Domain: spr.org
Stories and comments across the archive that link to spr.org.
Comments · 73
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Prisoner rape is funny, ha ha
Ha ha, yes, it is quite amusing to be sent to prison for a nonviolent offense (typing on a keyboard, for instance) and subsequently violently raped repeatedly by multiple large black men while the guards stand by and laugh and the prison wardens make no effort to keep it from happening. We will be sure to laugh heartily when you, your brother, father, son, uncle and/or cousins are sentenced to 30 days for some minor offense which they may or may not have committed. We will chuckle about the fact that they have a very good chance of coming home broken and scarred physically and psychologically by their horrifying experiences. Ha ha ha.
Rape is immoral. Rape is inhuman. Rape is cruel and unusual punishment, and we have laws against that. I always find it entertaining how our entire prison establishment feels these laws are unimportant, and our culture thinks that jokes about young, weak, and sometimes innocent people getting forcibly sodomized is a fabulous thing to joke about. Wait, no, I don't find it entertaining. I find it makes me sick to my stomach.
It's also heartening to see every prison rape joke getting a +5, Funny. Thank you, moderators. Great way to get karma. Keep up the good work.
Help Stop Prisoner Rape by not treating it like a joke. -
-1 Cruel
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Re:Compulsory jail jokeWhat about nonviolent peace protesters or drug offenders? It sure as hell isn't the badass muthas who get to be the bitch. Read the obit above, if you think you've got the stomach. I know people who knew the guy, and he was no fucking punch line.
If you've got a younger brother or cousin or son who ever happens to spend time locked up, I'm sure you'll laugh your ass off when he gets brutalized.
Really, would you chuckle at the thought of, say, Susan Smith being gang raped?
Sorry for the disjointedness... longest post ever from my Zaurus...
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Re:Great!
I'd much rather have free cable and sattelite at home than free cable and sattelite in a pound me in the ass penitentiary .
;)
Samir! This America, nonone goes to prison! -
Re:Enough With The Prison Rape Jokes Already
OK, maybe they don't get sent to hard prisons before conviction; but people have been convicted and sent to death row and later found innocent. I'm sure there are plenty of innocent people doing time for lesser offenses like armed robbery... or rape. Now, wouldn't that be ironic?
For more information, see this site. Yes, there's probably some bias there; but it's certainly not all made up.
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Your Insider Perspective...
No, not about hacking.
What are your thoughts on the work being done by SPR? Is it as big of a problem as they say? And, if so, what can the slashdot community do to raise awareness of it?
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Your Insider Perspective...
No, not about hacking.
What are your thoughts on the work being done by SPR? Is it as big of a problem as they say it is? And if so, what should be done to raise general awareness?
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Re:Lex Talionis is a morally bankrupt code
If a rapist is in jail, they are not raping anybody.
Are you sure about that?
Stop Prisoner Rape -
Where are you doing your time?
Are they sending you to a minimum security facility, or do you get to socialize with the boys in FPMITAP? 33 months of watching your back seems pretty harsh to me. Of course, I'd hazard a guess 90% of the slashdotters here have seen a DOD.NFO sometime, so do a run around the work yard for me sometime.
Heh. And just to belittle prison rape, do your homework. -
Re:Shower sceneI don't mean to spoil everyone's fun, but am I the only one who's disturbed by the number of (highly-moderated) prison rape jokes? Yes, humor can be found in any situation, but it seems a bit callous to me. This isn't some George Carlin-esque fictional rape scenario; we're talking about a real person who may be in for the most traumatic experience of his life. Yes, he's an idiot, and probably a criminal, but that doesn't mean he deserves to be raped.
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Re:Thoreau vs. this moronI really wish I had more time to reply to this comment... I'll do my best.
I think many people with overly liberal tendencies tend to jump on issues like this. In my experience, most Americans are pretty fed up with the justice system as it is.
I don't know what most Americans think. But I like to think I get a feel for it by getting feedback like I get from people like yourself. It's my belief that a good deal of person have zero sympathy for anyone behind bars. I'm not sure what causes that mentality. "Overly liberal tendencies"? Why does every issue have to be liberal/conservative? Can't we address issues at face-value only? I would like that very much.They are fed up not because of mass corruption, or because many innocents are wrong imprisioned, but rather that too many people who are guilty are just not getting punished at all.
I can't speak on the truth or falsity of that. But I do know that many people are wrongly imprisoned, and many methods used to arrest/incarcerate people are unjust. One needs to look no further than the nearby community college to take a class in criminal justice to find this information out. This facet of the system is what frustrates me and many other people. I can't speak for everyone, of course. You're right. Many guilty people are never punished. But that's because they're never caught! Not because the trial fails.Prison is punishment and it just seems like we, as Americans, are not actually punishing anyone with prison. It's one thing to get up in arms about a system that is doing too much, but who's really going to take up the call to make prisons harsher.
I would disagree with this statement in its entirety. I don't believe the only purpose of prison is punishment. If that were true, it would have no social benefit. Think about that before responding. What is the social benefit of creating a system of punishment and punishment only? I would also say that the prisoners are being punished. Are you saying your removal of freedom is not punishment? Have you seen any documentaries or read any books about the lives of inmates? You suggest what they do is some kind of cake walk?!? I'm incredulous at that idea!It's not exactly a cause that's likely to make many friends. The idea of male prisoners being raped by other prisons is in so many ways an appealing idea _only_ because there is a sense of justice. The thought that many violent criminals out there are being humilated in the most de-masculating of manners gives one a certain sense of justice.
