Running out of Time

4 months ago
556

Why It’s Ridiculous to Believe Voting in a Corporate Government Gives You Power
People proudly walk into voting booths thinking they’re exercising power — but power over what, exactly? You’re not voting in a system of the people, you’re voting in a corporate structure over the people. The so-called "government" of Canada is registered as a corporation. And what does a corporation do? It serves its shareholders — not the common man.
If this were truly a government by the people, then where are your shareholder dividends? Where’s your profit share? Why do you get taxed like an employee, fined like a subordinate, and regulated like livestock? Because you're not seen as a sovereign or a diplomat — you're treated like a subject, a corporate asset, or worse, collateral.
You’re not even given the dignity of being a co-owner in this enterprise. You’re given the illusion of choice between two wings of the same bird. Voting doesn't give you control — it gives them consent. You’re signing off on the very system that sees you as a franchisee, not the franchisor.
So let’s be honest: if Canada was truly your government, you’d be treated as the source of power, not the product to be managed. Voting in a corporate democracy is like a cow voting for its favorite butcher — different faces, same result. Sovereignty isn’t handed out by ballots. It’s lived and claimed by those who remember who they are.

The United States of America vs. Canada – What’s the Real Difference?

The United States of America was originally founded as a union of sovereign states, each with its own government, coming together under a constitutional framework. The people were recognized as the source of authority — meaning the government was meant to serve
the people, not rule over them. While this vision has been largely undermined by corporate overlays (like THE UNITED STATES, a federal corporation established in 1871), the original idea still carries the essence of self-governance and individual sovereignty
— at least on paper.

Canada, on the other hand, was never founded by the people. It is and always has been a corporate extension of the British Crown, registered as a corporation and still under monarchical influence through the Governor General. The Canadian "government" is essentially
a franchise of the Crown — not a country in the sovereign sense, but a managed corporate district. There is no original constitutional union of sovereign people in Canada like there was in the U.S.

In short:

The U.S. (originally): Government created by the people, for the people — individual sovereignty recognized.

Canada: Corporate colony of the Crown — people are subjects, not sovereigns.

So while both are now heavily corporatized, the U.S. began with the idea of self-rule, while Canada never left the plantation. One was born as a nation of people, the other as a business model.

"The Law That Breathes"

There’s a law that’s written not in books,

But in the stars, the streams, the way life looks.

It needs no judge, no ink, no seal —

Just breath and being, raw and real.

Natural law — the truth that is,

Before the state, before the “biz.”

It speaks in balance, cause and effect,

It needs no titles, no man’s elect.

Then came codes, with suits and pens,

Crafted by those who play pretend.

Statutes, acts, decrees in rows,

Claiming power nobody bestows.

They bind the straw, not living flesh,

They trap the name in a paper mesh.

They speak of rights but deal in debt,

A maze of rules, a legal net.

But nature’s law is clean and free —

Do no harm, let others be.

No license needed just to live,

No tax on what you're born to give.

Civil law is man’s invention,

A corporate game of false intention.

It governs fiction, not the soul,

It needs your consent to make you whole.

So read the room, not just the rule,

The living heart is nature’s school.

And if the system says you’re theirs,

Ask what law your spirit bears.

Loading 2 comments...