Our Cities Are Silencing Us - Official Release
This is the true story of a small counter-movement attempting to germinate in a hostile political stronghold in Santa Cruz, California. There are likely other small movements in Black Lives Matter cities around the United States, facing similar hostility and attacks by their own city leaders. Yet, the size of a movement is thankfully impertinent to the laws of the land. The Bill of Rights applies to the individual, not to any particular group or ideology. One individual’s voice is no less valid, and should be no less heard, than the voices of many. We place the duties to protect these individual rights into the hands of our elected officials and our judiciary. These fragile rights easily and regularly come under assault by government leaders who choose their politics over the innate laws of humanity so thoughtfully dispensed by our Founding Fathers. The City of Santa Cruz should be no different. In its obsession to establish and preserve Santa Cruz as a Black Lives Matter city, the Mayor, the City Council and the Chief of Police made one crucial miscalculation in their avaricious efforts to ward off detractors to the Black Lives Matter movement----they silenced a small voice that chose to fight back. In doing so, the city set off a chain reaction of a slew of Constitutional violations that would make most legal scholars cringe: infringing on 1st amendment rights by disrupting the Free Speech Mural protest and arresting its organizer, advocating for one movement over another through disproportionate uses of city resources and disparate interpretations and enforcements of the law and, lastly, surpassing the restraints placed on government speech in its suppression of a constituent voice, thereby failing in its obligation to be, quote, accountable to the electorate, end quote, as expressed in the Supreme Court decision Board of Regents of University of Wisconsin System versus Southworth. Government speech certainly permits a local government to leverage state powers in its advocacy of a particular movement, but it crosses an important line when, in doing so, it simultaneously uses those powers, or denies those powers, to delay, obstruct, misinform, discourage, denigrate, smear, restrain and even terminate a counter-movement, no matter what its size or composition. That’s discrimination--in its most naked form.
We oftentimes do not realize that the fight to protect and defend our Constitutional rights begins locally. It is within each of our capacities, AND obligations, to effect change in our own communities: to call out local tyrants and to punish them accordingly. We cannot rely on our local leaders to protect these critical rights, as they are often the abusers themselves. That responsibility falls upon each of us, to be vigilant protectors of these rights, such as our right to speech. Until we overcome our fears and test our voices in a hostile world, the only sounds that we will ever hear are from the voices that have made us silent in the first place.
About the First Amendment Preservation Society, Inc. (FARPS): Founded in 2020 and located in Santa Cruz, California, FARPS came into existence as a response to two important events: (1) the violence that took place in the aftermath of the June 2, 2016, Donald Trump Rally in San Jose, California and (2) the massive censorship attacks, beginning in Spring-2020, of many conservative and some moderate voices on the major “BIG TECH” platforms. Our mission is to stand up and defend the free speech rights of the oppressed and silent, so they may speak again.
ONE-MAN PROTEST - Google Headquarters, Mountain View, CA - Stop Silencing Conservatives
A lifelong Silicon Valley resident and conservative smells big tech bias over at Google and details what's behind his theory.
AppleProtest Part 2
One-man Protest - Apple, Inc. Cupertino, CA - Stop Silencing Conservatives - Part 2
Apple Protest - Trailer - Stop Silencing Conservatives
The trailer video cuts the concluding segment of part 2 of the Apple protest video to give viewers a short taste of the overall protest, in two parts, an 80 minute analysis of Apple's decline under Tim Cook and how the Apple "dichotomous" business model has lead to the moral decay of the once proud technology company. The essence of the protest is Apple's use of censorship of conservative voices of the now progressive company and its duopoly with Google that, combined, controls the O/S of nearly every single Smartphone in the world. It's a Big Brother nightmare starting to be realized and a warning to all Americans to stop Apple, Google, the Democrats and China from a despotic take-over of our democratic system.
Apple Protest #2 The Axis of Evil Sep 8 2020
My second visit to Apple brings awareness of a powerful threat to all freedom-loving Americans--the 21st century's "Axis of Evil" that operates in unison to attack our liberties in the name of political and economic domination. In this shortened protest, I name names on who these players are and how they are supporting and engaging in nefarious activities that most Americans have not yet come to discover.
