988)?
The RESPONSE to these two lies was excessively over the top. The response COULD have been a strategic targeted CIA/SpecialForces mission that involved 50 men in both countries to CSI. But no, the US decides to sacrifice our troops (both physical and mental death/PTSD) in both of these countries over the next two decades, sacrifice the innocent people in these counties (their life, their livelihood making many refugees while eradicating Christianity) while spending trillions of US taxpayer’s money.
What do we have to show for all that sacrifice here in 2021? Nothing!
The greater good was never achieved. Bringing “democracy” to the Middle East only brought death, heartache, pain and poverty.
So the US elite says: “Let’s bring this to the homeland”
Now consider the War on Covid.
Headlines read: “15 Days to Flatten the Curve”, “Hospitals are Overwhelmed” and “Vaccines are Totally Safe”
The RESPONSE domestically has again been over the top. Beginning with masks which Tony Fauci rightfully said initially as being a “comfort” mechanism before he went political and suggested 2x, this crowd submission method was a placeholder until the mRNA vaccines could be delivered less than a year later (thanks “Father of the Vaccine” Trump SARCASM).
When we think of the phases toward mandating the “vaccine”, I can’t help but think of the pressure the US troops in Iraq and Afghanistan accomplished when freedom fighters in those countries were hard pressed, they became ever increasingly resistant and resilient. “Terror” groups morphed overnight sporting names like Al Qaeda, Taliban and more. Geographic boundaries meant nothing as ISIS spread from Iraq to Syria. The result was opposite the stated goals of the US Empire’s CIA/Pentagon/MIC complex.
But no one remembers years later.
So too with this latest war. Fighting an obscure enemy (COVID is ONLY a set of ever evolving symptoms that can come from SARS-CoV-1, SARS-CoV-2, and other respiratory viruses like the flu), allows the fighters to shift their efforts while propping up their narrative, the “noble lie” (think Plato) that validates their forced mandates.
Consider the 1984 statement in the DHHS Federal Register, Vol 49 No 107 from June 1, 1984 in reference to the final rules concerning polio vaccination campaigns in the U.S.:
…any possible doubts, whether or not well founded, about the safety of the vaccine cannot be allowed to exist in view of the need to assure the vaccine will continue to be used to the maximum extent consistent with the nation’s public health objectives.
This is why the following narrative (propaganda) is enforced on the public by government, media, big tech, big pharma and large US corporations:
Herd immunity is required to enable economic and social recovery
Vaccines are the only route to achieving herd immunity
COVID-19 vaccines are perfectly safe
COVID-19 vaccines provide protective, durable immunity
This excessive push of mandatory vaccines is counter-intuitive and has some scary long-term effects not even thinking about the vaccine’s adverse effects themselves.
As of the early days of the mass vaccination campaigns, at least a few experts have been warning against the catastrophic impact such a program could have on global and individual health. Mass vaccination in the middle of a pandemic is prone to promoting selection and adaptation of immune escape variants that are featured by increasing infectiousness and resistance to spike protein (S)-directed antibodies (Abs), thereby diminishing protection in vaccinees and threatening the unvaccinated
The “hard press” on the virus is fueling the variants.
The “hard press” on the ‘terrorists’ fueled the variants.
I guess when you have a hammer like government .. everything is a nail.
George Washington knew this first hand when he led 15,000 troops into Pennsylvania to put down the “Whiskey Rebellion” which he and Alexander Hamilton caused due to the heavy tax (8x higher than King George’s taxes on the American colonies) on whiskey that they themselves had authorized.
A reasonable approach to this “War on Covid” would be as mRNA inventor Robert W. Malone suggests:
Full and complete disclosure on the vaccines
Comprehension of risks that the vaccines bring
Full voluntary participation with no coercion and no enticement
A healthy approach would follow more like Sweden’s strategy that has resulted in ZERO deaths there from COVID in the past weeks. A balanced response that allows the virus to move through the healthy younger population while protecting the older more frail population.
Provide personal risk assessment tools/apps
Provide clear and complete data on vaccine trials
Offer vaccination to high risk individuals
Understand that COVID is complex with different stages which means that allowing physicians to practice evidence-based medicine guided by laboratory testing
Use sequence-independent stage-appropriate medicines like Ivermectin, Famotidine/Celecoxib, Fluvoxamine, Apixaban, Vitamin D, etc.
