Source: Original Site Post

  • How Immigrant Cities Seceded by Violating the Law

    Jan 30, 2020, 6:04 PM by Jerry Odom How It’s Done (flawless) I’ll just drop this here, see your influence To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world: a) They establishments of sanctuary cities to harbor known illegal alien in direct violation of federal law us code 8 1324. b) The issuing of driver’s license and state documents to illegal aliens also in violation of federal law. (code 8 1324) c) Allowing illegal aliens to vote in federal elections is also a direct violation of federal law. d) Violation of Article I, Section 8, Clause 4 e) Violation of the 14th amendment and birthright citizenship f) Violation of oath of office 5 U.S. Code ยง 3331.Oath of office and Article 6 a. “that I will support and defend the Constitution” g) Violation of Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 h) Violation of article 4 section 4 i) Advocating for the overthrow of the US government via policy j) Violation of Clause 2 of Article 6: the Supremacy Clause k) countless violation of the Second Amendment l) the suppression of our religion, it’s replacement by adoption and expansion of an Alien and deceitful pseudoscientific cult via artful accounting, cherry-picking of measures, and willful ignorance of the changes in the capital of kin, culture, norm, tradition, and civilization; m) the forcible monopolization of our education, its use for indoctrination against our religion, and for the cult of the state; This is a shortlist of atrocities committed,

  • It’s New and Only Hard Until It’s Not

    Jan 30, 2020, 6:06 PM by Brandon Hayes P, like everything new, is hard until it’s not. There are many popular thinkers and commentators now that are taking to not differentiating between “hard” and “new.” I like this for the effect it has on framing. It’s only hard cause it’s new; and it’s only new cause you just finished. ๐Ÿ˜‰ P is simple; and quite frankly proper. The expulsion of deception solves for communicative misunderstanding (as saying “I understand you” when I don’t is a lie; deception). And if we don’t misunderstand each other than meaning can be relayed without delay. Only liars stand in the way; and if they don’t like being called liars… well, they ought to stop.

  • It’s New and Only Hard Until It’s Not

    Jan 30, 2020, 6:06 PM by Brandon Hayes P, like everything new, is hard until it’s not. There are many popular thinkers and commentators now that are taking to not differentiating between “hard” and “new.” I like this for the effect it has on framing. It’s only hard cause it’s new; and it’s only new cause you just finished. ๐Ÿ˜‰ P is simple; and quite frankly proper. The expulsion of deception solves for communicative misunderstanding (as saying “I understand you” when I don’t is a lie; deception). And if we don’t misunderstand each other than meaning can be relayed without delay. Only liars stand in the way; and if they don’t like being called liars… well, they ought to stop.

  • Yes, for Newbs, It’s Hard to Tell if I’m Bullshitting or Not.

    I know. I understand. It’s hard to tell if I’m bullshitting or not. But people who know their subject, can tell the difference. I know my Sh—t. ๐Ÿ˜‰ P is work. But it it’s life altering in explanatory power. The world will make sense like never before.

  • Curt Can You Explain… (Legal Reform)

    Jan 30, 2020, 6:41 PM

    —“I just read your “Civilizational Differences in Strategy and Conflict”. Excellent work! … I have a question. Toward the end of the post, you write “punish it in a via-negativa market for the continuous suppression of profit by plausible deniability of accountability”. Can you give an example of such a market, or an example of the effect of of such a market? Do you mean punishment for an observed negative consequence to a demonstrated interest (reciprocity)?”—

    “profit from plausible deniability to bait into hazard” Selling goods or services without warranty Selling drugs, encouraging prostitution, or pornography. Selling gambling, selling alcohol on credit, selling credit. Selling improbabilities, advertising, religion Selling marxism, socialism, postmodernism, feminism… One is not accountable for the consequences, because there is no warranty stated, and no warranty enforced. This is how abrahamic method of deceit was spread: western sovereignty is vulnerable to undermining because sovereigns are not prohibited from making bad choices, and we have forbidden retaliation and restitution for consequences of volition – even voluntary choice to be baited into hazard. In other words, the current emphasis on criminal reform is to add requirement for intent to stop police from criminalizing accidental violations. So our requirement for means, motive, opportunity, would be increased to include ‘intent’ also. Likewise, my emphasis on libility reform would be to force involuntary warranty on any baiting into hazard – which would effectively outlaw baiting into hazard, as violating sovereignty in the same way deceit violates sovereignty – and literally gut the advertising, media, entertainment, gambling, academic, credit card, consumer-financial, debt collection, and political sectors, and even the contracts for things like cell and cable bills. this effectively converts buyer beware (despite his or her ignorance) to lender beware (because of their asymmetric knowledge of risks). Instead all of this lending would go through the treasury and all CONSUMER interest be captured for the commons. If we combine liquidity distribution (managing the money supply) with direct distribution of cash to citizens on debit cards, we will invert the economy to be in the service of consumers. I hope this explains enough. Just like falsificationism and testimonialism and grammars convert justification to falsification – inverting our understanding of truth, this conversion of the law will restore sovereignty to the citizens and end the parasitism upon them that has destroyed the working middle managerial and small business classes. This is the greatest most revolutionary reform since the roman redistribution of land, and second only to the restructuring of continental power in the 19th century. And yet it is the very OPPOSITE of marxism.

