I Missed That: "Give Me Free."
LIFE, LIBERTY OR PROPERTY?
If you took an introductory college course in political philosophy, you are familiar with that phrase from John Locke that were modified in the Declaration of Independence, substituting "property" with "pursuit of happiness", or "happyness" for Will Smith fans. And, if you ever endured a first year law school course in property law, you may have heard what we did in our class at Washington & Lee: "Everything you need to know about property law, you already learned in the schoolyard." Well, that is not exactly true, if you continued further on to decedents, trusts and estates law, or regulation of land use, but it's a good start.
And, fresh from a pandemic, where a popular phrase was "it's not about your rights", while persons marched in the streets during a pandemic for justice, razed century old statues, and went out to celebrate in parties during Pride Month that not even a lawsuit could prevent the nation's only physician serving as a state governor to reconsider the prudence of doing things a little differently in a public health crisis might be required, the new rights issue in the midterms has emerged on the issue of abortion, framed under the issue of a woman's right to an abortion, which is never even discussed in Roe v. Wade, a decision about a physician's prohibitions at a compelling point of viability when the state, and its compelling interest, could intervene to protect life. And, in the law, as you may gather from reading some cases, there is a choice of deciding that the subject of abortion is life or property, as discussed in Dred Scott v. Sanford and in U.S. v. Amistad.
In a Fourth Circuit case, involving a judge and a refund, i.e., Virginia Elec. Power & Co. v. Sun Shipping and Drydock Co., 539 F.2d 357 (4th Cir. 1976), the reviewing court decided that the question was “closely analogous to what is known as a bare expectancy in property law”, very similar to the way that the question of viability is posed as the central issue in Roe v. Wade, and, in a court, especially as issues are refined in assignments of error on appeal, how a question is presented in framed in drafting choices will determine the rule that will be utilized to decide the case. A judge is not going to do your homework for you, generally, and is not there to be your attorney, or is not supposed to be.
Let's use the "clump of cells" argument, and consider what can be done with this property taken from this Amistad voyage. Can it be sold and regulated in commerce? Did we have an argument about vaccines and fetal lines? Then it is then property.
But, in this midterm election year, consider a line that is in the actual opinion, but not in the movie that had the African dude who made like one more film, where he played an African with Leonardo di Caprio and then ran out of African roles, where Justice Story wrote: "When the Amistad arrived, she was in possession of the negroes, asserting their freedom, and in no sense could they possibly intend to import themselves here, as slaves or for sale as slaves."
There remains a great debate in science regarding the expectancy inherent in a virus without a living host, which, despite a limited time of viability outside the host, is still considered, by some, as life, which is an argument growing in support, and some, who are seeking to develop a good definition of life to use in space exploration in search of other intelligent life in the cosmos that may not conform to what is found on earth believe this is an important question to resolve.
And, post pandemic, Dr. Rochelle Walensky has said this virus isn't stupid, Dr. Tony Fauci has said that this virus has fooled us before, and Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has said we underestimate this virus at our peril, while folks got vaccinated, donned facial coverings, cancelled vacations, closed businesses and stayed away from school from something smaller than a clump of cells that apparently has less value and importance than a novel coronavirus, measured in nanoparticle units and bigger than God.
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Fear Factor: Ophidiophobia
"I HATE SNAKES!" INDIANA JONES
He was the archeologist who every nerd wanted to be in the 1980s, fighting Nazis, searching for religious artifacts, and his dad was Sean Connery, but the leather jacket cool former pilot of the Millenium Falcon, MF for short, had only one fear in the world: snakes, which probably resonated with one in five kids in high school and one in ten American adults, as it is the most common specific phobia, second only two guess what: public speaking, higher than fear of heights and spiders, and at least the folks at Gallup Polls knew this marketing intelligence by the beginning of the current century, like folks at the Scientific American knew by 2018 that two thirds of our spiritual but not religious population, who may, not afraid to burn in Hell, reject God, church and religion, like Don Beyer's kids, a source of pride for their father, and like in the year before the pandemic, the Religious Repression Project had determined that, of 318,000 American Christian churches, only about 60,000 possessed an online capability, that a break in the habit of regular worship was the signature sign of departing a faith community and the words that pastors used most, as well as the words that resonated best with their congregations. According to Sun Tsu, as any tactical intelligence analyst worth his salt can tell you, said: the battle is won before it is fought.
Pandemics are historically associated with fear, confusion and despair, as noted by the Data Institute at the University of San Francisco, in research upon which the nation's only physician serving as a state governor, Ralph Northam, M.D., had relied for the nonmedical grade facial coverings mandate, ignoring the 2010 NIOSH study that had determined, with the same diagnostic equipment that is used to rate the N95, that substitutes for medical grade protection were wholly ineffective, a finding that was not overruled by the WHO hasty review of observational studies completed after May 3, 2020, and that stated that 12 to 16 layer cotton surgical masks may not prevent infection from COVID-19, or to use the words of a Florida judge, they do not "sanitize", a matter in which one pandemic litigator will intervene as soon as Attorney General Merrick Garland and the CDC try to appeal the recent ruling.
But how about the symbols more important than the face diapers to remind everyone of the pandemic to compel compliance, under the UNESCO precautionary principle, a doctrine expressly rejected by American courts in Sancho v. Department of Energy? The caduceus, the winged staff with two serpents? As Doc Northam said: "Symbols are important."
King Cobra Venom, or KCV, is found in snakes in Indonesia and China, which have the most lethal venom, but any scientist measures lethality by comparing the amount of venom neutralized by antivenom, or like taking the infectious dose and relating it to correlates of protection in attempting to develop an effective, and not just efficacious, vaccine. And for KCV, that formulaic expression is "118 mg venom neutralized per g antivenom" which equals the median lethal dose (LD), or about one sixteenth of a tablespoon to paralyze a mouse. Are you a man or a mouse? Speak up, because I can't hear you through your face diaper, socially distanced and fully vaccinated.
And did you hear the one about the Ph.D. who suffered an adverse event after being vaccinated? It was a "stroke of genius." Padunk. Dunk.
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Freedom from Religion
A WALL OF SEPARATION
"And Moses sent to spy out Jaazer, and they took the villages thereof, and drove out the Amorites that were there." Numbers 21:33
"A wall of separation" is an oft repeated phrase, probably far more in usage than "separation doctrine", but, like most, in high school and college elect to avoid science electives, not everyone attends law school and is familiar completely with legal terms of art, and, as these words are legal arguments, it is often said that only a fool represents himself in court. So, let a hint to the wise be sufficient.
According to Sun Tsu, "The enlightened ruler lays his plans well ahead; the good general cultivates his resources." According to Sun Tsu, "what enables the wise sovereign and the good general to strike and conquer, and achieve things beyond the reach of ordinary men, is foreknowledge." According to Sun Tsu, "foreknowledge cannot be elicited from spirits; it cannot be obtained inductively from experience," and "[k]nowledge of the enemy's dispositions can only be obtained from other men."
And at least, according to Sun Tsu military science, it is for this reason that "the use of spies, of whom there are five classes: (1) Local spies; (2) inward spies; (3) converted spies; (4) doomed spies; (5) surviving spies" and "[w]hen these five kinds of spy are all at work, none can discover the secret system."
Sun Tsu, not FM 22-Webb, describes this as "divine manipulation of the threads", and identifies this magic as "the sovereign's most precious faculty." But feel free to deny the science, mindful that, according to WHO Director General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, we have underestimated this virus at our own peril, according to Dr. Rochelle Walensky, this virus isn't stupid, and according to Dr. Tony Fauci, this virus has fooled us before, and you follow the science, right?