Emphasize treating patients as soon as they develop disease in outpatient stage
Stop censoring and blocking repurposed drug development
Only when a healthier medical-industrial complex emerges will public confidence in healthcare rebound:
Public campaigns should be positive, ethical, truthful and empathic
People should feel empowered when making health choices
In both actions and words it is important to steer clear of fear, coercion and questionable ethics
Obey the law and be transparent about risks while not circumventing time tested processes and ethics
Trust, educate and respect citizens right to choose
Avoid authoritarian demands, information censorship and psychological manipulation via big media and big tech
I am not holding my breath. It took 20 years to unravel the “War on Terror”, so how long will it be for the truth to emerge around the “War on Covid”?
I am thinking that my Lenovo PC read my post a few weeks ago:
My next update will hopefully be when I prepare to transition one of my laptops (either a Lenovo Model G510 vintage 2011 or H/P Model 15-p030nr vintage 2014) to have the Linux Mint OS that has proven so very successful on my oldest laptop, a Dell Inspiron 1545 vintage 2010.
Yes, my wife’s other old laptop would not even boot up after the latest Windows 10 update, and it was not even a major feature update which is did accomplish a few months ago (1903 feature update). Just the Lenovo splash screen and the dots that form a circle appeared with the CPU fan blazing every now and then indicated that this PC was not happy, and not useful anymore.
This was the first time I had another Linux PC to assist with the process of creating a bootable USB. Start to finish, including downloading the 1.9GB ISO file it took about 1 hour to install Linux Mint and configure it for future operations. I see this 2011 Lenovo PC as becoming my primary laptop and my older Dell will become my backup.
I utilized a wired Ethernet connection in case Linux did not have my wireless configured right away, but it did and it was not needed (but it was faster).
The installation guide is very straight forward, a big improvement since my first laptop rescue effort over 5 years ago with a PC that was facing no ongoing support for Windows 95. đ
Using Linux to facilitate another PC’s transition from Windows to Linux is no chore really, in fact, it was a little fun to see the “re-birth” of an old laptop towards being a valuable tool going forward. It is too bad that smartphones can’t be rescued like this, due to their battery finally giving up and making the life-cycle very short (2-4 years depending).
I love a market that has options like this, competition is good!
As promised, I will now offer the bright side of the two heroes who emerged in the United States in the early 20th century. I had hoped to include Charles Lindbergh in my last post, but there was way to much hubris to deal with in writing about FDR, and the sad fact was, there was actually way more material, but I do hope y’all get the point. Much less principled men and politicians get the attention of the masses than do the true heroes who stand by their principles.
I think perhaps of all the things a police state can do to its citizens, distorting history is possibly the most pernicious”
-Robert A. Heinlein
Once again I will heavily reference the 5 year old article by John J. Dwyer from ‘New American’ called “FDR vs. Lindbergh: Setting the Record Straight”. John’s article weaves his article more of the angst that FDR had with the popular Lindbergh over the truth-telling Charles shared over the years. The example of the executive order FDR flubbed in replacing a private industry with army pilots was the first issue that Lindbergh brought to light in 1934:
Lindbergh had never pursued political causes and had retreated with Anne from public view â and the vulture-like pursuit of the media â following the staggering loss of their son, but then Roosevelt, riding a historic wave of success and popularity, issued an executive order in early 1934 that outlawed an entire industry, private airline mail carrying.
There is a lot to be said of those who prefer to stay out of the limelight and shine their own light via more humble arenas. Lindbergh at his core was a humble man, but sometimes even the humble has to stand up for what is right:
The “Lone Eagle” [Lindbergh’s nickname] burst back into the limelight with a brief letter to the president protesting his actions. Lindbergh declared them âunwarranted and contrary to American principlesâ in their wielding of federal government power over the private sector whose production funded that government.
