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When someone credited with being knowledgeable comes before me on one of the electronic marvels, I listen with the thought of whether his thinking is more for my benefit or his. Almost always, I conclude his thinking is more for his benefit. Is there something innately selfish about my attitude if I grant you the same right, to think what you want? I'm poor in higher math but fascinated by discrete numbers, or rational numbers that are eventually periodic, like numbers representing harmony and symmetry, the fundamentals of nature. My life lesson number is the discrete number 7. Numerologists say that number means I'm here to use my mind. Certain angles between the planets say I'm able to understand the laws by which subtle forces are organized.
Frankly, I was bored with my formal education. I was not a good student. My interest in learning is triggered by practicality, not for the sake of learning. For instance, I spent thousands of hours studying the law with the idea of putting the IRS in its place. Not many laymen take the IRS to the U. S. Supreme Court. America's judges could have cared less about my constitutional issues concerning tax. A reporter for The Palm Beach Post, after reviewing my court papers, was interested in how the IRS reacted. It resulted in a front page story, with the IRS apologizing for its numerous mistakes. Neither the IRS, nor Congress, nor the President apologized for putting me on the street by mistake. To said high and mighty individuals, I'm no more than an ant they stepped on.
I've sublimated my thinking. Understanding the makeup of man is a natural for me. I've taken a keen interest in quantum mechanics because it deals with the world of the very small and the state of awareness. I love that idea. You don't learn how things work by looking at the finished product. Likewise, you don't successfully govern by making the end result justify the means.
The root of all American evil: money concentrated in Washington, D.C. Big money goes where big money does the most good. You frequently hear the high and mighty say, “I've done nothing illegal.” The high and mighty say the psychopath who murdered 32 Virginia Tech students did nothing illegal prior to the slaughter. Law professors stand before you maintaining that officialdom did nothing illegal. We, the people, don't get the connection of our right to exist with our Constitution. I hear this from Virginia Tech students who witnessed the horror of their classmates being slaughtered. Those murdered students were ants compared with the political agenda. The American people are brainwashed. Wake up, America!
The truth of the matter: Under “lawful” in Black's Law Dictionary, “legal” is defined as the form of law. Nazi law was a form of law. By world standards, it was not considered legitimate, moral, or principled. I didn't get my legal education in a law school. I got mine in the school of hard knocks. America's legal institution is an out and out fraud against the people.
The bottom line truth is that might makes right. How does America's law basically differ from Nazi law? Big money controls America's laws. Big money put me on the street. Big money, in support of psychopaths put 32 Virginia Tech students in their graves. Is there no such thing as evil, only sick people who need help? America is sick in the head. Big money and Nazi law makes the world hate you.
This is interesting. Under “anarchy” in my Webster's College Dictionary: “a theory that regards the absence of all direct or coercive government, as a political ideal and that proposes the cooperative and voluntary association of individuals and groups as the principle mode of organized society.”
I can't think of any form of law in practice that fits the above definition. However, in theory, America's law follows the definition. We call it a government of the people for the people. The ancient Greek Demosthenes, the father of democracy, said, “Every law is a discovery, a gift of God.” President Coolidge persisted in the notion. Said Coolidge: “Men do not make laws. They do but discover them.” Law Professor Edward S. Corwin, in his essay The “Higher Law” Background of American Constitutional Law, wrote that the identification of “Higher Law” with custom does not hold. In practice, “Higher Law” is not the final word.
Wrote Corwin: “The discovery that custom was neither immutable nor invariable even among the Greek city states impelled the Sophists to the conclusion that justice was either merely ‘the interest of the strong,' or at best a convention entered upon by men purely on considerations of expediency and terminable on like considerations.” (I'm reminded of America's slavery.) Something marvelous and mysterious took place in me at midlife, according to numerologists, a feeling of wanting to break free. I had a bigger than life calling. I went to sea on a sailboat and let the wind take me where it would. It put me on my course of destiny. It changed my life for the better. Wouldn't you know that I'm here with my Zaadz friends? One of my Zaadz friends wrote me, “I just know you are having so much fun at Zaadz.” Absolutely! We are going to change the world.
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