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Surprise Attack: Fooled U.S. Before
THE SURGEON GENERAL HAS CONDEMNED THE JUDGE WHO RULED AGAINST THE MASKS THAT NIOSH HAD DETERMINED WERE INEFFECTIVE A DECADE AGO
Democrat voters, according to pollsters, have grown tired of the pandemic, and even Bloomberg has determined that the recent decision in Florida is a chance for Democrat elected leaders to duck out gracefully, but, echoing the Biden Administration, which had failed to foresee a fall of Saigon scenario in Afghanistan, the Surgeon General is now doubling down and condemning the judge in Florida, attempting to use the fallacy of authority to save face amongst the progressive base, but, actually denying the science, since not even the WHO hasty review of 172 observational, not peer reviewed, studies in June 2020 had validated nonmedical grade facial coverings as effective, specifically stating that they were doubtful that even 12 to 16 layer cotton surgical masks would prevent COVID-19 infection, and the rule in the reiterated in the "DACA case", DHS v. Board of Regents for the University of California, is that review of agency action is based upon what is known at the time, as courts traditionally eschew speculative damages, have expressly rejected the UNESCO precautionary principle in American courts and "evolving science" has no foundation in law, as even under Jacobson v. Massachusetts, the government can exert no power without authority, and cannot restrict liberty for no reason, theme reiterated in Chevron USA v. NRDC, in which the court stated a rule in regulatory deference, but even there it requires some reasonably calculated method designed to actually prevent some other harm.
So, what is going on in progressive power circles? Probably the five stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance, as, beyond a reasonable doubt, a novel coronavirus had been cultivated in a laboratory, with the full and complete knowledge of the President's top medical adviser, and, even if not afraid to burn in Hell, Tony Fauci is not exactly excited about going to jail.
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He Lived?
EASTER WITH AN EMPIRICAL EVANGELICAL CHRISTIAN
The Parable of the Ten Talents concludes with a sharp rebuke of a "wicked and slothful servant" who had buried his sole talent, and with a rather intriguing distributive justice, not ceding that talent to the one who had just a little bit more, and had done well, but to the one who had the most, and had invested his many well. You can examine this parable from the perspective of the reasons why the one who had only one talent buried it, or at the other end, regarding why the one with the most was further rewarded, but, in an age of persons feeling inequitably disadvantaged, and vexed with the question as to how a loving God might permit that, let's stick with the "wicked and slothful." You can't miss what you ain't never had.
At the beginning of the pandemic, by the summer of 2020, as many as 23% believed that a novel coronavirus had originated in a laboratory, based upon a sincerely held "belief", and, more likely than not, could not articulate any empirical basis for this belief, which is far more common than one might think, and not just limited to claims of "election fraud", beliefs that "quid pro quo" means "bribe", etc. For hundreds of years before the construction of the Panama Canal, men actually believed that yellow fever was caused by bad air, and not just the indigenous people in the triple canopy rain forest in Panama, and, during the Easter homily at First Baptist Church of Alexandria, there was an illustration regarding "sincerely held beliefs", presenting a belief that a bottle labeled "water" contained water, which we generally accept on faith, like documents in boxes labeled "top secret". ''
If you believed that a novel coronavirus had been cultivated in a laboratory, especially now with the latest news regarding of potential use of nuclear weapons in the Ukraine, you have to ask yourself as to whether any rational person would develop a weapon that would present an equal danger to himself as his adversary, like a nuclear bomb that would kill the person deploying it and his enemy. It would not have a wide range of potential for defense planning. It's the same with biological munitions, like anthrax. Nobody would want to deploy anthrax if it was contagious because you would not only accrue collateral damage but also potentially harm yourself, which is not the goal of war or battle. Therefore, if a biological weapon was being developed, anyone who accidentally got infected may well die, doing the funky chicken, but the damage is self-contained and limited. Why that is so hard to comprehend even after two years, maybe you have to have had biological warfare planning experience.
So, employ this logical methodology to a freedom from religion scenario: the Christian religion of fables that Congressman Don Beyer "believes" is not based upon reason, and is just a bunch of fables. Is it because, according to Pew Research Center, persons who are atheists tend to be more educated and intelligent, causing him to want to put on the appearance of being intelligent, and faking it until he makes it? It happens more often than you might think.
Well, this may be a surprise, but like for Confucius and Mohammed, it is generally accepted by scholars that Jesus lived, and that he was crucified, which was a punishment the Romans had inherited and had generally reserved for limited purposes, like treason, the Spartacus slave rebellion, hanging the slaves on crosses like lampposts on the Via Appia, the road between Capua and Rome. So, definitely anyone who has run for office, or who is a relative unknown from amongst 435 members of the House of Representatives knows that "making history" for 15 minutes is hard enough, but there are even Presidents who most can't remember, but some dude, named Jesus, was not only remembered, but also apparently got on the wrong side of the establishment religious leaders and the ruling government authorities, enough to merit being made an example, and in science for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction, which, apparently has grown into reaction movement, not afraid to burn in Hell.
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Judgment Day: You Owe Me a Drink
OK. A RYDER TRUCK.
In 1995, when a Ryder truck was used in a domestic terror incident in Oklahoma City, when I stood up the 24-hour counterintelligence operations center for the entire U.S. Army, I did not have long-lasting trauma and associations with Ryder rental trucks, even as allegedly, a "fake CI Ranger", according to VA8GOP, but, in 1998, when Ryder rental trucks were parked in front of two abortion clinics in Little Rock, the abortion facility managers claimed that they were immediately placed in fear that they were reminded of the bombing in Oklahoma City, placed in reasonable apprehension of grave bodily harm or death, and were so convinced that the bomb squad was called, which found no bombs or explosives, but the person who parked the trucks, an attorney and pro-life activist, was charged under the FACE Act.
The FACE Act has a provision, never, of record, used, that protects the entrance to a place of worship, except during the pandemic, after Facebook decided to block access to a fringe independent candidate's social media account, the "safe place" for worship for those who remained unvaccinated, according to official government guidelines. That matter has gone all the way to the Supreme Court, on the shadow docket, for prejudgment decision, and kicked back to the Fourth Circuit, where it has been stymied, with not even a reply from Facebook, since December
So, on Maudy Thursday, the holiday commemorating the celebration of the Last Supper, in the second FACE Act civil suit involving the blocking of access to a place of worship, a motion for summary judgment was filed, and against the nation's only physician serving as a state governor during a once in a lifetime pandemic.
Under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(a), when a matter of public interest is brought to the attention of a federal court, a grand jury, or grand juries, if necessary, must be convened, a ministerial act that is mandatory, piercing the veil of judicial immunity, and proper for an application for writ of mandamus to compel the same, and who thinks an adrenaline junky who tried to catch a novel coronavirus in court during a once in a lifetime pandemic is not going to file that matter in court?
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Surprise Outbreak: Single Biggest Threat
DID THE AMAZING FAUCI PREDICT THE PANDEMIC?
According to a new opinion editorial that appeared in Bloomberg Business, the decision on the mandates for facial coverings aboard commercial airlines may be a blessing in disguise for the Democrat Party, permitting them to move on past a pandemic that even their most loyal voters want to forget, but how can one simply forget the amazing Dr. Fauci, the President's top medical adviser, who had demanded a nationwide lockdown, facial coverings and vaccine mandates, after having apparently predicted the pandemic at a panel discussion at Georgetown University in 2017?