FDR, on the other hand, was an arrogant SOB that came across as a more gentle soul in public. What a facade:
FDR attempted to portray Lindbergh as a tool of the airlines. âDonât worry about Lindbergh,â he scowled to an aide. âWe will get that fair-haired boy.â
About five years later, prompted once more to come out of the shadows, Lindbergh caught on to the war-fever that came out of the FDR camp and Charles could not let this one go either:
Lindbergh presciently discerned the gathering dangers to the nation, and began a series of radio broadcasts and public speeches in September 1939 against Americaâs involvement in yet another European war. In one speech, he issued âa plea for American independence,â asking, âWhy in this second century of our national existence must we be confronted with the quarrels of the old world that our forefathers left behind when they settled in this country?â
This is straight up US founder’s non-intervention foreign policy. Reluctantly, Charles became political one more time:
Though he personally disdained public involvement in controversial political issues, he eventually joined America First, the 800,000-strong noninterventionist (but not pacifist) organization, and he crafted a platform comprised of four main elements: 1) an embargo on offensive weapons and munitions to warring nations, 2) the unrestricted sale of purely defensive armaments to anyone who wanted them to protect themselves from attack, 3) the prohibition of American shipping from the belligerent countries of Europe and their danger zones, 4) the refusal of credit to belligerent nations or their agents.
Lindberghâs tenets were intended to ward off another experience like World War I wherein U.S. banks loaned the Allies the funds to buy American munitions and, hence, pushed strongly for American involvement in the war and for Allied victory in order to ensure repayment of their loans.
It sounds like a boat-load of common sense to me, but to a government trying to mask its failure of addressing the Great Depression Rx call the New Deal, it desperately needed some distraction. In response to this, FDR goes all out to get that “fair-haired boy”:
In response to Lindberghâs opposition to the presidentâs aggressive policies, Roosevelt loosed all but the hounds of hell on him, and the media â a media that Lindbergh biographer Scott Berg stated âhad grown to resent Lindberghâs uncooperative attitude, [and] instantly revised history.â FDRâs political allies excoriated the aviator with an armada of untrue accusations. They called him an âisolationist,â though he advocated vigorous American commercial trading around the world and urged the United States not to âbuild a wall around our country and isolate ourselves from contact with the rest of the world.â .. Rooseveltâs allies also called Lindbergh a defeatist and appeaser of Germany, though at the same time Lindbergh managed to gain unprecedented access to the German Luftwaffe (the German air force) and became the first non-German to fly the legendary Messerschmitt 109 fighter plane, and he provided intelligence to the U.S. military about Nazi capabilities. Hap Arnold declared, âLindbergh gave me the most accurate picture of the Luftwaffe, its equipment, leaders, apparent plans, training methods, and present defects that I had so far received,â and Arnold invited him to serve on an elite U.S. military aircraft development board.
Lindbergh was called a Nazi âfellow-traveler,â and Roosevelt and others privately said he was a Nazi. Yet Lindbergh spoke and wrote in many venues of his disgust with Nazi excesses and wrongdoing.
He was called an anti-Semite, primarily due, as historian Duffy wrote, âto a single claim he made,â in one Des Moines speech, âthat Jews were among the influential groups [including the British and the Roosevelt administration] that shaped Americaâs war policies…. Lindbergh never blamed American Jews for their attitude toward the war. To the contrary, even as he criticized Jewish support for war, he expressed sympathy and understanding for the Jewish position.â
All this sounds too familiar, being called a Russian-bot today comes to mind. Some things never change either, like the “anti-Semite” accusation. But the propaganda smear was not enough for FDR, as he wanted to bury Lindbergh:
Rooseveltâs forces went after Lindbergh, other non-interventionists, and even critical letter-writers to the White House in additional ways, as Duffy chronicled. These included telephone wiretaps, room listening devices, public smear campaigns, and in general trying âto find some dirtâ on them. The president himself initiated a cooperative venture with J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI in which the White House supplied the bureau the names and addresses of the letter senders so that the FBI could provide information on them.
Y’all thought that these tactics against whistle-blowers was a recent thing, think again. Politics operates primarily on having dirt on other people as leverage. Government in particular thrives on this, which is why the NSA does what it does every single day with your tax money, spy on everything you say and do and track wherever you go, the ultimate police state.
