Get Ready for Regulators to Peer Into Your Portfolio . – L.M.
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Items from The Economatrix:
NY Times: Criminal Charges Are Finally in the Wings for Big Banks
The Refi Boom Is Dead; Applications Drop To Lowest Since Lehman
Get Ready for Regulators to Peer Into Your Portfolio . – L.M.
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Items from The Economatrix:
NY Times: Criminal Charges Are Finally in the Wings for Big Banks
The Refi Boom Is Dead; Applications Drop To Lowest Since Lehman
An excellent debrief from Mike Vanderboegh that includes a video from Oath Keepers. bundy ranch debrief – SDS
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NRA video: Is gun confiscation next in Connecticut?. – H.L.
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Perfectly Split Firewood. – R.F.
I was under the impression that perfectly split firewood was wood that easily fit in my wood stove, yet left very little “extra” room. However, for those who are just beginning, this is a good “instructable”.
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And in the continuing bizarre case of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: Malaysia Flight 370 audio was tampered with! – B.R.
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Peter Schiff: Largest Exodus from Workforce Since Stats Were Kept – H.L.
“Honor those who have served our country, especially those who made the ultimate sacrifice. Educate future generations about the price paid for the freedom we enjoy in America the beautiful.” Freeman V. Horner, United States Army, Medal of Honor
Today we present another entry for Round 52 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The $11,000+ worth of prizes for this round include:
First Prize:
Second Prize:
Third Prize:
Round 52 ends on May 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that there is a 1,500-word minimum, and that articles on practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.
RegardingIdeas Concerning a Post Collapse World:
If one understands the Declaration of Independence and the Republican form of government, reforming the Union of States (and their people) is a viable goal. Cooperation in the defense of private property rights from predation is one justification for the necessary evil of government.
However, I would not suggest using the Constitution as a model, since it was flawed from inception. It would require extensive modification to accurately define the relationship of the sovereign people with the servant government and its servants, the citizenry, with regard to rights and liberties (natural and personal). It would also need to explicitly bar enforcing contracts for usury, prohibit limited liability, and cease limiting lawful money to species coin. Furthermore, it would have to clearly delineate the difference between the right to absolutely own private property versus qualified ownership of estate (a privilege, subject to taxation and regulation).
Sadly, after 80 years of socialist indoctrination, it is highly unlikely that Americans would be able to resist the destructive forces of collectivism and usury (the abomination). Any attempt at reforming government would be crippled by embracing even just one flaw of the previous system. For once the rights of the individual are at the mercy of a group or a majority, no one’s rights are secure. So, why must the Constitution be extensively amended?
The current Constitution has too many flaws that open the door to predators and parasites.
What changes would be effective?
Consider the surrender of the right to life and liberty inherent in mandatory militia duty (and Selective Service).
The Supreme Court has held, in Butler v. Perry, 240 U.S. 328 (1916), that the Thirteenth Amendment does not prohibit “enforcement of those duties which individuals owe to the state, such as services in the army, militia, on the jury, etc.”
In Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U.S. 366 (1918), the Supreme Court ruled that the military draft was not “involuntary servitude”.
If compulsory military service is NOT INVOLUNTARY, then it must be voluntary servitude. So are all civic duties derived from VOLUNTARY surrender of rights via asserting citizenship. Citizens are voluntary subjects of government, bound to obedience.
In America, no one can be “born a citizen,” without being born a slave.
This is not news. In 1836 John Whipple, an American lawyer, showed the impossibility of sustaining long term metallic usury in this fashion:
” If 5 English pennies… had been invested … at 5 per cent compound interest from the beginning of the Christian era until the present time, it would amount in gold of standard fineness to 32,366,648,157 spheres of gold each eight thousand miles in diameter, or as large as the earth.”
This illustrates the inherent problems of a metallic based money system plagued by usury. Such a system cannot operate without causing economic booms and busts, as the usurers cyclically destroy the economy, collect their debtors’ collateral, and repeat the process.
One of the most insidious problems is money madness. Money madness is the indoctrinated belief system that a subset of a set (precious metal coins) can act as a representation of value for a whole set.
As anyone with mathematical skills beyond 4th grade knows, you cannot equate a subset to a set.
Let me demonstrate further.
Imagine all goods and services divided into ten equal blocks: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, and J.
G (gold) is enacted as a medium of exchange equivalent in value to the remaining 9 blocks.
1/9 G trades for A, 1/9 G trades for B, and so on.
