Archive for May, 2009

MISSOURIANS!! URGENT TIME SENSITIVE CALL TO ACTION!!

Monday, May 4th, 2009

Missourians! NEED HELP! Call Sen. Charlie Shields (573)751-9476 and DEMAND A VOTE ON MISSOURI HB 361 TO REPEAL REAL ID IN MISSOURI NOW!!! A FEW DAYS LEFT OF SESSION TO DO THIS FINAL STEP OR WE START OVER!!

PLATTE & BUCHANAN COUNTY RESIDENTS ESPECIALLY!!! LET HIS OFFICE KNOW THAT YOU’RE FROM THERE, AS THIS IS HIS DISTRICT!!

Is MDC Conserving?

Monday, May 4th, 2009
Dear friends in liberty,
•  On 4-28-2009 my employment with the Missouri Department of Conservation was terminated.
•  The reason given was “work place violence.”
•  I disagree with this reason.
•  On 4-26-09 I yelled at a volunteer who was taunting and teasing me.  This person was making fun of my name, calling me, “Rene-Ahh.”  I raised my voice.  I did NOT threaten, swear at, or call her names.  I simply told her that I was sick of her taunting me and using tax-payer money to promote big business and lobbying groups.
The full details of my separation are lengthy and warrant further investigation by the Missouri Department of Conservation, the State Treasurer, as well as the tax payers of Missouri.  I will provide you with the highlights that led up to my termination.
•  My supervisor at the Shepherd of the Hills Visitor Center, John Miller, recruited me as a volunteer after I was hired to fill a position of Public Service Clerk.
•  John’s wife, Kathy, is in charge of running special events at the visitor center.
•  At some special events John and Kathy sometimes appear to quarrel.  I have been put in the middle by Kathy requesting that I walk across the property and retrieve John, and John sending me back to Kathy with a message.  I was in no position to say no to the boss or the boss’s wife.  I was working and getting paid by the state at these events.
•  In the early part of February, John placed Kathy and another volunteer, Carrie-Ann in charge of coordinating an Earth Day event for 4-25-09.  Kathy requested that I organize a local food workshop.  I agreed to volunteer for this task, and spent my days off driving to or calling people in my area, asking them to set-up a booth at the event.  I told people this was a celebration of all things local and a demonstration of how small businesses are better for the environment.
•  In the early part of March, Kathy and Carrie-Ann announced that they were inviting Lowe’s and Home Depot to the event.  I told John, Kathy, and Carrie-Ann that the people I had invited would feel insulted by this.  I resigned as a volunteer for the state and turned over all contacts I had made to Kathy and Carrie-Ann.  I was content to continue my job as a public service clerk.  I just did not want to volunteer anymore.
•  In early April the small, local businesses I had contacted in February began calling me.  They wanted to know why I had made no further contact.  I tried to talk to John about this.  John cut me off and told me to talk to Kathy.
•  I did talk to Kathy, who lectured me about my communication skills and frequent misunderstandings.  I was very hurt and angry about this lecture, but could not go to my boss because it was his wife giving the lecture.
•  In late April, I opened a package that arrived at the visitor’s center.  This package was from the Missouri Corn Growers Association, a lobbying group that seeks government funding.  The package was full of brochures promoting the use and more funding for ethanol.  I asked John what this was for and he said they were to be given out at the Earth Day event.
•  On 4-28-09 Carrie-Ann came to the visitor’s center to work on Earth Day projects.  Every time I saw her she made fun of my name.  She knows how to pronounce my name.  I have heard her say it correctly.  I asked her why she was using tax payer time and facilities to promote a lobbying group.  She said she used to work for Monsanto.  I yelled at her.  I yelled that my name is Renea and I disapprove of a former Monsanto employee using tax dollars to promote a practice that seeks government funding to burn food and drive up the price of groceries.  I yelled that I can barely afford to feed my family as it is.  Then I left.
•  I also spent a week working with an employee, Bryon, who came to work late and left early everyday.  Furthermore, when Bryon is at work he spends his day in my boss’s office surfing the internet and sending email.  Bryon makes more than $15 an hour.
•  I had complained to John about this several times.  When I resigned as a volunteer John became more critical of my work.  I feed the turtles too much (I used my own money to buy food for the turtles).  I was late one morning and John told me to “not make a habit of it.”  In the two plus years that I have worked for him I had been late maybe five times.
•  I did Bryon’s job and my job on the days I worked with Bryon.  Other employees voiced the same complaints to John.
I never received any warning or criticism about my work until I resigned as a volunteer.  Everyday I strived to do better than the last.  I did every task assigned to me, as well as compensated for Bryon’s absence.  I spent two years volunteering so I could learn more about the job I was getting paid to do.
•  John is a member of the National Association of Interpreter’s.  John and Kathy used tax payer money to fly around the United States to hand out awards.  I helped John with his credit card statements every month.  The State of Missouri has paid thousands of dollars for plane tickets alone.  John took his wife, Kathy, and the state paid for private hotel rooms and food.  John and Kathy have taken at least three trips in the past year.  Each trip was 5 – 10 days long.  The people of Missouri has footed the bill.
Any ideas on how to stop the Missouri Department of Conservation from abusing our money and neglecting our citizens and wildlife?
Your friend in Liberty,
Renea McMasters