But I digress .. back to some more principled Lindbergh moments:
He corrected problems in the Armyâs B-24 Liberator bomber, flew high-altitude test flights in the P-47 Thunderbolt fighter, and conducted dangerous research on combating airborne oxygen blackouts, using himself as guinea pig. At 42 years old â virtually invalid age for a fighter pilot â he flew 50 combat missions in the Pacific. Colonel Charles MacDonald, commander of the famed âSatanâs Angelsâ fighter group, said, âLindbergh was indefatigable. He flew more missions than was normally expected of a regular combat pilot. He dive-bombed enemy positions, sank barges, and patrolled our landing forces on Noemfoor Island. He was shot at by almost every anti-aircraft gun the Nips [Japanese] had in western New Guinea.â
He also increased the bomb load of the Navyâs F4U Corsair fighter plane to 4,000 pounds, the heaviest ever carried by the fighter, then personally dropped it on Wotje Island, demolishing a Japanese anti-aircraft gun battery. After he devised how to extend the P-38 Lightning fighterâs flight distance by hundreds of miles, Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers in the Pacific Douglas MacArthur engaged him as a consultant and offered him whatever plane he wished to fly. Lindberghâs discovery of how to improve the P-38âs flying distance enabled the fighter plane to escort bombers to the Japanese-held island of Palau, aiding in the capture of the island and leading to its use as a launching pad for MacArthurâs triumphant return to the Philippines.
In a head-to-head aerial dogfight with a Japanese group commander, Lindbergh missed crashing head-on with the enemyâs plane by five feet and shot it down. Aiding a fellow pilot in another dogfight, he got jumped by a Mitsubishi Zero that fired from directly behind him as he âcommended [his] soul to God,â but another American fighter shot down the Zero in the nick of time.
I never hear of all this. My last recollection from my history teachers was that Charles melted into obscurity after challenging the thought that the US must enter WWII.
Charles experience in the South Pacific left him reflective on what he saw. Once again he would not keep quiet:
Having personally confronted the true horrors of war in the Pacific, though, Lindbergh bitterly denounced it in his private journal: âAs the awful truth of the German crimes against the Jewish people came out, here we were, doing the same thing to the Japs.â He wrote about the attitudes he encountered: ââThey really are lower than beasts. Every one of âem ought to be exterminated.â How many times I heard American officers in the Pacific say those very words!… And âWhy beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brotherâs eye but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?ââ
He chronicled the shooting of Japanese soldiers attempting to surrender so that other Japanese soldiers would remain in the jungle and slowly starve; Marines firing on unarmed Japanese swimming ashore at Midway; troops machine-gunning prisoners on a Hollandia airstrip; Australians shoving captured Japanese out of transport planes over the New Guinea mountains; Japanese shinbones carved off for letter openers and pen trays; Japanese heads buried in ant hills âto get them clean for souvenirsâ; and âthe infantryâs favorite occupationâ of poking through the mouths of Japanese corpses for gold-filled teeth. He added, âWhat is barbaric on one side of the earth is still barbaric on the other.â
âJudge not that ye be not judged,â he continued. âIt is not the Germans alone, or the Japs, but the men of all nations to whom this war has brought shame and degradation.â He also wrote of the legacy of using violence to solve mankindâs ills: lynchings, witch-burnings, âburnings at the stake for the benefit of Christ and God.â
Epic stuff that history books failed to capture. This is all by design as the US Empire has to hide heroes like this to keep the narrative intact that the US Empire, the state, is worthy of worship. As a result, the masses say the pledge, worship that flag, do your duty and vote, but don’t you dare be critical of the US government, that would be unpatriotic, or would it? What did our founders do with the British Empire?
So now what? In summary:
Franklin Roosevelt graduated onto the front of textbooks, currency, and best presidentsâ lists. Charles Lindbergh, meanwhile, won the laurels of hatred and slander reserved for the truest patriot, he who loves his country enough to criticize her for her own good â a lesson that patriots of today know only too well is repeated almost daily in America through the cooperation of likeminded media and politicians.
Charles would lead a quite life after WWII retiring to Hawaii and dying there in 1974. I never even knew he was still living when I was reading about him in my history books and World Book Encyclopedias.
It is time to unearth these real heroes from having been buried by our government. We can’t afford to return to the days like John Adams’ administration when the Alien and Sedition Act made it a crime to be critical of the US government:
Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798, which made it a crime for anyone to criticize the government âthrough writing or any other shape, form, or fashion.â Specifically, criticizing the president, Congress, the military, or the flag was made illegal.