One might forget that even the WHO had discredited the claims that COVID-19 had been present in China before December 3, 2019.
One might forget that there were only a total of 27 cases connected to the Hunan Wholesale Seafood Market, a venue the size of nine American football fields, in the largest city in the central mainland and 42nd largest city in the world, or even that it was the farmers who had experienced the highest incidence of infection, like the American passengers and crew aboard the Diamond Princess, a cruise ship that had set sail from Yokohama, Japan, and, by January 14, 2020, as the first imported case was en route to arrive in Seattle, there were only 41 known cases of COVID-19 in China, with the first fatality shortly before, but already the alarm was sent around the entire world, "novel coronavirus" had become a new part of the vocabulary and genetic sequences were being spread to prepare for a prophecy that a pandemic was emerging, which, too, came to pass.
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Rebel Yell & King's Dominion: A Wall of Separation
DAREDEVILS AND DELICATE SENSE ABILITIES
At the time, in the creative process, of crafting the title to this newest video, while I was aware that during the pandemic the theme park just north of the former capitol of the Confederacy had been closed, I was entirely unaware that the old-fashioned wooden roller coaster that had already abandoned the racing concept to rather provide a chance for one track to go forward, whilst the other had riders racing backwards at 56 mph, so as not to have any daredevil in the theme park depart with the feeling of being a loser, had even changed the name of the old Rebel Yell to Racer 75. Daredevil just ain't what it used to be, not afraid to burn in Hell, notwithstanding.
As a former commander during the summer surge sessions at U.S. Army Basic Training, and as a former strategic counterintelligence officer with a little more experience than others in smoke munitions, I know that given any group of 12 initial entry soldiers, given the opportunity to don a military grade protective mask and create a proper seal, at least one, if not more, will fail in the task and then go on to try to play it off like they are perfect in a gas chamber filled with CS gas. It's like a science.
And, at least by 2018, the reporters at the Scientific American, which had unprecedentedly given its endorsement to the current President, during an unprecedented pandemic, during which, throwing caution to the wind, over 4.2 million Virginians rushed to the polls to do their duty to vote, like democracy depended upon it, while less than a quarter chose the option to submit a ballot by mail, despite all of the clamor about an election being stolen by mail in ballots, knew that, given any 1,000 average Americans, watching a magician, of average skill and ability, toss a ball in the air two times, so as to create an expectancy, on the third feigned toss, as many as two thirds, will have been prepared to be astounded and amazed, testifying on a stack of comic books or by oath with their hands on a Dr Seuss book that they had witnessed, with their very eyes, the ball disappear magically in the air--exactly the percentage of people who believe, despite the empirical science, that intelligent life, at least as intelligent as that on Earth, exists someplace else in an infinite universe, but what if they, too, are wrong, as all probability suggests? Still not afraid to burn in Hell?
In a contentious election choice between two sides of a poop sandwich, as described by the first Negro Governor of Virginia, who had refused to endorse the congressman in Virginia's most diverse congressional district to succeed him when he decided to run for Virginia Governor, I had already lost most of my family and friends; so, if they lost their lives in a once in a lifetime pandemic, I can say I was not invited to the funeral, and public health guidance would have recommended that I stay away to preserve my life, a primary consideration, according to Don Beyer, and his secularist, atheist and humanist allies, is the reason most people decide to embrace religion, church and God, which he is proud as a father to say that all four of his children have rejected. However, when I may have been described as a Negro, and could have testified in a court that I had a younger sibling, I could say that I had a brother who actually worked in a few California theme parks, and had some rather revealing stories about the child age operators on thrill rides and attractions in whose hands we place our lives on rides with warning signs that discourage the pregnant, those afflicted with heart conditions and those with serious mental or emotional issues to avoid. And, if you thought the "insurrection" was a mass violence scene, your eyes would pop out of your head on hearing stories from a typical day at a theme park, with the deadly combination of adults who believe they know it all, and children in charge of keeping everything safe, like the last and continuing pandemic.
And, this video treats another widely misunderstood, but rather simple concept, like the yes or no question, regarding the classification of certain metrics for COVID-19: the definition of "wall of separation between church and state", the cherry picked phrase of Don Beyer and the "not afraid to burn in Hell" atheists who preach for a freedom from religion, and apparently even have their own holiday in January. And despite a wall of separation between the executive, legislative and judiciary powers, I would bet that at least two thirds of Americans do not know what the phrase "wall of separation" means, the phrase spoken by the slave holder, Thomas Jefferson, but that phrase, apparently, is not racist.
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Is He Risen?
THE RASHOMON TALE OF A RESURRECTION
A "not an option" and "fringe independent" candidate for Congress in a 45% faith affiliated Virginia, as a resident of 32% faith affiliated Arlington, post a pandemic that closed places of worship and found the numbers of "nones" increase by six percent, probably does not have a winning message if he is still talking about Easter after Easter Sunday, and running against a "not afraid to burn in Hell" incumbent, who is proud as a father that his four kids have rejected God, church and religion, and, after winning over 75% of the vote, decided to align himself with the Freedom from Religion Foundation, but isn't #GoodTrouble a good thing? How about #Resist?
In the first installment of this Lenten Season video, we touched upon the historical Jesus, who most credible scholars will concede had lived, falling short of raising the question as to why a nonviolent person might gain so much notoriety as to have both the local religious authorities and the Roman government, traditionally enemies, giving rise to even tax collectors being looked upon with reproach for their collusion, wanting not only to punish him, but also crucify him, a penalty reserved for only the worst of criminals and enemies of the state. That is an important question, even in criminal law, where there is an actus reus, or bad act, as well as a mens rea, or culpable mind, which could make the difference between involuntary manslaughter and capital murder.
So, in this video, we even depart the traditional Easter sermon, which tends to focus on Mary of Magdalene in the Johannine Gospel, and rather fuse the string of accounts across the Canonical Gospels to piece together the parts of the story into one unified narrative, first to discover consistencies, but also to impart some understanding as to what had occurred after the crucifixion, giving rise to a debate regarding whether a person who died under suspicious circumstances--enough these days to cause folks to march in a street during a pandemic--had been raised from the dead, as had been prophesied. And, especially the tale of Matthew, a colluding taxpayer himself, adds a broadened perspective about the events that began with a group of women arriving at a sealed tomb with brand new spices and hoping to get somebody to open the sepulcher just for them so they could do the thing they wanted to do, which always makes for a scene at a funeral when somebody didn't get a chance to do their thing before the casket is closed.
And any preacher's kid who has seen a lot of funerals knows exactly how that scene always plays out.
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Scare the Monkey Mess Outa Ya: Roller Coaster Thrill of a Lifetime
PHI BETA KAPPA DON BEYER SAYS HE HAS NEVER READ ANYTHING IN THE BIBLE THAT SAYS LIFE BEGINS AT CONCEPTION
Don Beyer, in an interview at "The Embassy", an inside joke by the reporter from The Hill, actually stated that he has a bookshelf in his Washington Office with the rainbow flag tacked on the entrance door, and the only foreign flag, the Switzerland flag, on Capitol Hill, flying in the wrong position by diplomatic protocol outside his office, that only contains books that he has never read, empirical evidence for anyone who bothers to visit the former "Ranger", albeit at the National Park Service, before ditching the idea of medical school, with an economics degree--yes, they actually require you to take some science before you take the MCAT and try to attend even Ralph's step above Grenada medical school--to work at Daddy's dealership, and be reprimanded by Daddy, for arriving late to work, as he even admitted to Steve Scully at C-SPAN in his freshman year as a Congressman--a very informative interview that Don prays to a God who apparently doesn't exist that I never read, like apparently nobody else did, or you may have heard it from one of his opponents on the ballot, if they wanted to actually win.
