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Don Croft
Fri 04 Nov, 2011 12:45

Re: Terrorist States Plan to Attack Persia Next Year
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Another humorous aspect of discarding the federal US Alleged Government is that it probably would result n an economic boom after maybe a few weeks of adjustment.  In countries like Canada, where getting rid of the federal gov't is probably also a healthy move, more people are dependent on bread-and-circus  handouts so the adjustment might be a little more irksome.  Maybe we could compare America's withdrawals to giving up tobacco or sugar and Canada's withdrawals to giving up alcohol.   A friend of mine in a former communist country is experiencing hard times, though I think the hard times were created to corral these folks back into national socialism, which is the same as communism these days.  She actually misses the communist dictatorship and has told me so. In that country's case, giving up slavery is probably more like giving up heroin.
 
In countries like France, where people seem to love national socialism, maybe nothing much is going to change except that the Babylonian Mystery School  monsters who run the country might be replaced by accountable representatives and their living standards would 'adjust down' in the absence of fiat money.  France is about the size of a large Ameican state. Maybe Utah will opt for a beehive form of national socialism and if that's what most of the people in Utah want, that's what they'll have. Idaho, New Mexico, Wyoming, Colorado or Nevada certainly won't wage war on them 8)

Anyone who has stopped working for greedy jerks and has become self-employed goes through the same sort of withdrawals, though, and I've  only know a few self-employed people (the more fearful ones) who ducked for cover and became corporate slaves, again. If that choice were not available they'd probably have been better off.  I wasn't self employed until I was forty and in that case I was fired from my last job.  That was a blessing. Not everyone I ever worked for was a greedy jerk, of course, only 95% of them were.

In the years I was a wage slave I struggled with the idea of employment, always feeling like there was something deeply wrong with how things were in the workplace.  Earlier this year, I read a book about Thomas Paine, who had been essentially erased from history even though he was a key figure in the American Revolution and well respected by the more reputable founding fathers, especially Benjamin  Franklin.  His notion that people in companies are technically not 'employed' but are rather 'selling their labor' changed my entire view of this sticky slave issue. I think pajama people prefer slavery to freedom and they're the majority, after all. I remember how hateful they all were toward me for questioning the nature of employment. I rarely encountered PJ folks after I quit working for others, though.

James Hughes, my amazing sometime mentor,  illustrated the workplace dynamic for me with a story, which I'll pass along here:

A man was imprisoned for many years in a cell that had no windows and was starving and one day an earthquake destroyed the outer wall of his cell.  He saw that he was in the face of a cliff by the sea and immediately jumped to freedom.  He swam away from the island until he almost drowned, then a slave galley picked him up and he was thrown on a bench and chained to an oar.  The conditions of the slave galley were so  much better than what he was used to and the food was so much better that he was ecstatic and couldn't help expressing it to the other slaves, who then beat him to death ;)

So, if you're a person with an inquisitive and open mind and you get hammered for that at work, I hope this story will give you a little solace, at least, and I trust that you've already put some orgonite in your desk (hopefully also throughout the building) in order to stop the sociopaths from stealing your energy when they come around.

~Don


