Monthly Archives: March 2021

DeSeuss’d | The Gate’s to the Zoo are, Officially, Open!

I do not like green eggs or ham,
Beijing-Joe or Scamster Kam
I do not like them in a tree,
I do not like them close to me.

I do not like Ol’ Joe or Kam,
Toxic Speaker, Lowly Nan
I would not could not, too much pain.
Not in a swamp, not on the plain.
Not in a sewer, not in a drain.
I do not like them don’t you see,
Send them home, leave me be.

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Suspended Convergence

The collective becomes inconsequential, anemic if you will, without a Devine Spark of the Ideal igniting each Individual in their own time and then only on a one-by-one-at-a-time basis. Think of it this way:

While we (all) may eat at the same table we process the fuel singularly and apply it individually.

It is for this reason that the popular notion of “It takes a village” is so deeply flawed; the only accomplishment collectivism successfully records resides solely in its destructive capacity which is precisely why “We are forever burdened by the unknown good a broken spirit silences.”

Posted in In Practice et seq | Leave a comment

“Even when we fail it must never be forgotten that it is in the effort applied that we discover the purifying comfort of resolve.”

Curtis C. Greco, Founder

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The Dangers of Familiar Narratives

“There are two ways to make a revolution, One can fire at the opponent with machine guns until he recognizes the superiority of those who have the machine guns. That is the simplest way. One can also transform a nation through a revolution of the spirit, not destroying the opponent, but winning him over. We National Socialists have gone the second way and will continue on it. Our first task in this ministry will be to win the whole people for the new state. We want to replace liberal thinking with a sense of community that includes the whole people.”

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Blinded By the Politics of Correctness

At some point, so goes my hope, the American People will find a way back to their common ideal however in order to do so we will need to face a most regrettable truth. The moment an Individual is elected to Public Office, with rare exception, is also the last unobstructed moment of their allegiance to those whose votes place them in office. How do we know this? It is quite simple because all you need to do is to consider how routinely politicians cast their votes along party line and then look at how their votes compare with their respective states positions (polling) on the very same issues; sixty-three-point nine percent of the time (since 1990) a member of the House and/or Senate will cast a vote inconsistent with that of their electorate.

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