50 Activists in 100 Days. First State, Tennessee. Barry Donegan.

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

Tune in tomorrow on rtrradio.com at 9am central to hear the first of the Liberty Restoration Hour’s 50 activists in 100 days campaign. Tennessee, you get the first state ;)

Barry Donegan is the singer for the experimental band Look What I Did whose most recent album, Minuteman for the Moment, was released on Combat/Koch records and produced by Brian Virtue(Janes Addiction, Deftones). Barry is a libertarian political activist who writes for thefreedomrevolution.com and has been recently elected Director at Large of the Nashville/Davidson County GOP.

Be sure to check out Barry’s band here: http://www.myspace.com/lookwhatidid

I am seeing what I can do to get them to KC. I am glad to see the music community stepping into party politics. That is the only way. Change hearts, change minds.

If you want to be on the Liberty Restoration Hour’s 50 activists in 100 days, please facebook Catherine Bleish.

peace,
Catherine

50 Activists 50 States 100 Days

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

We’re looking for a mover and shaker from each of the 50 states to come on “The Liberty Restoration Hour” 9:00 AM Central/ 10:00 Eastern on Restore The Republic Radio in the next 100 days. Do you think that we can make that happen? It’s time for the world to hear the REAL grassroots exist.

(and the only qualification is that you are DOING something and you think the world should hear). We need to learn from each other

Missouri, Tennessee and Virginia have already had an activist book a show on the Liberty Restoration Hour. Contact Catherine if you want to come on.

ALSO: volunteers are needed to help with the project. Contact Catherine if you are detail oriented or have a multi-state network and can help recruit guests.

Contact catherine@libertyrestorationproject.org for more information or to get involved in this project.
Please link to this on your favorite email lists or social networking sites

Thanks in advance for any help you can be toward making this project happen.

My Speech From LRP’s Grassroots Training 4-26-09

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Below is the speech I wrote for LRP’s grassroots training that took place last Sunday. I got some good reviews, so I thought I’d post it.

Readers, please keep in mind a few things:

-I did not present this verbatim, and never intended to. I ad-libbed parts of my speech, if anything this was to serve as a guide.

-This was to be presented to a liberty-minded group of political activists, so I wrote it that way. At some point, I’d like to revisit and expand upon this subject matter in a more general way, but for that day’s purposes, I stuck to how my subject matter related to advancing the cause of liberty.

-The subject matter at hand is infinitely complicated, and I’m almost ashamed that I tried to express it in speech format, much less in under half an hour. Again, I plan on expanding on what I’ve said here. If anything, my speech was meant to spark interest in what I was talking about.

-I used the word “Love” entirely too often, in my opinion. The word is overused these days, and mostly refers to things other than what I consider “love”. For the purposes of this speech, when I say “love” I’m referring to either the absence of fear, or “stewardship”(as Darryl Drumright described it to me after my speech), or both.

I hope you enjoy reading this speech as much as I enjoyed giving it. Thanks to the Liberty Restoration Project for putting on last weekends wonderful events, and to Catherine especially for housing my poor ass all weekend.

Critiques are not only welcome, but encouraged!

-Josh Carter

“You won’t hear me talking about a lot of issues today. You won’t hear me telling you what bills to support or oppose or how to go door to door. I will not be performing a skit today. What I will be talking about, what I will attempt to describe, is the fire inside me that makes me go, that demands that I take action, that burns through walls of fear and lights the way in the dark places.