The problem arises when one wishes to trade 1/9 G for all G.
That Does Not Compute, and neither does any money token based system where a subset of a set is deemed to be money.
Remember, the function of money is to facilitate trade, by passing value to a future trade. When all trades are over, and the money remains, what “value” can it hold for a future trade?
What if one has a mountain of money and nothing to buy in the marketplace? (Gilligan’s Island scenario)
Beyond barter, the function of any medium of exchange or money token is to pass value to a future trade, for equitable trade to occur. However, to believe that the token itself must have value or exist after the trade is a recipe for disaster. Making a subset of a set into one’s money is guaranteed to fail. No subset can maintain proportionality with a dynamically changing marketplace. In the end, the money drought collapses the economic system, and often the nation, as well.
Implementing these changes would eliminate many problems that corrupt the current government and plague Americans. Of course, the most important thing to remember is that only America has a republican form of government. That must be preserved at all costs.
In a post-collapse America, the American people would be far better off if they would avoid subjugation, usury, and socialism. Restoring their status as free inhabitants under the republican form of government would result in returning their lost sovereignty, freedom, independence, and full power to exercise natural and personal liberty over their private property, absolutely owned, and constitutionally protected.
REPUBLICAN FORM– that form of government wherein the people directly exercise sovereignty, and are served– not ruled– by government (and its subject citizens). The sovereign people retain possession of all their inalienable rights, powers, and liberties, and no democratic majority can vote them away. The servant government only exercises power by special delegation. Though not the most perfect form, it is the best form, securing the maximum liberty and freedom to its sovereign people.
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. –That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed…” – Declaration of Independence, 1776.
NATURAL LIBERTY– The power of acting as one thinks fit, without any restraint or control, unless by the law of nature. The right which nature gives to all mankind of disposing of their persons and property after the manner in which they judge most consistent with their happiness, on condition of their acting within the limits of the law of nature, and so as not to interfere in the equal exercise of the same rights by other men. 1 Blackstone’s Commentaries, 123, – Black’s Law Dictionary, Sixth edition, p. 919.
“Natural Liberty is the right which nature gives to all mankind, of disposing of their persons and property after the manner they judge most consonant to their happiness, on condition of their acting within the limits of the law of nature, and that they do not in any way abuse it to the prejudice of other men.” – Bouvier’s Law Dictionary
PERSONAL LIBERTY– The right or power of locomotion; of changing situation, or moving one’s person to whatsoever place one’s own inclination may direct, without imprisonment or restraint, unless by due course of law. 1 Bl. Comm. 125. Black’s Law Dictionary, Sixth Ed., p. 919.
“Personal liberty, or the Right to enjoyment of life and liberty, is one of the fundamental or natural Rights, which has been protected by its inclusion as a guarantee in the various constitutions, which is not derived from, or dependent on, the U.S. Constitution, which may not be submitted to a vote and may not depend on the outcome of an election. It is one of the most sacred and valuable Rights, as sacred as the Right to private property…and is regarded as inalienable.” 16 C.J.S., Constitutional Law, Sect.202, p.987.
“Personal liberty largely consists of the Right of locomotion to go where and when one pleases only so far restrained as the Rights of others may make it necessary for the welfare of all other citizens. The Right of the Citizen to travel upon the public highways and to transport his property thereon, by horsedrawn carriage, wagon, or automobile, is not a mere privilege which may be permitted or prohibited at will, but the common Right which he has under his Right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Under this Constitutional guarantee one may, therefore, under normal conditions, travel at his inclination along the public highways or in public places, and while conducting himself in an orderly and decent manner, neither interfering with nor disturbing another’s Rights, he will be protected, not only in his person, but in his safe conduct.” II Am.Jur. (1st) Constitutional Law, Sect.329, p.1135.
TRAVEL– Within the meaning of a constitutional right to travel, means migration with intent to settle and abide. Black’s Law Dictionary, Sixth Ed., p.1500
Dear Hugh,
Three cheers for the article “Ideas Concerning a Post Collapse World”! “M.S.” is obviously a very bright and literate person, and while the blog offering is short, it is packed with a lot to think about. I believe the author is likely “spot on” with most of its outlook for the future with one question mark for me as to whether a foreign army (or two) would invade the CONUS or not. I see that as more likely than the author does, but only time will tell. I would though like to take the opportunity to address an item briefly mentioned in the offering that I believe has become somewhat of an “Urban Legend” amongst some survivalist types. That is the notion that absent modern medical care we are all just one paper cut away from infection, gangrene, and dying a horrible death.