Yet, his doting, "thank you so much for joining us, again, sir", hosts at the Freedom from Religion Foundation, of course just get star struck, apparently like any scientist when the Nolo Contendere Dealer Don Beyer says something about policy with which they agree, like abortion, and then uses the logical fallacy of authority on them: "I have never read anything in the Bible that supports the idea that life begins at conception." Spoken like a true salesman, and don't they look like intelligent people, especially the one who looks like the alien in The Empire Strikes Back to whom not even Chewbacca would not hand the keys to the Millenium Falcon. Willy Loman, eat your heart out.
But, having gone through some basics in the last installment on Don's coming out of the closet as an atheist, apparently with some gripe against God regarding being restricted in his sexuality--whatever that means in a district where people get wild about porn tabs--the actual meaning of a wall of separation, which apparently many miss on the test--it is not quarantine, my fully vaccinated religious friend--we proceed to the jurisprudence regarding the extension of this religion from which the former Ambassador desires freedom, while attempting to promote other alleged rights, he inherited from his monkey's uncle.
Not every Hemming Jacobson who goes all the way to the Supreme Court is a pastor, and, recall that the Evolution Theory in public school was brought first to court by a dang football coach who had been recruited for money by the ACLU. Yes, if you believe the movie, contrary to the facts that require research, God was kicked out of public school by a sports coach who obviously lacked the talent to go pro.
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Please Remain in Your Seats Until the Car Has Come to a Complete Stop
"YOUR WISH HAS BEEN GRANTED." ZOLTAR, BIG
It was a scene shot at a familiar amusement park in Rye Beach, New York, in a film starring Tom Hanks, who had been able to convince an adult by simply stating "George Washington", a middle school, that he had graduated from a university, having placed in that adult's mind a sufficient expectation for a magical occurrence to present. And, Josh Baskin, hoping to impress a young lady had found great disappointment upon learning that he did not, despite his greatest desires and dreams, satisfy the minimal height requirements to board and enjoy a thrill ride attraction, inducing trauma in the mind of a child, and invoking sympathy from a film theater audience.
A graduate of the Number One ranked competitive college in the nation, accepting only 13% of applicants, and who is apparently not afraid to burn in Hell, had presented the proposition to the Freedom from Religion Foundation, an organization that believes themselves to be "intellectuals", and all the more honored to have as their guest a member of Congress, who boasts of "almost perfect SATs", but not quantifiably defined, that 1) there is no biblical source that he has ever read, a qualified condition, to sustain the proposition that it is morally unacceptable in the Christian faith to have an abortion, selecting Christian theology as his sole target, despite pronouncements regarding being a defender of all religions, which he personally rejects as an intellectual, dedicated to science; and 2) there is no scientific foundation to sustain the idea that a fetus is a living organism, entitled to those "natural law", actually not recognized in American jurisprudence, rights, described as endowed by a Creator, in the founding documents, i.e., the Declaration of Independence, and described as "self-evident", integrated into the Constitution.
The community of the most government scientists in the nation has presented the claim that a fringe independent and not an option candidate for Congress is, in fact, despite payments, without financial aid to the most competitive private college in the nation, is a graduate of an evangelical Christian college associated with Rev. Jerry Falwell and the Moral Majority, which Don Beyer, not afraid to burn in Hell, has decreed to have been neither moral nor a majority, even contrary to the empirical evidence, but, like the standard for a demurrer, under Federal Rule of Procedure 12(b)(6), accepting all allegations as true, the internationally notorious porn tab guy has an opportunity as foot stomping Baptist to kick a little most competitive college Democratic Party symbol on these groundless and unsustainable claims set forth in support of abortion, and Planned Parenthood, which had early endorsed the newest member of the atheist club in Congress back in December.
So, Champions of Christ, let's have at it. Bully! And jolly good show. Yank! (A little gallows humor from a fan of The Mikado since kindygarten.)
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It Takes a Thief: FACE 2 for 1?
GRAND THEFT "AUTO" IX?
"Brave" investigative reporters at Live Action had indicated that the persons indicted under the 18 U.S.C. Section 248, the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act could face up to 11 years in prison, but did not even mention the indictment brought under 18 U.S.C. Section 241. Actually, the maximum sentence under the FACE Act, although a felony, is three years, but only for second offenders, and for first offenders, only one year, which is not a felony, but only a misdemeanor. Why is that important?
This is where actual criminal investigation experience, maybe civil rights and criminal defense, maybe even litigation or law school experience, is kind of important if you want to get a story right--wait! They are "brave". I get it.
You don't convene a grand jury for a misdemeanor charge because it isn't necessary, and it is a waste of limited judicial resources, but you do require a grand jury, if you want to charge a felony, which makes the additional charge under 18 U.S.C., conspiracy to violate "civil rights", and not just "rights", as written on the arrest warrant, in addition to the fact that it has traditionally been utilized for prosecuting voting rights act cases, and even then, not since the 1960s, and, even then, the murderers of the Freedom Riders, Schwerner, Chaney and Goodman, who were involved in voter registration, vicinity Philadelphia, Mississippi, only served, tops, six years, despite sentences from seven to ten, and, nobody in this case has been stopped by police, taken back to the station, released, tracked down again, and had their bodies buried in the woods. So, even a ten maximum on the Section 241, and a one year charge on the FACE Act, doesn't even make sense, but the charge, traditionally brought for voting rights being extended to abortion rights is a significant deviation of DOJ policy, about which we have submitted a FOIA request--a change of policy that found the Biden Administration reaching back retroactively to a prior Administration, examining disposed criminal cases to cherry pick abortion related cases and then convene a jury, which could, under jurisprudence establish a case of selective prosecution, and warrant seeking Brady Rule evidence for purposes of impeachment, to support a necessity defense. Or that's just my hunch, as a former childhood protege of a legendary criminal defense and civil rights attorney, whose capital punishment clients, unlike Tim Kaine's did not need Ray Brown rolling up in his Mercedes to bum a last meal, and say sorry things didn't quite work out, but, I love you, man.
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My Body and My Choice: Swimming with the Fishes
A DEFENSE OF NECESSITY AND/OR OPPORTUNITY FOR BRADY RULE EVIDENCE DISCOVERY?
Some anonymous trolls were convinced one fringe independent, not an option, candidate for Congress was an artificial intelligence bot, while others were convinced that he was Rudy Giulani operating under a pseudonym, and he obviously was not the Liberty University Champion for Christ removed from the Black History Timeline of a formerly elite, private college in the Shenandoah, where the most laudable accomplishments of alumni is being a former army captain who spent his time whittling USA flag creations from wood. Go, Generals!
However, in Gagelonia v. Commonwealth, 52 Va.App. 99 (2008), one Red Rose Rescue participant, and former childhood protege, had come upon, in a case in which not even the NAACP Legal Defense Fund was interested, that eventually nullified the provision of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that had been recognized by the U.S. Supreme Court in Georgia v. Rachel in 1966, in a case involving persons accused of trespassing, while integrating lunch counters in Atlanta, a unique creature of Brady Rule evidence, from the Supreme Court decision in Brady v. Maryland, regarding discovery of potentially exculpatory evidence that is mandated to be available to those accused of crimes by police that would impeach the prosecution and/or defense in an attempt to obtain a conviction, and increasingly appearing to be available to those nine persons recently indicted in a grand jury, under what appears to be a politically motivated decision, even transforming what had traditionally been a prosecution tool to defend voting rights into a method to punish those against abortion, and providing an extra layer of protection to "precious cargo" in human lives, even greater than deposits in banks, insured by the FDIC, and greater even than afforded to owners in a peculiar institution of American chattel slavery. And, he really ain't black, as a person who voted for Donald Trump, supported Ronald Reagan, and organized Kids to Re-Elect the President--a Nixon KREEP.
