Residents of Murrieta preparing for Feds in riot gear
Posted by Non_mooching_artist 10 years, 10 months ago to Government
So this is what the Feds are shoving down the throats of the people of Murrieta, CA. Illegal immigrants who have no business being in our country AT ALL. So they are left to prepare to be hit with rubber bullets, pepper spray, pushed with vehicles carrying these illegal, disease ridden illegals. Why is this happening? The utter lunacy of this is astounding. I really want to see these residents prevail over the illegal newly minted dem voters.
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Because the State has no use for even somewhat informed citizenry. The State has already determined YOU to be of no-use for them: it is much easier for the State to get away with (fill in the blank) by having an easily malleable, common-core indoctrinated, foreign population with which we (the State) can easily CONTROL via unemployment checks, housing, food & medical insurance (uh, not necessarily "care", but who's going to notice? ((evil grin)) )
With people like you & the legal citizens or Murrieta, getting away with stuff is much harder and we find you to be annoying & unnecessary.
Since we can't exactly replicate 1930's Germany at this time (foot stomp), we are sending in our version of Brown Shirts to bully, uh, clear a way for the new control subjects, uh, we mean, permanent democrat voters to get settled in & do nothing but wait for the checks to start arriving along with the voter registration cards, just in time for the 2016 election.
Oh yes, CA and TX will be full-on "Blue" states! We've socially engineered it that way. We won't discuss legality. Just like what Emperor Palpatine said in Stars Wars Episode I: "I will make it legal!".
SIGH.
Yes, it is total lunacy.
https://www.google.com/search?client=ope...
where did the residents of Murrieta get the riot gear?
Cause I really liked The Lion's Paw...
I think the quote and reference may have been in one of Glenn Becks books but I cant recall which one.
The hero of this story is one of the last of the private teaching doctors--somebody well-enough-off to afford his own sailboat, say a 34-foot sloop. Something one man could handle himself, but large enough to go out into the ocean without getting swamped.
He has seen all the bad things happen to medicine. He knew when Thomas Hendrix, the famous neurosurgeon, abruptly vanished from The Johns Hopkins. (News like that would travel fast in the academic medical community.)
Early--very early--in Ragnar's career, Ragnar would start taking the first prizes. Now this doctor would read the accounts--for in those days the news organs would report everything; Ragnar Danneskjöld was the kind of Big Story that translates easily into newsstand bucks. So our doctor, who takes his sailing seriously, starts thinking that maybe--just maybe--he can anticipate Ragnar's next strike.
But now he's in a quandary. He's torn, the way Hank Rearden would be torn years later. Was he ever "a dirty rat"? Did he want to start being "a dirty rat" now? Especially for a government that took, and took and took, and maybe caused the deaths of a few patients from their mishandling of the new government hospitals?
Then one year the IRS makes the decision for him. He gets one of those nastygrams the IRS loves to send. You see, his number is up for a Taxpayer Compliance Measurement Program audit. Where they look at e-v-e-r-y s-i-n-g-l-e t-h-i-n-g on your return. Only it never occurred to John Galt to sniff him out to see whether he was "ready," if you know what I mean. But he does not want to subject himself to a TCMP audit. Because he knows he has skated on a few deductions now and again. He would long since have wound up on the Poor Farm if he hadn't. (Didn't Floyd Ferris say when the government hasn't enough criminals to ride hard, it invents them?)
So he sets out on his boat, to the next projected position of Ragnar Danneskjöld. Only he has no idea what he wants to do. If he could catch up with Danneskjöld and rat him out to the Navy, maybe they could make his IRS troubles go away. But aside from whether he can trust the government, what did Ragnar Danneskjöld ever do to him? Has he the right to rat someone out just because the government wants him?
He's still wondering what he wants to do when Ragnar spots him first, then sends out a launch with a boarding party to intercept him, board him, and bring him in to the flagship of the rag-tag fleet he has at the time. (He wouldn't hijack an aircraft carrier until later.) Now Ragnar and the good doctor are in a quandary, and they both know it. Ragnar does the only thing he can do: presses his newfound prisoner into service in Sick Bay.
Not long after that, they hijack the aircraft carrier that will be Ragnar's flagship from then on. That's when Ragnar takes the one wound of his career. The doctor, of course, patches him up--the Hippocratic Oath, as he interprets it, requires that.
In the process, Ragnar shares his back story, and also the story of John Galt--right up to the Twentieth Century affair, that is. Eventually the doctor comes to sympathize fully with Ragnar. He will serve him for the rest of the great strike, as his chief medical officer.
The problem is: they probably *would* dare. This is not going as Rand thought the endgame of the looters' state would go. They're doubling down and preparing to arrest everyone.
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