For the past ten years we have lived and operated a “small scale farmstead” as the author speaks of. Our farmstead is 20 acres and has gardens, orchards, and myriad livestock. That lifestyle is hard work, and we are constantly building, fixing, mending, and dealing with what we call “barnyard drama”. Cuts, scrapes, scratches, wounds, and bruises are a regular occurrence in farmstead life. The number of times I have bled in the last ten years on the farm are not countable, and I have never once become infected much less needed antibiotics for a wound including two dog bites. Frequently, I don’t even wash or bandage smaller cuts and scrapes. (I do encourage puncture wounds to bleed though!) Do we have antibiotics on hand for more serious problems in a post collapse world? Sure. Will we be more diligent with wound management in a post collapse world? Sure. Yet for most wounds, Povidone Iodine, Vetracyn, triple antibiotic ointment, and sterile dressings are going to be all you need to treat them. As I said, I have seen this notion come up in numerous survival offerings where we are all one infected scrape away from death, which to me is a bit over the top fatalism. Regards – B.J.
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Against the Crowd: Buy Treasurys
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Items from The Economatrix:
Michigan Bans Animals On Small Farms. – B.B.
I’m still trying to wrap my head around this one. I can see no valid reason to implement this other than attempting to control every aspect of a person’s life. I certainly understand regulating a large animal in an area incapable of supporting it but chickens, bees, and goats?
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HSBC Demands to Know How Customers Spend Their Money. – H.L.
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Man Arrested In FBI Sting Found Dead In Federal Custody. – B.R.
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Relaxation Bear Sparks Rabies Scare After Biting 14. NO Common Sense. A baby, any baby animal, can get scared enough to BITE. – H.L.
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“Therefore if thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath ought against thee; Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift.” Matthew 5:23-24 (KJV)
May 3, 1952 was the birthday of Pastor Chuck Baldwin, who has done yeoman service in promoting the American Redoubt movement.
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I couldn’t sleep last night and picked up my favorite book in the Patriot series, “Survivors”. I don’t know what it is about them, but I have always enjoyed stories about sailing and long, hard journeys on horseback.
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Today we present another entry for Round 52 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The $11,000+ worth of prizes for this round include:
First Prize:
Second Prize:
Third Prize:
Round 52 ends on May 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that there is a 1,500-word minimum, and that articles on practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.
I would like to start off by telling you about something that happened to me at a fairly young age. What I experienced made me look carefully at how truly exposed and vulnerable I was. That experience also led me to make changes in my life that were truly transformative. What follows was very emotional for me, and it shook me to my core when these events transpired.
In 1990, I was at deer camp with some college buddies in Upper Michigan. We were staying at a family cabin, situated deep in the Pere Marquette Forest system. The evening we arrived (just prior to the gun deer opener on November 15th), we passed the time making preparations for the morning hunt. Firearms were inspected and given a final once-over and clothing was laid out so that we could get an early start. We all had pre-assigned blinds and were in them well before first light. We all hunted hard that morning, but nobody had any luck.
We all arrived back at the cabin around 11am, and after some discussion, we decided that since the deer seemed to not be moving, we would attempt a “deer drive” in the afternoon. For those not familiar with that term, it basically works like this: You position one or two “shooters” a few hundred yards away and try to utilize local land features or “flankers” to “funnel” the deer toward your shooters, as the other people in your hunting party “push” them. In this instance, we had a road on one side of us and a river on the other. The distance between the two land features was about 200 yards. Three of us were positioned about 50 yards apart, and we began to push the woods toward the bottleneck where the river and road met. So, I drove all of us out to the location in my truck at about 3:00pm.
To say that I felt this drive was “idiot proof” would be an understatement. I would have had to either go swimming or walk across a 30-foot, gravel road to not meet up with our shooters located just a few hundred yards away. That presumption would prove to be my undoing. Due to my lackadaisical attitude, I made a few very bad decisions. Because a deer drive usually is a bit of a cardiovascular workout and can make you perspire and get hot, I was only wearing an insulated flannel shirt and an orange hunting vest. This was mistake #1.
My friend, Greg, took up a position just 50 yards from the road. My other buddy, Jim, was in the middle of us, and I was 50 yards from the river. I can vividly remember the sound of the river, with the water rippling over the rocks to my right. I can also remember having a visual of Jim on my left as we walked through the woods to our objective. Everything seemed to be setting up perfectly for a successful hunt. What followed proved to be more of an epic failure on my part, due to my poor preparations for this hunt.