This tends to bolster a defense of necessity, as articulated in the 1980 case of U.S. v. Bailey, an opinion drafted by the conservative Justice Rehnquist, and a matter in which the historical appointee Thurgood Marshal had abstained. And he is just a person trained in investigations since college, a former tracker of terrorists, spies, drug dealers and other ne'erdowells, with three unreported cases at the Suprem Court, and not a "brave" investigative reporter for Live Action.
But a note for all of the Sopranos: despite what you see in the movies, while it may raise suspicions to have a dead Negro in your trunk, unless, like one New Jersey police officer, you happened to have also killed the decedent, it's like perfectly legal. Ask the officer to prove you killed the Negro, and practice the line, "Honest, Officers, I was just being a Good Samaritan." And, if anybody asks, tell them Consigliere Junior sent ya.
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Now You See It. Now You Don't
INCINERATORS, FETAL PARTS, SPOLIATION CHARGES? WHAT NEXT? RELIGIOUS EXEMPTIONS?
A great magician caper? Father Vic had to be smiling down from Heaven when the Saint Peter's Peacocks managed to violate public health guidance, practice to make a better team and make the March Madness championship, but this latest twist in a developing caper crime story has got to have Father Vic rolling on the floors of Heaven, especially after the notorious joke by the Black Jesuit, Cardinal Arupe, when the people of Jersey City decided to draft him to run for Mayor, after old Democrat Mayor Whalen, and holdover hack from the Mayor Hague machine, found himself in prison.
According to the story, Cardinal Arupe had to draft a letter to convince Father Vic to honor his vow of obedience to the Pope and not seek electoral office. However, he knew that becoming the king of a kingmaker district was quite a tempting offer, and also knew, giving an indication of Vatican intelligence, that Father Vic was a kid from Brooklyn who had at least a little savvy to understand his meaning, especially with a guy who loved his ponies as much as his Peacocks. And, Cardinal Arupe wrote that if Father Vic decided to go against the wishes of His Holiness the Pope, he wanted to have the garbage contract, which on the mean streets of Brooklyn, even vicinity of Fordham University, meant to make a hit on the Pope, which terrified the chain smoker so much to death that he would light up a cigarette if you even mentioned politics in any discussion. Talk about a good psyop, right?
Well, now we have as many as 115 fetuses, but also potential allegations of spoliation against the Curtis Bay Waste Management Company, which is a violation of Federal Rule of Procedure 37(e), but worse, also, in a federal criminal investigation, a felony charge with a maximum of 20 years in a federal penitentiary and/or fine, and, according to their operating permit, they operate two such incinerators, sharing one stack, permitted to incinerate 150 tons per day each. So, why would anybody say they don't have an incinerator?
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Precious Memories: More to Be Desired Are They Than Gold
THE HEIST OF THE CENTURY?
It was an indictment handed down on March 23rd by a grand jury at the U.S. District Court in the nation's capital that has yet to appoint a judge in an unreported case to inspect 15 boxes of classified information that had been seized from the Mar-a-Lago property of the former President.
It was the Southeast DC apartment raid by federal law enforcement officers from the FBI that had prompted a two-time Emmy Award winning investigative journalist to be on the scene, like the nine reporters from the Washington Post, including one who had apparently broken a window to get in, an active crime investigation scene at the Watergate, and a third rate burglary to which the DC Police Department had dispatched only two responding officers.
It was the scene reported by the brave investigative reporters at live action, arising, apparently from an arrest that had been filmed live on Facebook, while pro abortion activists engaged in "shark attacks", spewing their messages and demanding to have their presence deleted on the film record, while others called the phone of the person filming to disrupt the broadcast, an arrest on October 22, 2020 that has been connected to what appear to be the remains of aborted children, images described by Michael J. Knowles as images that made it difficult for him to say that he loved America.
And now, a son and grandson of black pastors, a person who shared a spiritual mentor in Dr. Benjamin Elijah Mays, with the slain civil rights leader, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., a friend of his father, a childhood protege of a legendary civil rights and criminal defense attorney, Raymond A. Brown, Esq., and a former army top spy, physical security expert and pro se litigator who has garnered the reputation in courts of record as being the Scourge of the Virginia Bar Association, especially for his litigation as a participant in a Red Rose Rescue and in litigations that have reached the nation's highest court in challenge to the government response to the public health crisis, presents a novel, and informed perspective of these events, comparing them to attempting to rob a retail branch of a commercial bank, like the major New York City banks where he has experience as a teller, intimately familiar with security protocols and procedures at those federally insured depositories, as well as the only person to have brought civil litigation under the FACE Act for its purported protections of the entrances of places of worship, unreported in the press.
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A Dream Deferred
"THAT'S IT! I'M A BAGEL ON A PLATE OF ONION ROLLS!" FUNNY GIRL
On Thursday, by a vote of 53 to 47, a largely partisan vote, the first Negro woman to be appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court was approved upon the advice and consent of the U.S. Senate, an elected body in the legislature, of one hundred popularly elected representatives from fifty states that includes 24 popularly elected women, a body that has had only 232 Negroes in its ranks in its entire history, a body where people of color comprise only eleven percent of the top job staff jobs, in a record breaking, or history making Senate class where 23% are designated as persons of color. And, according to Negro Senator from New Jersey, five years from now, nobody will even remember what the vote was, nor probably the questions about the appointed justices former decisions as a judge, if you think about it. But, for the sake of history, what is the true measure of success or failure?
The first African American elected to the County Board in Arlington was not elected until the year after the first African American was elected to student body office at a private elite college in the Shenandoah, and many folks want to get rid of the African American who is serving on the County Board now. It was not until the year after Barack Obama was elected to the White House that an African American was elected to the Arlington Public School Board, a school board that was completely replaced to avoid implementing the desegregation plan decree issued by the Supreme Court in the landmark Brown decision, and took five years, and an additional federal court order to do so, and in public schools where an achievement gap remains unabated, not even one member of the Arlington NAACP decided to run to replace the sole African American who was serving on the school board, but they got upset, and joined with the Arlington GOP, who also presented no candidates, after the election was over to cry about the early caucus held by the Arlington Democrats being unfair. Some people, just like to complaint, on all evidence, and wonder why they never get anything.
A salesman, like Don Beyer, will tell ya, if you fail to plan, you plan to fail, which just makes common sense, but a soldier will tell ya that piss poor planning yields piss poor results, and you have a pandemic, breakthrough infections, a virus that has fooled you before, and this virus, apparently, isn't stupid, according to the nation's top doctors.
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Pandemic Apprentice (Academy Award Edition)
THE FACE ACT VERSUS AGGRAVATED TRESPASS IN CALIFORNIA
In 1993, the killings of Drs. Gun and Tiller by persons describing themselves as pro life activists had set off a "doctors lives matter" movement, albeit with greater force than George Floyd, finding within just a year the passage by a Democrat Congress of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act, and the beginning of a movement to describe all pro life activists, presumption of innocence notwithstanding, of being terrorists.