Triple Protest Airbnb Facebook California Sep 11 2020
Join me as I visit Facebook in a second protest with updates on issues affecting censorship and election tampering by the social media giant. Meanwhile, Airbnb gets the limelight with a new algorithm under development that wins the "woke" algorithm of the year award. Finally, California and the Liberal Elite of Silicon Valley can't escape the hammer of a patriot who points out that "they're next" on the list of government targeting.
Los Altos Protest - How to Live Like a Progressive Elitist in Silicon Valley
Hollywood isn't the only wealthy, progressive enclave ladling out the progressive agenda, yet not coming close to actually living what they had in mind for the rest of us. Los Altos, California, is a small town that's representative of most progressive, elitist enclaves. Not only do they have running water, but the town is mostly white, rich, educated and progressive. They live a lifestyle that contradicts everything that they try to force on the middle class--open borders, free public services for illegals, racial division, BLM, Antifa, hate Orange man, welfare program that stick the black community in permanent poverty and black children without fathers, violence in the street while they look away, censorship of conservative voices on their social media platforms, yada, yada, yada. Here's a quick peek at a Los Altos home taken just before they released the dogs on me.
Los Altos Protest - What Big Tech Doesn't Want You to Know
You may have heard of how "Big Tech" has been silencing conservatives. But, I bet you don't know where they spend their private lives, where they bring their families on the weekend to enjoy the fruits of their labors. Well, I know where they go. One of several cities that they converge upon is Los Altos, California. Once a small town with "mom and pop" business, Google has decreed it its own and has transformed it into its own vision. I pick on Los Altos because I used to live up in the hills above it, Los Altos Hills, for decades, and I've seen the town change since the arrival of Google, and is one reason that I left it to move to Santa Cruz. I use Los Altos strictly as a model of all small, suburban Silicon Valley cities--and there are many--Los Gatos, Saratoga, Palo Alto, Sunnyvale, Stanford, Menlo Park...and on and on. This particular Los Altos Protest was more of an investigation of how these elites would react to my presence there--a flag-carrying conservative who's trying to recall their governor and trying to make them uncomfortable with their complicitcy in silencing conservatives on the social media platforms, who many of them work for. In the second video, I will summarize the 2 1/2 hour experience.
Los Altos Protest - Final Thoughts on Progressive Elitist Los Altos
In this video, I summarize my findings of my two-progonged goal of (1) gathering recall signatures for removal by vote of Governor Gavin Newsom and (2) reaction to my "Stop Silencing Conservatives" on social media sign in front of Le Boulanger, Los Altos, CA. In reality, the protest was about being able to walk away with a better understanding of the Silicon Valley Progressive elite class, where their soft underbelly lies, and how to potentially use this information in the future if the Democrats decide to steal the election through mail in voting fraud. The truth is, Los Altos, and other progressive small towns like this, has a huge soft underbelly and that is this: Silicon progressive elites live in a bubble. There are no homeless tents, discarded needles, riots, broken windows, feces, or discord. There is only peace, tranquility and safety. It's easy to be a social justice warrior when the negative side effects of policies that you support and fund never pass through the bubble. The concept of a homeless tent is entirely foreign to these aristocrats. In short, it's easy to support and fund with big money progressive policies when you aren't exposed to their results. Those policies make you feel good, but, in the end, they do more harm than good. But, progressive elites never feel the pain of their mistakes the way the rest of us do. They can afford to insulate themselves from those minor details. Their weak underbelly is when those problems actually enter into their lives. Smart, wealthy people then seem to have an epiphany--that the crap they dump onto the rest of us might not be all that great because they finally had their first experience with it--and it sucks. There is only one thing that would shake up a progressive elite, and that is when the byproducts of progressivism shakes up their own neighborhoods. I say "why wait?" Let's install a few homeless camps in these cities with some ACLU support and see how they react? That's how you knock sense into a progressive elite.