After walking a couple of hundred yards, I lost sight of Jim in some thick brush. It didn’t really alarm me, as I had a river on my right, and I was using that as a guide by staying about 50 yards from it. Topographical maps at the cabin indicated that by doing so, I should not stray very far from them. However, as in my case, assuming a five year old, topographical map is still accurate may not be a good idea. This was mistake #2. As it turned out, the river had changed course a couple of years after that map was printed, due to some logging activity and beaver dams. I had walked right through the old river bed and walked into the great beyond without even knowing it! I thought the river was just over the next hill. After about the third hill and still not hearing or seeing the river anymore, I had to admit that I was lost. This admission was good choice #1.
At this juncture, I would like to tell you a little about myself at that point in time. I was 21 years old and had been hunting since I was 14. I had a good teacher, and considered myself an experienced woodsman. I was also an accomplished Boy Scout in my youth, so I had a fair amount of experience in the woods. My background as a Boy Scout taught me to “always be prepared”, so I did have with me (thankfully), a well-stocked survival backpack, which was good choice #2. This is probably the only thing that allowed me to survive, to live to tell you this story. Its contents proved invaluable, and I could not imagine how bad the outcome would have been if I hadn’t had it with me. Later on, my friends would tell me that the only reason they felt I could survive out there was because of that pack.
Just about the time I admitted I was lost, about 6:00pm, darkness had begun to fall. As bad luck would have it, so did nearly a fresh foot of snow. My tracks behind me were filling in fast. Just about the time I was thinking about turning back to retrace my steps, I stepped in between two large sticks and twisted my ankle badly. With my mobility severely hampered, my options were dwindling fast. I picked up one of the large sticks and used it as a makeshift walking stick. It was at this point that I realized I was probably going to be out there some time. I decided I needed to set some boundaries– good choice #3. I decided to first try to signal the others using my firearm. I loaded three shells in the gun and sent my first volley into the air. I could barely hear some yelling in the distance, but the hills and all the falling snow muffled and misdirected the sound. I had only 12 shells with me, which was mistake #3. I sent four volleys over the next hour, but help never arrived.
I then tied some flagging ribbon to a tree limb and decided that I would walk 100 yards in each direction. If I didn’t come upon a trail, I would pick out the best spot to set up camp. After walking in all directions, the only thing I encountered was an old hunting blind made up of dead fallen wood. With everything covered in snow now, this source of dry wood was my only hope for starting a fire. I decided to make camp right next to it. I opened my pack and withdrew one of my three options for starting a fire– a cigarette lighter, a magnesium fire starter, and waterproof matches. There was also a small film canister that had some paraffin-soaked cotton balls. In no time at all, I had built my firewood “teepee” and had a roaring fire. I then turned my attention to shelter.
With the snow coming down at an alarming rate, I needed to find a way to stay out of the wind, wet, and cold. I took out the five foil survival blankets and a length of paracord from my pack. I tied the rope off between two trees about four feet off the ground, right in front of my fire. I then put two blankets on the ground, and used two more to make a “lean-to”. I attached it to the cord with clothespins and used snow to hold it at the bottom on the backside. The last one blanket I used to wrap around myself. The camp looked like something right out of the Boy Scout Manual. I then tied another length of cord to two trees so it hung about a foot over the fire. It was this line that my socks and boots were hung on to dry, because my footwear was thoroughly soaked by that point.
After fire and shelter were handled, the focus turned to hydration. In my pack was an old tin army cup. I spent the next little while melting snow and rehydrating myself. I had some iodine tablets and neutralizer, but with this being freshly fallen snow I did not need them. There was also some jerky and a couple of chocolate bars in the pack, and that was truly a blessing since I had burned up a lot of calories on the deer drive and camp setup. By about 10:00pm, I had settled in for what would be a long evening, particularly from a psychological standpoint. In my opinion, anybody who reads this story and says: “I would’ve been fine” is just lying to themselves. Trust me. You have NO IDEA what races through your mind in such a situation!
You can be the most macho man in the world, but it will not matter when you become as helplessly and hopelessly lost as I was. In this forest, it can be five miles until you even cross an old logging road. It is a desolate and massive chunk of forest. There is not much population, and your bones might be the only thing they find in the spring after the scavengers have eaten your carcass. It is at this time that you are alone with your thoughts, and all you can do is rely on your skills and life experiences. You truly sink to the level of your training. I can remember having my “Come to Jesus” meeting and praying that the Good Lord would see me through this. I had truly made my peace with God and was just hoping to return home to my loving family and girlfriend alive. There was a lot of deal making going on out there for sure.