Such things are hard to describe, so bear with me. Like I said, I won’t be talking much politics, instead I want to talk about the ways I’ve made some progress in advancing the cause of liberty, and to describe that, first I must describe some of the obstacles to the success of liberty and peace.

So, it seems we’ve got a struggle of mindsets on our hands…. On one extreme we have those that wish to be absolutely free; those that wish to self-govern; those that believe that where true liberty exists, peace and prosperity will follow closely by.

On the other hand, we have those of us who think that central planning and control is the cure for our societal woes; those that see the average human as unfit to make one’s own decisions; those that believe coercion can bring peace, and we’ve got everything in between.

Now, the thing is, from what I see, there are people on both sides that think one way and feel the other. What I mean by that is I’ve seen plenty of people who would identify themselves as liberal or maybe even socialist, but when I look at them I see someone that holds some very libertarian beliefs, but they will deny it to the bitter end. By the same token, I’ve met people that call themselves “libertarian” or “liberty-minded” that strike me as rather fascist.

Now, this is a strange obstacle. It causes plenty of unnecessary misunderstandings, and the consequences are real, but they are hard to spot, and harder to define, and the solutions are difficult to even fathom. I could go on for hours about the ins and outs of it all, but today I want to focus on the idea of someone supporting the nuts and bolts of why liberty and freedom work, but without truly holding them in your heart.

This has several manifestations. Maybe we try to administer our concept of “freedom”, attempting to force it on others in a grand display of hypocrisy. This always gets us nowhere, how could one force someone to be free? One cannot, but the idea that you can comes from the fear of others being free. The same people that want their own personal freedom can sometimes judge others as unworthy of the same liberty.

Others want to be free, but they are afraid of it. Consciously or not, freedom scares them. They live life codependent on the people around them, not truly living an individual life.

The list goes on, but the common theme is fear. This fear, like any fear, is a prison, and an obstacle to happiness.

One subject that I want to get into is apathy and defeatism. To stand up for one’s self is taboo, to speak out is looked at as dangerous, and it’s no surprise. Our leaders don’t seem to like dissent. A friend of mine from Phelps County told me once, “Josh, there may be old rebels, and there may be bold rebels, but there are no old, bold rebels.” And she’s right.

Of course, some are jailed or killed, but I think a good many simply burn themselves out. They are swallowed up by a sense that they won’t get anywhere, that their fight is hopeless—that harassment and ridicule will be the only rewards for their efforts. All their love and ability is shrouded by this fear, this hopelessness.

Eventually, we get to the point where we say to ourselves: what’s so bad about apathy? Who can help it in times like these? We say to ourselves: Who will help me, who will carry this burden for me? Without this help, surely there is little chance that I can make a difference. Without someone to guide me, how could I possibly find my way? I’m just one drop in a sea of humanity, what could I possibly effect?

We find it easier, then, to just blend in with the crowd, and try to make the best out of our caged existence. As long as I get my paycheck and my sitcoms and my McDonald’s, who really cares what else goes on, right? It is neither my fault nor my problem if my government does things that I don’t approve of, because once you give up control of your own way, you have no responsibility for what happens, kinda comforting, right?

We’re surrounded by the notion that there is no need to express real individuality, the processed, quality-controlled, candy-coated stuff, is much easier swallow, thank you very much. Real individuality is only for those who have earned it, like movie stars, rock stars, rappers, sports “heroes”, and all our favorite reality TV characters. For us, we get to imitate their greatness and try to see ourselves in them, and endlessly hope to one day be like them.

Well, if this is your way of thinking, I’ve got some bad news for you. Furthermore, if you are looking for a better way of living, I’ve got some really GOOD news for you. But first the bad news.

The Bad News is that probably none of us will ever win a Nobel Prize or be on MTV Cribs or hit a home run in a major league ballgame. The Bad News is that to identify with and try to be someone else, is to lose your way. There’s a reason they call it your life, you know. It’s because when you let someone else dictate how you “should” be, you turn your back on the idea that you were born perfect, to be perfectly the human being you were made to be.

