Sunday, February 3, 2013

How many officials think you're a terrorist for embracing obvious truth?


The answer may surprise you. Here's a tally of just a few cases:

http://fff.org/explore-freedom/article/terrorism-and-lexical-warfare/
“Terrorism” and Lexical Warfare

We were talking about this Saturday at the PN meeting in Greer, SC. Bureaucrats are all convinced that normal healthy human beings are the biggest threat to every living thing today. Federal paper shufflers have squinted into their sociological microscopes and formed battle plans against us, the people, under titles COINTELPRO and Dismantlement. That's right, they must have misplaced their copy of the Constitution, because their response to vigoroous, rightful exercise of the First through Eighth Amendments is to set out to destroy it.

I love this part of the article in particular: "The extreme fringe believes that the U.S. government is either the enemy or has been subverted by the enemy and must be actively defended against.” See? You are a dangerous criminal if you believe in defending yourself and your family from clearly, berserkly out-of-control officials, from IRS and BATF goons down to local cops. Never mind those who wear badges or other official forms of ID -- Dr. Clarkson and this blogger have been smeared online by the laughably-misnamed Southern Poverty Law Center for such "crimes" as picketing the tyrannical Anderson Count Council. 

"Lexical warfare".... the word "terrorism" in quotation marks, above.... our article linked this evening is rare for its probing insights into the real nature of things versus the spin put on it by those who show their own massive corruption and destructiveness by accusing concerned citizens of it. The piece's writer, Wendy McElroy, understands that there is a massive, vitally important lexical fight to the death going on in our society. Yes, even punctuation can have rich significance and lend highly concise power to writing, speaking, advocacy. The enemy uses such tactics for evil; what are we waiting for?

DIALECTICS, that's the word. Look it up. Add it to your vocabulary. Dialecticize to others every day -- it doesn't require knowledge of any dialects! 

/\/.\/\/.  torpenhow@charter.net

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