Posted on 06/12/2015 8:12:47 AM PDT by all the best
The next presidential farce (er, race) is already starting to heat up, and it promises to be great entertainment. I admit it, I absolutely love good theater. The presidential campaigns are reality TV at its best a year-and-a-half of nonstop lies, gaffes, chest-pounding, and some of the best slapstick comedy America has to offer.
Granted, it also can become boring, because weve heard all the lines so many times before. For example, its 100 percent guaranteed that every troglodyte who seeks the dictators job will, with a straight face, promise to stimulate the economy, create jobs, level the playing field, and initiate both immigration reform and tax reform.
We also know that there will be nary a mention of shrimp on treadmills nor the all-important question of why lesbians tend to be obese. No sir, none of the new crop of power seekers will so much as hint at wasting your money.
Of course, neither will they be specific when they promise to cut rat-hole programs from the budget. As always, the entire eighteen-month production will be all about hyperbole and vagueness. Substance, as always, will be missing in action.
But the most certain thing of all is that not one of the candidates will pledge to end slavery, because an end to slavery, by definition, would mean an end to government, which in turn would mean an end to the criminal classs power over others and its unfettered access to your money.
What makes slavery possible is legislation, which legalizes organized violence. It therefore follows that the conditions of people can improve only through the abolition of laws that promote organized violence.
Which reminds me of what Lyoff Tolstoy, the great Russian novelist, had to say about the abolition of government. H
(Excerpt) Read more at robertringer.com ...
Great article. I’ve been a big fan of this guy since reading his book “Winning Through Intimidation” back in the early ‘70’s. (The title doesn’t do the book justice)
There will always be government. At best it is small, local, and limited in power, which is what our founding fathers designed. But now we have the fedzilla that controls virtually everything.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.