The FACE Act is codified as a felony offense under federal law, and is one of the additional offenses with which a prosecutor may charge persons engaged in pro life activism outside an abortion facility. However, like Jane Fonda, a hero of the Planned Parenthood endorsed Congressman Don Beyer, Jr. (D-Va), just last year, when she exercised her free speech, like when Randall Robinson exercised his free speech outside the South African Embassy on the issue of apartheid, or John Lewis joined his buddies at SNCC to attempt to integrate lunch counters, since 1933 the criminal charge that can be brought is a misdemeanor offense of trespass. However, obviously if you engage in free speech and say the magic words "stop the steal" or "make America great, again" or even "Donald Trump", obviously that is code for "insurrection."
However, the recent events that caused Dr. Jerome Adams, an anesthesiologist, to provide his assorted thoughts, "as a Black man", regarding what he had imagined to be "black on black violence", provide an excellent example of the disparate treatment against persons professing a Christian religion and engaged in a devotional free exercise of their sincerely held faith beliefs, serving as pro life counselors outside, or even inside, abortion facilities, particularly when examining the "wobbler offense" of trespass in California, which includes, under Penal Code 601, the felony offense of aggravated trespass, defining a reasonable time of 30 days within the articulation of the credible threat, as defined under the California stalking statute, for an aggravated trespass to occur from an articulated threat, which can even be presence at the residence of the victim's neighbor, or at the place of business or workplace of the victim, but not in the home of the assailant (common sense), or if the conduct was an articulation made in free speech (Chris Rock says he wasn't paid extra for the extemporaneous joke).
Not long after the Oklahoma City bombing, where I had stood up the Operations Cell for the entire U.S. Army, a pro life activist merely parked a Ryder truck on the street in front of an abortion facility, arguably free speech. For a charge of aggravated assault, the assailant must not only communicate the reasonable threat, but also possess the capability, but under the FACE Act the person was convicted, fined and imprisoned, because they believed he had been attempting to create the image of someone trying to replicate the bombing of the Alfred Murrah Federal Office Building, even though obviously lacking the explosives to accomplish that task. Hence, the pro life activist received a far greater punishment for what may be described as free speech than a person, like Jane Fonda, who can even chain herself to the Capitol steps, and get a slap on the wrist misdemeanor charge of trespass.
And, on March 7th, in a decision not publicized even in the conservative press, like Fox News, or amongst "nonprofit" organizations that pay their bills by saying they are pro life, the Supreme Court, in a case of first impression, considered a claim that Facebook had blocked the access to a place of worship when they disabled a person's social media account, which would be a strict liability offense, with no affirmative defense, were the entrance of an abortion facility blocked. And, the Supreme Court, with a conservative majority, decided to punt on recognizing the free exercise of religion as at least on parity with a women's alleged right to kill her baby in abortion.
Ironically, the same decision where the Supreme Court decided that, at least for now, it was okay for Joe Biden and Tony Fauci to develop a biological agent, which could not be transmitted from person to person, having only a less than five percent secondary attack rate, that had by December 2020 claimed the lives of over 319,000 Americans, over 20% of whom happened to be Negro, like 60% of the COVID-19 fatalities in Richmond when Democrat Negro Mayor Levar Stoney had prioritized the removal of century old statues.
And, hail Satan, in this blessed Lenten Season. And, if you are okay with science ignoring Newton's laws of conservation to promote the Big Bang Theory, and are comfortable that not even scientists can explain how apparently Moses knew in a pre Hellenic age that the "water" necessary for biogenesis on earth could only be found in one place, obviously you are not a big Pascal fan, but I like to follow the MAFF, like any gambling man.
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SEAL of Approval: Blackhawk Down
THE CONSPIRACY THEORY THAT EVEN PROGRESSIVES ARE SCARED TO DISCUSS
According to First Liberty Institute, the attorneys for the U.S. Navy SEALs in the current litigation in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, they have brought a total of three cases all the way to the United States Supreme Court since their founding in 1972, when one retired Army Ranger and the most junior commissioned officer to have ever served as the Operations Officer for all U.S. Army strategic counterintelligence in the continental United States (CONUS), was just beginning the second grade, and in just the two years of pandemic, he has had three cases docketed at the Supreme Court, and he possesses neither a law degree nor a license to practice law, but he did serve as a Legal Specialist with the 75th Ranger Regiment, because somebody has to handle the legal work involved in a rapid deployment lite infantry special operations unit, and when you are available for deployment anywhere in the world in less than 18 hours, it tends to involve an understanding of even international law, status of forces agreements and treaties.
Last Friday, the Supreme Court handed down a sweeping decision in Austin v. U.S. Navy SEALs 1-26, an application raised on the "shadow docket" for prejudgment relief in an interlocutory appeal, which is quite a lot of law to try to understand for a novice, because that means that the action is currently in three courts: the original trial court in the Northern District of Texas, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court.
However, under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 24, a person enjoys a right of intervention, which can be a conditional right or an unconditional right, to essentially be a Good Samaritan, parachuting into somebody else's case that might be in a bit of trouble to have the court decide a material issue that effects both their case and yours. And we just happen, based upon intelligence and special operations experience, to have the one shot-one kill target solution on the vaccines mandates, and, you may have noticed that you did not hear about it on CNN, in a briefing at the Heritage Foundation, at CPAC, from Family Research Council or any other conservative think tank or press outlet, and that should be one of those things to make you ask yourself exactly why.
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Do You Believe--In Magic?
NO BODIES? PERFECT!
In the 2006 Hollywood film, with Hugh Jackman, Christopher Bale and Michael Caine, viewers were, perhaps for the first time, introduced to the perfect magic trick, comprised of three elements: the pledge, the turn and the prestige, one of a series of films, and considering the fact that, just like the 65% who possessed some faith affiliation, importing a moral imperative, 71% believed they had had some paranormal experience, and as many as 68% believed in good and evil spirits, while 18% believed that they had actually seen a ghost. These are the scientists who voted for the science in 2020.
While today, according to Baptist News, "Americans today are more optimistic about the trajectory of the pandemic than they have been since those halcyon days after vaccines and before Delta and Omicron", while as many as 24% of atheists had turned to prayer in March 2020, 63% of adults are "now expressing positivity about the direction of the pandemic", which "is the highest since last June after the vaccine was rolled out and infections were down sharply, but it is well below the 89% recorded then", and "55% of U.S. adults are still worried about future variants, and two-thirds expect the pandemic will persist through the end of 2022 or beyond."
According to Pew Research Center, in 2020, when 319,000 Americans had already died, over 20% Negro, you may not be surprised to know that it had been found that , going all the way back to "the very beginning of the U.S. coronavirus outbreak, Democrats have been far more likely than Republicans to see COVID-19 as a 'major threat' to public health", which probably had some impact upon their vote, in an election where Forbes Magazine found that the only mandate for Joe Biden was on the pandemic response.
Notwithstanding the rise by six points of nones, increasing their lead ahead of Roman Catholics, during two years of pandemic, of the 65% who had some faith, even "nondenominational", like a history making judge, before, for the scientists who demand evidence, and empirical, reason based analysis, it is at least intriguing that, according to Pew Research Center, "[a] large majority of U.S. adults (86%) say there is some kind of lesson or set of lessons for mankind to learn from the coronavirus outbreak, and about a third (35%) say these lessons were sent by God." And, by September 2020, most Americans believed that their lives had been changed indelibly in ways that will never go away, like the 20% of churches that voluntarily closed their doors that, by May 2020, will never return.