See, the dirty little secret that those who would control you don’t want you to know is that you are responsible for the world around you whether you outwardly participate in it or not. Many wish to avoid “rocking the boat”. But I assure you, inaction and submission have some quite serious and real impacts on the world around you, and the consequences you hope to avoid by playing along are nothing compared to repercussions of sloth.

I’m sure I don’t have to explain to anyone here the dangers of incremental encroachments on liberty, but they illustrate my point beautifully, and it’s been said before, so here I paraphrase Benjamin Franklin: When we are willing to give up, yes, a little, tiny bit of our personal liberty, so that we can feel secure in our social setting, we will lose both the liberty to be ourselves and the feeling of security in being ourselves, and rightfully so!

I’m not going to stand here today and pretend like this is an easy concept to adopt, however. We just be ourselves, and everything works out, and there’s no pain or discomfort, right? Yeah, not so much. There certainly are some complications to this idea.

The desire to “fit in” cannot be ignored, first off. It is a strong compulsion, and is hammered into our beings from a young age from all angles, but I do not find it to be inherent. If it were, youthful angst would be a very different beast. Certainly, children look to their parent’s for approval, but the healthy child takes it no further than a friendship level, but more on that later.

The fact of the matter is that many of us feel this so-called “need” to belong to something. We require other’s approval for our own happiness, we let ourselves be tugged around by strings others give us and the more we fear the person on the other end, the more tightly we hold the string.

Of course, nobody wants to call it fear. Most call it passion, hate, even love or simply “business”. Justify it however you like, the fact remains that it is fear, plain and simple. Fear of what others think. How silly is that? Being afraid of an opinion. Bah.

But for many of us it’s not just the fear of ridicule or being ostracized, it’s the rush they get from others’ approval. This can be even more dangerous, as this emotion is rooted in the same fear, but it masquerades itself as pride, and passes in most circles as self-esteem. But every time we seek that rush, we ensure a later depression, when reality changes around us and we are still clinging wantonly to our social addictions.

And last but not least of the complications I want to mention is complacency. We say “well, it’s not that bad,” and frequently, it’s not. Most times standing up for what’s right doesn’t seem worth the trouble if you only look at the short term consequences. And in this, complacency can be one of the most dangerous traps to fall into, because it is the foundation that incrementalism is built upon.

Think about it: if there was a severe enough backlash every time the government stepped outside its moral bounds in the most minute and seemingly harmless way, could we have ever gotten to where we are today? But how do we first accomplish that, then subsequently maintain such vigilance? What virtue is it that can keep the spirit of liberty alive in the hearts of We the People? Is there such a thing?

Well, my friends, I am here today to tell you that there is such a light at the end of this tunnel, and I call it awareness. Think about that word for a second: AWARENESS. What does that mean to you? To me, the key to success in life—no matter what your goals are—is absolute awareness of everything going on both inside and around you. Your fears, desires, ambitions, the repulsions and attractions you feel for others, and the effects they have on you and your actions.

And I’m not talking about being informed or educated. Don’t get me wrong, book smarts and keeping up with current events are both important, but at best, they make up 25% of what is needed for functional humanity. The rest is awareness.

To be truly free, one must be aware. Without awareness of our emotions, the actions they lead to, and the consequences of those actions, we are flailing away in the dark, condemning ourselves to a life of hit-and-miss, we will never be acting, always reacting, and always playing catch-up to our marionettes, begging them for a freedom we didn’t know we possessed all along.

And how do we achieve such awareness? It’s actually very simple: we watch, we comprehend, but we do not judge. We detach from our egos, and simply observe. We make no effort to change, we just sit and watch. That’s all you have to do!

Like I said, it is very simple, but no one is saying that this will be easy or painless. The ease with which this change happens is inversely proportionate to the amount of unnecessary attachments we hold on to, and the pain is likewise directly proportionate.

One my favorite illustrations of this is the story of a painter named Joe. One day, Joe was painting on a ladder, when the footing of the ladder slipped out from under him, and he fell over 20 feet to the ground. His friends rushed to his side. “Joe, are you OK? That was quite a fall, did it hurt?”

Joe responded quite accurately, “No, the fall was fine, it was the stop that hurt.”

You see, in this reality, as human beings, we have the freedom of choice. There is no law of physics that will stop us from choosing our own path, right or wrong. We may free fall as long as we like, but the second our fallacies collide with reality—BOOM—pain manifests. A very wise man once said that “human suffering occurs when our illusions collide with reality.”

