In this upcoming election we have two choices.
One is for war. (long article)
The other for peace?
The first one is Hillary who swims in a sea of Leninism, the waters of which roil with anger and resentment towards the American people (see this) and the other, Donald Trump who seems hell bent on imprisoning the Clinton’s (not a bad idea in itself) and restoring the country to its dominate position in the world. His concept of cooperating with Russia and Syria to finish off those religious fanatics is a no brainer.
But in the end, say four years from now, will anything truly have changed? It seems you never know what you will get out of this bunch no matter who gets elected. If Hillary spends four years in the highest office of the land, will she inflict more death and destruction than Genghis Khan’s hordes? And the Donald. What will he have bought to the table after serving four years? To vote or not to vote. Its your choice.
Below is a article by Jack Perry who is a writer living with his wife in the Sonoran Desert where he writes, reads, bakes bread, makes arrows, walks, and documents the foolishness of government itself.
Thereâre three questions strangers pose to me that cause me to lose hope in the long-term viability of the human race. The first one is, âDid you watch (insert lame TV show or sports game/program here) on TV last night?!â The second is, âHey, you gonna play the Powerball?! The lottery is up to ten million bucks!â And third and last is, âWho are you voting for?â Ok, in order: Television is the best circus to pacify and entertain the masses since the Roman Coliseum went Chapter 11. If anyone thinks the government isnât telling you what they wish you to believe on that device, you are sadly mistaken. The lottery is a gambling game run by your state government. So, let me guessâŚyou also play those games on the carnival midway and think youâll win those, too, am I correct? Lastly, voting is just an iteration of the government-run lottery. Except the âprizeâ, so to speak, couldnât be sold for a mangled, road-found penny if it was for sale in a vending machine. In fact, I think they should just put the election ballots where they belong: In those vending machines sitting in supermarket lobbies, along with all the fake tattoos and plastic hip-hop jewelry.
Think about it for a moment. The state government runs a gambling system that is pretty much a gigantic money-making enterprise. Plus, they get to tax the winnings! Man, they get some of it right back! They also often dole out the big winnings in yearly payments, probably so you canât abscond the country with it all. But everyone I know that has played this regime rip-off has never won so much as ten bucks but has lost cash up into the hundreds of dollars. I tend to think the guy who wins the jackpot is probably a government shill to begin with. Thatâs how most gambling scams work and the government ought to know since they run the biggest one called âelectionsâ.
The feds run the absolute biggest one because they havenât got a lottery to bilk the people with. Instead, they have what amounts to a âvoting lotteryâ where you get a ticket in the form of a ballot and you pick who you think the winner will be. Now, you can âwinâ this lottery and still lose. Thatâs the beauty of the scam, and Iâve got to hand it to them on that note. Look how many people thought when Obama won, they also âwonâ because they voted for him. Yay! Free health care! No more wars! No more poverty! Uh-huh. And what have we here? Obamacare which is getting close to making affordable health care unaffordable and already has for millions of Americans. Another war in the Middle East over some vague objective similar to something from George W. Bush speak. And escalating poverty made even more so by forcing people to buy health insurance they really canât afford.
I saw on the news the other day that Hillary plans to âaggressivelyâ push Obamacare enrollment. âAggressivelyâ, huh? What does that mean? SWAT teams on standby to cart the unObamacared off to re-Obamacare meant camps where theyâll be forced to watch âAn Inconvenient Truthâ on a non-stop feedback loop and eat a vegan diet based on legumes and pulses? Or perhaps a federal ID card proving you have health insurance, which will be used as necessary ID to get a job like a Social Security card? People will vote for Hillary thinking theyâre going to âwinâ and she wonât also deliver up another war (or continue the one Obama has begun.) Yeah, youâll âwinâ all right. Just like all those discarded lottery tickets sitting in front of convenient stores across America, feverishly scratched off with the last penny to reveal the following: SUCKER!
The difference between the lottery and voting is you donât need a penny in your pocket to vote. You donât need to scratch off the grey film to reveal who will win. Although that might not be a bad idea. Scratch off the grey film and: âYou just elected Hillary Clinton and won a free snowcone, redeemable at government buildings where government Powerball Politics ballots are honored!â Gee, what flavors of snow cones have they got? Oh, yeah, right. Baloney, government cheese, and MRE frankenfurters. Thatâs always a given with the government.
Iâm old enough to remember how the public schools would have their own âelectionsâ to brainwash us into thinking we lived in some kind of genuine democracy instead of this Potemkinocracy constructed from government cheese, graham cracker fallout shelter rations (thatâs what was in those cansâI checked), and the biggest lottery scam in the history of the world. Theyâd pass out these copied ballots, still wet from the copy machines they had back then and have us mark our choice with those big, fat pencils they had back then. The pencils that didnât have erasers, by the way, so we couldnât erase those mistakes just like when voting for real now. Weâd seen the Fall of Saigon on the news and the 1973 Arab Oil Embargo, and enjoyed free government milk, so we marked the ballot for the guy least likely to make us do homework. As if we knew any better who to pick back then, than we do now.
By the way, another tiresome TV question I get is, âDidjya see the debates on TeeVee last night?!â No, actually. I was busy oiling my bicycle chain and following up by julienning some carrots and trying to craft them into a new vegan breakfast cereal I can make into the next fad-food with a little showmanship and the right celebrity endorsement. âJackâs Carrot Crunch! What a great way to start your day! Just add soy milk! Gluten-Free! Sustainable! Dog-Friendly!â And I wonât promise free health care or college in every box, either. Instead, the prize in the box will be a lick-and-stick election ballot tattoo. âHow come youâve got a smudged Hillary on your forearm?!â âBecause thatâs the one that came in the box!â
But, hey, be my guest. Play the lottery. Go vote. Same thing.
–Jack Perry from his article “Play the Lottery, Vote, What’s the Dif?”
Of the Origin and Design of Government in General.
Truncated essay ~
SOME writers have so confounded society with government, as to leave little or no distinction between them; whereas they are not only different, but have different origins. Society is produced by our wants, and government by our wickedness; the former promotes our happiness POSITIVELY by uniting our affections, the latter NEGATIVELY by restraining our vices. The one encourages intercourse, the other creates distinctions. The first is a patron, the last a punisher.
Society in every state is a blessing, but Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one: for when we suffer, or are exposed to the same miseries BY A GOVERNMENT, which we might expect in a country WITHOUT GOVERNMENT, our calamity is heightened by reflecting that we furnish the means by which we suffer. Government, like dress, is the badge of lost innocence; the palaces of kings are built upon the ruins of the bowers of paradise. For were the impulses of conscience clear, uniform and irresistibly obeyed, man would need no other lawgiver; but that not being the case, he finds it necessary to surrender up a part of his property to furnish means for the protection of the rest; and this he is induced to do by the same prudence which in every other case advises him, out of two evils to choose the least. Wherefore, security being the true design and end of government, it unanswerably follows that whatever form thereof appears most likely to ensure it to us, with the least expense and greatest benefit, is preferable to all others.
-Thomas Paine