It is a fact, according to Pew Research Center that, based upon evidence or not, just like the 65% who believe, without evidence, there is not just life, but intelligent life on other planets, that almost "three-in-ten Americans believe COVID-19 was made in a lab", a claim that the President's top medical adviser, Dr. Tony Fauci, has consistently denied.
However, would it surprise you that prior to the pandemic, former Deputy CIA Director, working at the International Spy Museum, had admitted that in intelligence work--or national security--we actually use the techniques employed by stage illusionists to present the appearance in the minds of unwitting subjects that something is what it is not?
Would it surprise you that the Scientific American that had unprecedentedly endorsed Joe Biden, had also began publishing a series of articles on stage illusion and magic tricks as early as 2018, two years before the pandemic?
Did you know, regardless of how you had voted on the origins of a coronavirus in April 2020, on March 7, 2020, the Supreme Court, Justice Alito abstaining, decided not to proceed to oral arguments, on an application for prejudgment injunctive relief to compel the White House, which had asserted a presumptive executive privilege, to respond to a FOIA request, or explain why it had not yet replied, since March 23, 2021, as to whether the secondary attack rate and infectious dose for COVID-19 was classified information, information that could only be classified if the government owned the causative biological agent for a disease that has been attributed to more deaths than Adolph Hitler during the Holocaust, the subject of a formal complaint submitted to the International Criminal Court, alleging crimes against humanity and genocide.
So, since you look like an intelligent person, do you believe that you could be fooled into thinking that a novel coronavirus had been zoonotically evolved from an animal source that not even the National Laboratories, the amazing Dr. Fauci and the Intelligence Community (the ones hiding the aliens from you) could not find?
Do you prefer not to know that your "beliefs" without evidence were responsible for your pandemic?
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That Is Jacked Op: "Not a Victory of Party"
"THAT'S A DARK SIDE, MY FRIEND." WHEN HARRY MET SALLY
During a pandemic, one former biological warfare planner filed three complaints in state and federal courts, taking those claims all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, enduring two years of litigation, with two matters still pending in courts, matters passed upon by VA8GOP, rejected by VA8 Democrats and incurring the wrath of the Progressive Voters Guide, a national progressive organization, but finding not one mention in the press. And, now with world war on the horizon, threats of nuclear, biological and chemical warfare, the only question is whether you have two years to wait upon the outcome of litigation, after you vote based only upon your party affiliation.
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Failure Is Not an Option: Just Your Choice
HIT RETURN TO RESUME OPERATION
In June 2015, as a freshman congressman, Don Beyer, Jr. had been interviewed by Steve Scully on C-SPAN, after having successfully defeated two Negro women, one Hispanic, one Negro male, the first openly gay Jewish American ever elected to a state office and one Caucasian male in the most diverse congressional district in the Commonwealth, and the most reliable Democrat Party District in Virginia, prompting Alexandria activist Gail Gordon Donnegan to comment to the Washington Post, after that primary election, that it was disappointing to see a rich, White male prevail, and he went on to defeat an Negro male, described by the Washington Post as a "unicorn", because his religion was Judaism. Explaining his victory, Congressman Beyer said that he was "the only one who had the resume."
There are so many Democrat Party votes in Virginia's 8th Congressional District that, in 2016, Scott McCaffery, the editor for the Arlington Sun Gazette, had said that bookies wouldn't lay odds on a Republican picking up a seat because it was so far out of reach, and in 2017, Patricia Sullivan, of the Washington Post, had confirmed that the County of Arlington which had last voted for a Republican Presidential nominee in 1980, was the jewel of the kingmaker congressional district that had decided statewide elections for the prior two decades. But, this year, after being so confident after what he had described as the election of his lifetime, the 2020 election, that, after years of expressing "frustration whenever government officials political leaders used God to promote bad policy or ideas--or twisted the Bible to make a bad point," upon the urging of Congressmen Jared Huffman and Jamie Raskin, he had accepted the invitation of the Congressional Free Thought Caucus, which he claimed on Twitter "pushes for science-based policies (key during the pandemic), and described by The Friendly Atheist as "a group of lawmakers dedicated to promoting reason-based policy."
However, this year, for the first time since his election, although he has informed supporters that he is concerned that the Republicans are attempting to recruit "an extremist" to defeat him, Beyer faces a primary challenger, a 29 year old woman of color, daughter of immigrants, Victoria Virasingh, who hopes to be the first Indian/Latina to represent the district, and she has already raised over $123,000, far exceeding the amount raised by any Republican in the district since Patrick Murray's last race in 2012, while, having already raised over $927,000, is in a position to exceed his normal campaign receipts of around $1.3 million. And Virasingh has stated that she is running not because Beyer, who has the worst roll call vote attendance record in Virginia, despite boasting to Steve Scully that he was the envy of Congress for having a district to close to the Capitol, has performed poorly, but that she, with no prior experience in elective office, or government service, can do better.
And, Arlington County, Virasingh's home since birth, alone has the most government scientists in the nation, is the most educated, by credentials congressional district, and boasts a rank of 14th for holders of graduate degrees; so, at least on paper they look like intelligent people.
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God: Unclassified (You Bet Your Life, a/k/a Feynman Wouldn't Bet with His Money)
EVEN MSNBC COULD NOT FIND KETANJI BROWN JACKSON'S CHURCH OF MEMBERSHIP
For those attracted like gravity to the paranormal, Thomas Francis University (TFU), a college not even ranked by U.S. News and World Report, “offers spiritually-based and metaphysically-based degrees and affordable courses perfect for open-minded students with esoteric interests.”
First, from a strictly economic perspective, think of the drama majors who thought they would one day be Barbra Streisand or Al Pacino. Not a good bet, and after a pandemic, over in your mind or not, for two years, everyone has had the opportunity to consider the fact that, save the planet for climate change or not, at some point, you will have no more quarters to put in this video game we play called life, and, just like an infinite universe makes 65% believe that intelligent life, not just life, exists on other planets, according to Pew Research, there is a 100% chance that your gameplay experience will have a big "game over" sign on it. And you don't wannabe the guy feasting on sushi platters at Wasabi to find out that it wasn't all you can eat, and you have to pay for this crap, with or without your TFU degree in Paranormal Science or Parapsychology, or Accelerated Metaphysics, for a nominal investment for just $300. Momma used to say: you get that for which you pay. But, if you, like thespians, are just into the your craft, go on and splurge on the Masters and PhD degree offerings at TFU, live long and try to prosper.
Science, Big Bang Theory notwithstanding--and Dr. Francisco Duran the Superintendent at Arlington Public Schools has not yet launched a program to keep students safe from universes coming into existence in the vacuums inside any third grade thermos--is based on the idea that results can be replicated. Now, think: Don Beyer, congressman, had parents that sent him to Gonzaga High School , for a fine Jesuit education, just like Tim Kaine. Victoria Virasingh, a daughter of immigrants who she says worked multiple jobs, attended Saint Agnes, a parochial school in Arlington, and went on to Stanford University, and kids at the best public high schools in Arlington attain, on average 1270 on the SAT, which may get you into Howard University, an HBCU, but not Harvard, in the Ivy Leagues. Do you see any public school kids in affluent and highly educated Arlington running for Congress who believe they can win? And, if you adopt a bad plan, you may be successful, by accident, but the odds are that you shall not defy the odds.
A novel coronavirus, if you believe zoonotic evolution, got lucky, developing a gain of function, to attach to a human host, closed your businesses, churches, library and schools, and kept improving itself, without even a sentient thought so that even Dr. Tony Fauci is worried about what a virus with no brain might do next.