So the lesson here is when you feel a negative emotion coming over you, stop and identify just what illusion of yours is colliding with reality. Like I said, DON’T JUDGE! Don’t become frustrated or punish yourself, that only creates more illusions and misconceptions. Just watch, identify, listen, discern.

Be like the Rose. One of my favorite authors, Anthony DeMello said it something like this: we all have our flowers, our so-called “good qualities”, and we also all bear thorns. We spend much time vainly trying to enhance our natural beauty, and at the same time we are ashamed of our thorns. But not the rose! The rose makes no attempt to brighten its colors when being admired, nor increase its fragrance when an admirer stoops to enjoy it. At the same time, the rose makes no attempt to drop its thorns when an admirer pricks himself on one—the rose knows they are there for a reason, as well. No, the rose simply is what it was made to be, and it fulfills its role perfectly, without any ambition to be more, nor any fear of being less.

With this awareness of your own perfection, your fears will have no pull on you, and your love will become true love, for you will truly love yourself. The things you do will cease to be reactions, but instead actions. Without fear, the most disastrous circumstances are simply a new beginning. You simply pick up and go on, not wasting time on negative emotions, but not ignoring them, either.

Of course we will feel bad when we do not succeed, or if plans we spent weeks on are ruined, but we will be happy nonetheless, because we are not afraid. We carry on.

What does this have to do with politics? Well, if you like public control over private matters and disdain the idea of personal liberty, not a damn thing. But there is no way to truly further the cause of freedom without being free yourself. There is no way to spread love with fear. The best way to spread liberty is to live it.

The person that can love himself, to me, is what Thomas Paine described as a “Hero in the most sober sense of the word.” Not the hero who will jump on a grenade to save his squad or in front of a bullet to save a loved one. But the hero who just won’t, just can’t stop in the face of injustice and violation of basic human rights.

Whether their style is extroverted or introverted, they don’t quit. They may not be writing their Senator or planning an event all the time, but in everyday life, they are living the good life, spreading peace simply by their presence, not because it makes them feel good, but because its what they felt like doing at the time. They’re simply happy, for no other reason than there is no reason not to be.

There’s always a reason to get upset, but once you realize you get a choice in the matter, you don’t get all that upset anymore. There’s always a heckler, but that doesn’t mean you have to be mad at them. One of the most important things you can do in your life is to get rid of the idea that other people can anger you.

They can certainly try, but it’s up to you whether or not to get mad. When we say, “I am sooo mad at so and so,” we say it all. “I AM MAD”. The verb is yours, you are doing the action. The trick is, you can say “so and so made me mad”, but that’s in the past tense. When you are angry, it’s you doing it.

So just drop it. See the negative emotion, identify it, realize that you don’t have to identify with it, and let it go.

So if you’re not negatively effected by other’s dissent or fear, then you are free to feel your own feelings, and, just as important, think your own thoughts. You won’t rely on other’s opinions for your own. You will still need to listen, to take advice, but the final decision is always yours, and always best fits your own needs.

I’ve never read any Ayn Rand, but plenty of people have told me I need to, and I certainly selfishness as a virtue. Not greed, that is fear. But self-centered is all we can be. The evils of keeping to one’s self can never overcome the misdeeds done in the name of helping someone else. Charity is wonderful, if done voluntarily. But charity ends and suppression begins when there is a perpetual support system in place.

These concepts are taken for granted in the libertarian community in reference to economics, but how many realize they reach into the social realm as well? Just as free markets require individuality and can be smothered by interdependency, so can the personality wither and become atrophic when we rely on others for our own self-esteem.

The sometimes frightening but truly joyous truth is that we are alone. Not to say we are lonely, but instead emotionally and intellectually self-sufficient, with everything we need to be happy already inside us and everything we need to know around us.

One of the most beautiful things I took away from the series “Band of Brothers” was the name of their training camp. It was named after a nearby mountain that stood alone. The name of the mountain was “Currahee”, a Native American word that meant, “We stand alone, together.”

So, we stand alone as individuals, but together in the face of tyranny. I can’t tell you how honored I’ve been to stand among some of the heroes in this movement and in this room today, but I can tell you I’ve seen what just one of us can do.

As individuals, we can be downright frightening to the establishment. Together, we will be the end of it. Thank you, and God bless you, my heroes.”