I kept telling myself, “I’ll pay the $20,000 for them to send the chopper out to look for me. I don’t care!” However, as luck would have it, the harsh weather conditions were not conducive for such an effort. So there I was, a 6’4” 270 lb man, in top physical condition, built like a brick you-know-what (I was a Division I football lineman) and I was literally on the verge of tears because of what I was up against. Tell me you’d be any different, and I’ll call it BS every time. I was there. I know. It will break the biggest of us. Now, by this time, my friends were in full-blown panic mode after I hadn’t made it to our pre-designated rendezvous point. They had used my spare keys to access my truck. (Luckily, I told them where a spare set was stowed– good choice #4.) They then enlisted the help of some off-duty cops from downstate who were camped a few miles down the road. These guys then called the sheriff.
The sheriff then called the Department of Natural Resources, who came out to assess the situation. By this time it was midnight. They determined that the risk was too great to start searching at that point and that they would begin looking at first light. At about 5:00am, the last individual who was to join us on this trip arrived. He promptly came out to the place where we began our deer drive, once my other friends notified him of the situation. This individual was actually a professional tracker, and he was the one who actually found me just an hour later. I’ll never forget the relief that I felt when I saw his lantern bobbing toward my makeshift camp. It had been over 15 hours since I last saw a human being. I was overjoyed! He actually threatened to leave me there, as he said I looked more comfortable than he was! To this day, I do not know how he could have possibly tracked me with all that snow that fell, although he did confess that he logically concluded that I had gone through the old river bed when he saw that it did not match the topo maps at the cabin.
The purpose of this little anecdote is to point out how, in a survival situation, we will respond versus how we think we’ll respond and to discuss the shortcomings in my preparedness when venturing out into the vastness of a massive state forest. There are several things that happened in the woods that day that literally broke me down and made me realize how much I had to learn. It is not just equipment that can get you through a tough time. Your mental preparedness and training are the most important tools in a survival situation. Let’s look at what I did wrong:
Now, let’s look at what I did right:
After arriving back home (I understandably cut my trip short due to the bad experience), I took a good hard look at myself. I determined that, while a few more doo-dads would have been helpful, what I really needed to do was to get more training and work on my mental toughness/preparedness. After all, it was my training that actually saved my bacon out there because it kept me in check MENTALLY. I am, however, not too proud to admit that I cried like a baby out there at one point. It is something that is hard to imagine, unless you lived it. I vowed to myself while out in those woods to NEVER allow myself to feel so helpless again. I have since gotten married (to my girlfriend at that time) and become a father (of three awesome boys). As any father would, I also wanted to be more prepared to protect them if ever there came a time where things got bad and basic survival skills were needed to insure their well-being.
I set about achieving those goals once I got home, and I have been a “prepper” ever since. I started by adding to my survival pack, which we all affectionately now refer to as our “bug-out bag”. I now have a GPS to go with my compasses and maps. That technology was in its infancy back then but has now come a long way. I certainly wouldn’t trust a battery-operated device as my only way of getting the job done, but they are still handy to have. I also added some nice two-way radios with weather channel and extra batteries as well as some marine signal flares, a “D cell” rescue strobe, a little .22 handgun, and an AR-7 survival rifle with 100 rounds. I also keep fresh socks, a spare sweatshirt/jacket, and a little “rocket stove” to heat water easier.
I then really got into training my mind and body to deal with adverse situations. I became very proficient with firearms to help boost my confidence and empower myself. I also became a firearms instructor and took several classes that dealt with hand-to-hand fighting, edged weapons training, force-on-force, and low-light encounters in all three of the above situations. This gave me quite a bit of confidence. I then proceeded to take some primitive survival skills classes and a few orienteering classes to brush up on my astronomy and learn how to get out of the woods the good ‘ole fashioned way. These were VERY helpful. You would be surprised at all the neat little tricks these people know from studying the way they did things before all of our modern conveniences came along!
I hope you learn one thing from reading about my harrowing experience– you will never really know if you are truly prepared until you are tested (FOR REAL). Do yourself a favor; go out there and IMPLEMENT your skills, preps, and gear. Don’t just study things in “theory”. It is easy to sit on the couch and TALK about things or type on a keyboard what your response would be in a particular situation. It is quite another to actually LIVE THAT SITUATION. You are probably not as tough as you think you are, and you may just ball up when the chips are down, if you have not practiced what you preach!