If you subscribe to Darwinian Evolution, just think of some new chromosomal variant from a species suddenly emerging, defying the odds, then contending being with being a little different from everyone else in a jungle, with no government assistance, protection of its franchise, affirmative action, civil rights laws, welfare, universal healthcare, living wage or anything else you believe you need to survive, and then, like Romeo and Juliet, hooking up with its star-crossed lover with the same mutated chromosomal pattern, without online dating, a Jewish mother to do some matchmaking or anything else, and then creating a whole new species. And, if you are still angry about how you were treated differently in high school or college, in the evolution game, pal, you are on your way to extinction. And, hopefully, for you, you don't have to worry about any hereafter.
Gamblers make their luck, and even Dr. Richard Feynman said that he would only gamble if he was gambling with somebody else's money, and you are in a bet for your life. And you look like a winner, but will Tony Robbins see you at the top? Even Rev. King, in his Mountaintop Address said, "I may not get there with you", and it is not likely the namesake of the Virginia's 8th Congressional District Committee was saying that he thought that you'd be in Heaven instead of him, with his Nobel Prize.
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'Twas am Experiment
'TURN ON YOUR LIGHTS." COURAGE UNDER FIRE
‘Twas an experiment in democracy, begun by privileged men,
That was doomed from the beginning, and they could not wait for it to end.
It rose just like a star that had arisen in the east one Christmas mourn,
And would close the church of Jesus that a new savior might be born.
‘Twas an experiment in democracy, begun by privileged men,
That was doomed from the beginning, and they could not wait for it to end.
Whilst visions of sugarplums were dancing in their childlike head, t
Their own revered men of science turned a blind eye to rapid case identification, and their elderly accumulated amongst the dead.
On the anniversary of a pandemic, he promised them an Independence Day,
Placing the nation on a war footing, but that is all that he would say.
‘Twas an experiment in democracy, begun by privileged men,
That was doomed from the beginning, and they could not wait for it to end.
And as the death toll had approached a million, irreplaceable he claimed was each soul,
As a great American rescue plan faded into past memories, ever mindful of midterm election polls.
‘Twas an experiment in democracy, begun by privileged men,
That was doomed from the beginning, and they could not wait for it to end.
Did black lives ever matter? That was certainly what the politicians did say,
Razing century old statues in a pandemic, and declaring a holiday for abolition, but not even on the right day.
‘Twas an experiment in democracy, begun by privileged men,
That was doomed from the beginning, and they could not wait for it to end.
Did black lives ever matter? Just as vulnerable as the old,
But just like their celebrated black history in public schools, about these facts, apparently, they were never told.
And now today there is a new, more terrible threat emerging in the east,
No more concerns about global pestilence and invisible enemies, with the march of armies and an unhinged beast.
Evolving intelligence replaces evolving science, when refugees flee in millions and awakened patriots return as soldiers prepared to fight tonight;
The prayers that had been powerless and nonessential in pandemic are now transformed and directed to prevent a global war, and global fright.
And the clergy who rise to recite those prayers are now even less credible than before.
For what was true before evolving science remains just as true today: only the dead have seen the end of war.
‘Twas an experiment in democracy, begun by privileged men,
That was doomed from the beginning, and they could not wait for it to end.
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WHO Turned Out. . . (Bearer of Light)
JESUS IS A BIG LOSER IN A VIRGINIA FOR LOVERS
In 2020, Americans voted for the science, and, empirically, Christian brothers and sisters, with 45% professing any faith belief at all in Virginia, compared to two thirds nationwide, your great faith notwithstanding, your resurrected Savior is a big loser.
In Virginia's 8th Congressional District, after capturing 75% of the vote in the election of his lifetime, Don Beyer, Jr., after years of expressing frustration with leaders who had used the Bible to promote bad ideas and policies, accepted the invitation of the atheist club in Congress, the Congressional Free Thought Caucus, because evidently, Christians don't make reason-based decisions, and, call it coincidence, but 20% of places of worship that voluntarily declared themselves nonessential in a pandemic will never reopen, Bible reading, despite record sales at the beginning of the pandemic, was at an all-time low, and, despite reports that as many as 24% of atheists had begun praying at the beginning of the pandemic, finding even Cheryl Chumley at the Washington Times singing Hallelujahs and Hosannas, apparently their prayers were answered, finding those who express no faith affiliation, who had already surpassed the Roman Catholic Church as the largest "faith denomination", bounding by six points, exactly half the loss in the faith over the past decade, after the pandemic.
And, when the prayers of an atheist are more effective than those in the faith, like the novel coronavirus, measured in nanoparticle units, but bigger than your God, Amanda Chase clouds that look like angels not withstanding, even Einstein believed the language of God was in math, and God may be trying to tell you something. Do the math.
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God: Unclassified (Old Man Lazarus: And When He Died. . . )
SCIENCE SAYS: WATERED DOWN FAITH
A delightful, old Negro spiritual sings, "Rich man, Divies; he lived so well; and when he died, he went straight to hell," who is exhorted, in repeated, lively refrain, to dip his finger in the water, let it cool his tongue, 'cause he's tormented in the flame", and, in the Johannine Gospel, we find this wonderful metaphor, "But whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life." But, while we do touch on the Paschal proposition, the Abrahamic biogenesis theory, and the consequences of finding out at the end of a banquet of life, without consequences, that you have to pay for the "free water", and have no money in your faith wallet, we decided to follow the science on where the abundant aqueous substance necessary for life found its origins on earth, more elusive than a zoonotic source.
If we knew from where the water came, we might better be able to reasonably calculate how to locate that intelligent life that 65% of Americans believe--yes, believe--exists in space, without an iota of evidence, and maybe ask Spock, if you had our pandemic, would you take the vaccines?
If we knew from where the water came, our humanitarian minded Satanists could find a way to fulfill their goals at equitable distribution and provide water to those arid regions so disparately disadvantaged by geography, and who haven't listened to Sam Kenison, to move where the food is, an idea popular amongst some fleeing the Ukraine to move somewhere that bomb shelters are not being placed in large theaters, having forgotten even the bombed out steeple in Berlin that made an easy target marker for someone dropping his payload, for those who actually looked, unlike George McGovern, who apparently dropped and forgot, until he looked back and noticed exploding farmhouses with people he prayed for 40 years he had not killed.
Or, for those who want to get in good graces with the aliens, you can lead the delegation to let them know they gave us too much, and to inform them their water is causing us climate change problems, simply say thanks, return the excess and eliminate the problem of melting glaciers, rising tides and the need to erect a large air conditioner at the poles.
Science Test Question: How many planets in the solar system? Eight. Not nine, which is so almost two decades ago, like a lot of our pandemic misunderstandings.
Science Test Question: How many moons? 205 total, and 150 confirmed, with most massing in the outer solar system, the planets that had were formed of the remnants of former generation stars, of which the remaining material has become our comets, like Haley's Comet, and which have ice cold water, but we are in the asteroid ring class, with fewer moons. Think about it.
Science Test Question: How did prophet Moses, the writer attributed to being the author of Genesis, know that water, like the aqueous substance we find in abundance on Earth, with not even the Hellenic science, know that that water was only in one place? Maybe Pharoah needed to tell him the secret to get the slaves to build his pyramid. It's a theory. Look how many Negroes built this country, and I doubt somebody said, "Build, Brother, Build," like a fire and forget Javelin to build some of this crap.
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