Press Release: Adam Kokesh Announces Exploratory Committee for New Mexico’s 3rd Congressional District Santa Fe, NM, May 1, 2009

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Please tune in TODAY at www.rtrradio.com to hear Adam make this announcement on Catherine’s show!  Adam will be on for an entire hour.  (podcast will be available.)

PRESS EMBARGO: For Release 7 a.m. MST, May 1, 2009

Press Release

Contact: Tina Richards
Media Relations
Phone : 573.247.8059
Email: Tina@TinaRichards.us

Adam Kokesh Announces Exploratory Committee for New Mexico’s 3rd Congressional District
Santa Fe, NM, May 1, 2009: Adam Kokesh announced that he will form an exploratory committee to consider the race for Congress in New Mexico’s Third Congressional District in response to a national grassroots movement calling themselves “Draft Kokesh”. Adam Kokesh served in the United States Marine Corps and was deployed to Fallujah, Iraq during 2004. He received the Navy Achievement Medal, Combat Action Ribbon, Navy Commendation Medal in addition to others. After returning from Iraq, Kokesh resumed his studies and completed his bachelor’s degree in psychology at Claremont McKenna College. In February 2007, Kokesh became an active participant in Iraq Veterans Against the War. He quickly became a leading voice in the Anti-War Movement and has gained tens of thousands of supporters from the Ron Paul Campaign for Liberty Movement. Upon his graduation, he returned to Santa Fe, New Mexico. (Additional biographical information available at the following site: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Kokesh)
““When I got out of the Marine Corps, I joined the monumental fight to end the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, bring the troops home to defend America, and restore a Constitutional foreign policy. Having won the public to our side, it is time we take the fight to the capitol,” Kokesh stated. “Over the next couple of months, I look forward to meeting supporters all across the district as we make our decision on whether or not to run for Congress,” continued Kokesh. “I have been blessed with standing shoulder to shoulder with citizens across the nation, but now I return back to my roots of New Mexico in the desire to represent the citizens of New Mexico’s 3rd district. Now is the time to decide if running for Congress is the best way to continue my service to my country and to the constituents of New Mexico’s 3rd district.”
Adam Kokesh is drawing support from both the left and the right of the political spectrum. This wide appeal of Kokesh supporters will make a real challenge for the freshman congressman currently serving the 3rd district.. In the upcoming 2010 elections, this will be a congressional race to watch.

Letter sent to Draft Kokesh Supporters:

My fellow patriots,

Thank you for all you have done to help me in my journey over the past years. It has been an honor to stand shoulder to shoulder with you. Slowly but surely, in our struggle for freedom from authoritarianism, we are making progress. As long as we continue to hang together, we will not hang separately!

When I got out of the Marine Corps, I joined the monumental fight to end the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, bring the troops home to defend America, and restore a Constitutional foreign policy. Having won the public to our side, it is time we take the fight to the capitol, to the real enemies of the Constitution. Posturing against war while voting to fund it is unacceptable! Tragically, we still have a government that behaves like it owns us, rather than serves us.

Since I was first politically active, people have been encouraging me to run for Congress, including a recent effort to “draft” me to run (draftkokesh.com). We need rallying points to keep our movement invigorated and growing, and if running for Congress from my home town of Santa Fe can serve as one, I will gladly step up. In that effort, I am excited to announce the formation of the Kokesh for Congress Exploratory Committee.

While I am asking for your financial support in this effort, I want to make it clear that I am willing to make the personal sacrifices necessary to raise the standard of our national leadership. If elected, I will not accept the Congressional salary of approximately $170,000, but only the national average income. It is not enough in these difficult economic times, for Congress to tell the American people what is best for us economically, while they vote themselves another pay raise and burden our children with impossible debt. Enough is enough!

There is a temporary website up now at kokeshforcongress.com. Please sign up and donate there as we prepare for the launch of a complete site on June 1st.

It is time once again to draw the line between patriots and loyalists. I am a patriot because I am committed to the ideals of liberty and equality this country is destined to achieve, loyal to no false authority. I know that much more than political resistance is required to achieve a paradigm shift, but we can do no wrong standing up for what we know to be morally right. Regardless of my decision, I remain eternally committed to the cause of liberty.

Love, faith, respect,

Adam Kokesh