God Bless
Mr. Latimer: Your “Letter: the Circular File” brought back my encounter with government busy-bodies when I worked in manufacturing. I would get this multi-page survey form every quarter that went through sales, inventory, cost of goods sold …..yada…yada. It was enormously disruptive to my work load. It had all the penalty information on the envelope, and I was afraid not to fill it out due to any consequences to my employer. If you didn’t get it to them on time, the threats would start via mail and then go on to phone calls.
The last straw was when I got a phone call from them because “they did not like my numbers”. I told them that the numbers were the numbers. In the end, I agreed to look at them again, and I just never did. That nightmare finally ended, and perhaps they found another entity with figures they liked better. – J.G.
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HJL,
Regarding the census. The same thing happened to me. A woman contacted me regarding some kind of census, leaving cards on my gate and a phone call claiming she wouldn’t stop coming back until she got the information. She finally caught me leaving and sort of blocked my exit. I told her I only had a minute since I was going to work. I refused to answer quite a few questions. It felt like an invasion of privacy. She had an official card and a phone number of her supervisor, but I never called to check her out. I gave short, evasive answers, and she finally left. Here lately, sometimes when I am awake in the night, my hotspot that connects me to the Internet makes the noise it makes when it connects, and I am not on my computer or have not turned it on myself. I have since been taking the battery out when I am not using it. Makes you wonder. Like Sigmund Freud said, “The paranoid is never entirely mistaken.” Keep up the good work that you do. Thanks, – FAH
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Also, B.W. sent in this letter for SurvivalBlog Readers:
To Whom It May Concern,
Pursuant to Article I, Section 2, Clause 3 of the Constitution, the only information you are empowered to request is the total number of occupants at this address. My “name, sex, age, date of birth, race, ethnicity, telephone number, relationship, and housing tenure” have absolutely nothing to do with apportioning direct taxes or determining the number of representatives in the House of Representatives. Therefore, neither Congress nor the Census Bureau have the constitutional authority to make that information request a component of the enumeration outlined in Article I, Section 2, Clause 3. In addition, I cannot be subject to a fine for basing my conduct on the Constitution, because that document trumps laws passed by Congress.
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson, 154 U.S. 447, 479 (May 26, 1894)
“Neither branch of the legislative department [House of Representatives or Senate], still less any merely administrative body [such as the Census Bureau], established by congress, possesses, or can be invested with, a general power of making inquiry into the private affairs of the citizen. Kilbourn v. Thompson, 103 U.S. 168, 190. We said in Boyd v. U.S., 116 U. S. 616, 630, 6 Sup. Ct. 524,?and it cannot be too often repeated,?that the principles that embody the essence of constitutional liberty and security forbid all invasions on the part of government and it’s employees of the sanctity of a man’s home and the privacies of his life. As said by Mr. Justice Field in Re Pacific Ry. Commission, 32 Fed. 241, 250, ‘of all the rights of the citizen, few are of greater importance or more essential to his peace and happiness than the right of personal security, and that involves, not merely protection of his person from assault, but exemption of his private affairs, books, and papers from inspection and scrutiny of others. Without the enjoyment of this right, all others would lose half their value.’”
Note: This United States Supreme Court case has never been overturned.
Respectfully,
A Citizen of the United States of America
U.S. Lost $11.2 Billion in GM Bailout, TARP Report Says – G.G.
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What the Fed Is Really Doing to Your Money
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Items from The Economatrix:
Here’s an older article I had missed. It’s worth a read: Trayvon Martin and America’s Gun Laws: The New Yorker. It is definitely slanted, but wiley in doing so. Battleground America. – P.M.
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Another possible link the the Cliven Bundy saga: Reid Bunkerville LLC Exposed: Is This Why Bundy Ranch Was Targeted?
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Because it is so important to have the Government regulating all aspects of your life, the Average U.S. household spends more on federal regulations than for health care, food or transportation. – G.G.
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Because if we knew, we might apply some pressure on them. Sworn to Silence: Law Enforcement Can’t Talk About This Tool They Use Every Day. – JBG
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Emergency Florida concealed-carry bill killed by last minute amendments. – B.B.
“And it came to pass on the third day in the morning, that there were thunders and lightnings, and a thick cloud upon the mount, and the voice of the trumpet exceeding loud; so that all the people that was in the camp trembled.” Exodus 19:16 (KJV)