Just over 20 years after divorcing the British Empire, the federation, now under the Constitution did this? Fast forward another 100 years and then you had this:
U.S. Sedition Act of 1918 … made it a crime to âwillfully utter, print, write, or publish any disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language about the form of government of the United States, or the Constitution of the United States, or the military or naval forces of the United States.â
Our true history ain’t pretty, can’t we just be honest about this?
A true test of freedom is when you find out who you can’t criticize, am I right?
Enough for now, get out there and enjoy your weekend all!
So the journey continues from the world of Windows10 on a newer laptop with all the random unannounced reboots, CPU fan spinning so fast I think the PC will meltdown to LinuxMint19 on a ten year old laptop.
In the past week I have adjusted from MS Office Powerpoint ($$$) or ($$) [if your employed in a corporation that uses MS Office so you can get a copy at a reduced expense]Â to LibreOffice Impress ($0 – but donations are appreciated). The Linux OS standard web browser, Firefox, is easy to import bookmarks, etc. External hard drives get automounted when the USB is connected. The wireless HP OfficeJet Printer is seen and available after every boot-up. Things were going well, or so I thought.
Then enter Amazon and its Kindle Fire and all the “protection” known in the publishing world as DRM (Digital Rights Management). I was ready just to use the Amazon Kindle Web Reader shown at the top of this post since there is no Linux app from Amazon to read your books on your PC like they have for Windows. It was at this point the DRM issue became very apparent since I was interested in saving a copy of my library on this Linux laptop. I am guessing for years I have been in denial about this DRM reality but the author of the tool DeDRM says it best from his web page:
The problem here is that America’s copyright lawyers figured out how to change the rules of ownership. When you buy a paperback book, its content belongs to the author, but the physical book belongs to you. You can loan it to someone, trade it, sell it, or just keep it and reread it as many times as you want. But when you “buy” a Kindle book, you’re renting temporary authorization from Amazon to store the book on up to 6 Amazon-approved devices.
Geoff Stratton
Enter the program for any OS called Calibre. With this application I can install a plugin from Geoff Stratton and enter the 16 digit license from my Kindle Fire and I can bring my Kindle book collection over to my Linux PC and remove the DRM with Geoff’s plugin so my own copy does NOT require a certified Amazon product to display the book. This is essential for many reasons that Geoff explains below:
This arrangement is bad for customers, for a number of reasons: 1) Any Kindle book that you “own” can disappear at any time, because of technological failure, change of license, or simple human error. 2) If Amazon ever abandons their Kindle business, all your Kindle books could vanish in a flash. Wait, though, isn’t Amazon too big to disappear? Maybe. But Kodak, Enron, General Motors, Sears, and the Smith-Corona typewriter company were once “too big to fail” American institutions too. 3) DRM interferes with legal uses of copyrighted text, like satire, reuse in teaching materials, and citation in reviews or academic papers. As a one-time IT guy at a public university, I frequently battled with DRM-ed written and recorded materials that instructors or researchers wanted to excerpt. The worst offender here is DVD region encoding. 4) DRM-ed Kindle books are incompatible with non-Amazon book readers and software. Sure, Amazon software is supported on most platforms now, but what about a decade from now? How many people still have the equipment to read a floppy disk, VHS tape, phonograph record, or audio cassette? A lot of music, art, and writing gets lost every time our storage technology changes to a different format, whether you’re talking about reel-to-reel tapes or clay tablets. If it’s important to you, make as many different copies of it as you can stand.
So strictly for personal use .. I downloaded “calibre” for my LinuxMint PC:
Then it is just a matter of following the directions to take the DeDRM plugin from Geoff’s site and configure Calibre to “know” your Kindle Fire.
Well, it has yet to work out that easily. All of a sudden my Fire does not want to play with my Linux PC and that seems a little coincidental to all of a sudden have an issue. I found two Calibre “dot” files on my Kindle and I think this might be a way that Amazon blocks this kind of activity.
So for now, I will read my Kindle books via the web reader and will have to get back to y’all about this DRM stuff.
Stay tuned.
-SF1
BTW: To add to my day, WordPress decided to update the software used to edit/publish blogs, so that has been yet another learning curve for this #60-something