  • Curt Can You Explain… (Legal Reform)

    Jan 30, 2020, 6:41 PM

    —“I just read your “Civilizational Differences in Strategy and Conflict”. Excellent work! … I have a question. Toward the end of the post, you write “punish it in a via-negativa market for the continuous suppression of profit by plausible deniability of accountability”. Can you give an example of such a market, or an example of the effect of of such a market? Do you mean punishment for an observed negative consequence to a demonstrated interest (reciprocity)?”—

    “profit from plausible deniability to bait into hazard” Selling goods or services without warranty Selling drugs, encouraging prostitution, or pornography. Selling gambling, selling alcohol on credit, selling credit. Selling improbabilities, advertising, religion Selling marxism, socialism, postmodernism, feminism… One is not accountable for the consequences, because there is no warranty stated, and no warranty enforced. This is how abrahamic method of deceit was spread: western sovereignty is vulnerable to undermining because sovereigns are not prohibited from making bad choices, and we have forbidden retaliation and restitution for consequences of volition – even voluntary choice to be baited into hazard. In other words, the current emphasis on criminal reform is to add requirement for intent to stop police from criminalizing accidental violations. So our requirement for means, motive, opportunity, would be increased to include ‘intent’ also. Likewise, my emphasis on libility reform would be to force involuntary warranty on any baiting into hazard – which would effectively outlaw baiting into hazard, as violating sovereignty in the same way deceit violates sovereignty – and literally gut the advertising, media, entertainment, gambling, academic, credit card, consumer-financial, debt collection, and political sectors, and even the contracts for things like cell and cable bills. this effectively converts buyer beware (despite his or her ignorance) to lender beware (because of their asymmetric knowledge of risks). Instead all of this lending would go through the treasury and all CONSUMER interest be captured for the commons. If we combine liquidity distribution (managing the money supply) with direct distribution of cash to citizens on debit cards, we will invert the economy to be in the service of consumers. I hope this explains enough. Just like falsificationism and testimonialism and grammars convert justification to falsification – inverting our understanding of truth, this conversion of the law will restore sovereignty to the citizens and end the parasitism upon them that has destroyed the working middle managerial and small business classes. This is the greatest most revolutionary reform since the roman redistribution of land, and second only to the restructuring of continental power in the 19th century. And yet it is the very OPPOSITE of marxism.

  • Jan 30, 2020, 7:51 PM —“Seems like” insinuates an association (bad or good, bu

    Jan 30, 2020, 7:51 PM

    —“Seems like” insinuates an association (bad or good, but usually bad) without putting forth any capital or reliable information to back your claim. The classic “I don’t really know, but I think I know, ya know?”–Zack Passmore

    (It’s an attempt to undermine without warrantying your words.)

  • Jan 30, 2020, 7:51 PM —“Seems like” insinuates an association (bad or good, bu

    Jan 30, 2020, 7:51 PM

    —“Seems like” insinuates an association (bad or good, but usually bad) without putting forth any capital or reliable information to back your claim. The classic “I don’t really know, but I think I know, ya know?”–Zack Passmore

    (It’s an attempt to undermine without warrantying your words.)

  • Humans are ridiculous department

    Jan 30, 2020, 8:22 PM (Humans are ridiculous department: Oh. And, you know how cops have a revenue.. eh … I mean ‘ticket’ quotas? Is there some weird rule in southeast Asia, that truckers have to meet a quota by running over and making road pizza out of so many jaywalkers, bicyclists, and scooter riders per week to maintain a license? The Chinese at least used one child policy. Is running over humans with heavy machinery a better selection process? Seriously. I know most of it’s concentrated in one country, but why? I mean, Thai truckers, Mexican drug cartels, Brazilian gangsters, Arab Drivers, and Islamic fundamentalists must be keeping a pool or something. Right? OMG.)

  • Humans are ridiculous department

    Jan 30, 2020, 8:22 PM (Humans are ridiculous department: Oh. And, you know how cops have a revenue.. eh … I mean ‘ticket’ quotas? Is there some weird rule in southeast Asia, that truckers have to meet a quota by running over and making road pizza out of so many jaywalkers, bicyclists, and scooter riders per week to maintain a license? The Chinese at least used one child policy. Is running over humans with heavy machinery a better selection process? Seriously. I know most of it’s concentrated in one country, but why? I mean, Thai truckers, Mexican drug cartels, Brazilian gangsters, Arab Drivers, and Islamic fundamentalists must be keeping a pool or something. Right? OMG.)