A person with a shred of compassion (and I mean that.. merely just a shred is all it takes) would say that there is nothing at all appealing about that idea. And please, do what I asked of you before. Look into the subject before making comments about it that aren't true. The people that are being raped are not the violent criminals. The violent criminals are the ones doing the raping!!! The non-violent criminals (the drug offenders, the petty criminals and thiefs, etc.) are the victims here. PLEASE READ ABOUT IT! If you don't want to do extensive investigation, just go here or here. Or maybe read this article. This is just what I came up with on a quick and dirty search. Know the reality before making your judgements.Of course, that is not reality. Any educated person can realize that. Rape is a horrific crime and noone deserves to be raped.
So which stance are you taking? Do you not care, or do you care? I can't tell.I don't necessarily regret my comment though, because it is drawn from the same desire to avoid the real problem as your call to help the inmates. Our justice system just doesn't work. It needs to be fixed.
I agree with that sentiment (the justice system needs to be fixed), but I think you and I have different ideas of how to do that. But don't make the mistake of thinking that I'm avoiding or skirting any issues here! There is something that can be done about prison rape. Go read about it. As you said (in a matter of words), let's work on the things we can fix now, and focus on the harder stuff too. But we definitely need to fix the things we can fix, and asap!!I really won't shed many tears though over prisoners being raped. Instead, I'll say them for the much larger problems that we as a society face. Most inmates are just lifeless bodies, consumed by a life of drug abuse and poverty.
So you're flip-flopping again, which is why I don't understand some of your comments. Didn't you say that "Any educated person can realize that. Rape is a horrific crime and noone deserves to be raped"? Are you educated? Can you realize it or not? Why did you even say it then? Yes, put the majority of your energy into solving the larger problems (as you see them). But work on the smaller ones that we can actually fix too. It will go a long way towards solving the larger ones. As for "Most inmates are just lifeless bodies, consumed by a life of drug abuse and poverty", let me just say... What the hell are you smoking? Where do you come up with that? Can you show me backing evidence for that massively sweeping, broad generalization? Are you suggesting that most inmates have no capacity of self-awareness that they are incarcerated? That they are a shell of skin, bones and organs, and have no emotions nor capacity for conscious thought, like a gerbil? You need to think about that a little more. And consider this. 60% of federal inmates are incarcerated on drug-related charges. These aren't nearly all drug "abusers". These are casual users and sellers. Before you make more sweeping generalizations about these people, please... Educate yourself some more.It disturbs me more that these individuals live such empty lives than it does that they may be physically assulted.
I can't even comment on this. Read my previous comment.It's like the whole abortion issue, everyone is either pro-choice or pro-life, but noone is pro-helping the people who may be thinking of getting abortions overcome the problems that would lead them to that point in life.
Why are we talking about abortion now? What do you know about abortion besides rhetoric? Do you know that many times women get abortions that don't have any "problems" that would lead them to getting one? Would you say, a woman who is in college, getting a degree to pursue a career, and who accidentally gets pregnant, and decides that there is no way she can raise a child at this stage in her life, and still pursue her goals, has a "problem that needs to be fixed"? What is her problem, exactly? Consider it an exercise in creativity to come up with other scenarios with non-problem-related circumstances surrounding the decision to have an abortion. Or just go and read women's stories of how, when and why they chose to do so. But don't comment on this again. We don't need to discuss abortion now. We're discussing prison rape.So, if you really want to discuss things seriously, let's address the real issues and not dance around liberal nonsense.
You can't honestly expect to provoke positive dialogue from me after saying that my issues are "liberal nonsense", can you? Come on now, really... And believe me. I am discussing things with the utmost seriousness. Instead of throwing around trivial phrases like "liberal nonsense", how about pointing out to me which parts of what I'm discussing is nonsense? Just what have I said that is not to be taken seriously? -
Re:Thoreau vs. this moronI really wish I had more time to reply to this comment... I'll do my best.
I think many people with overly liberal tendencies tend to jump on issues like this. In my experience, most Americans are pretty fed up with the justice system as it is.
I don't know what most Americans think. But I like to think I get a feel for it by getting feedback like I get from people like yourself. It's my belief that a good deal of person have zero sympathy for anyone behind bars. I'm not sure what causes that mentality. "Overly liberal tendencies"? Why does every issue have to be liberal/conservative? Can't we address issues at face-value only? I would like that very much.They are fed up not because of mass corruption, or because many innocents are wrong imprisioned, but rather that too many people who are guilty are just not getting punished at all.
I can't speak on the truth or falsity of that. But I do know that many people are wrongly imprisoned, and many methods used to arrest/incarcerate people are unjust. One needs to look no further than the nearby community college to take a class in criminal justice to find this information out. This facet of the system is what frustrates me and many other people. I can't speak for everyone, of course. You're right. Many guilty people are never punished. But that's because they're never caught! Not because the trial fails.Prison is punishment and it just seems like we, as Americans, are not actually punishing anyone with prison. It's one thing to get up in arms about a system that is doing too much, but who's really going to take up the call to make prisons harsher.
I would disagree with this statement in its entirety. I don't believe the only purpose of prison is punishment. If that were true, it would have no social benefit. Think about that before responding. What is the social benefit of creating a system of punishment and punishment only? I would also say that the prisoners are being punished. Are you saying your removal of freedom is not punishment? Have you seen any documentaries or read any books about the lives of inmates? You suggest what they do is some kind of cake walk?!? I'm incredulous at that idea!It's not exactly a cause that's likely to make many friends. The idea of male prisoners being raped by other prisons is in so many ways an appealing idea _only_ because there is a sense of justice. The thought that many violent criminals out there are being humilated in the most de-masculating of manners gives one a certain sense of justice.
A person with a shred of compassion (and I mean that.. merely just a shred is all it takes) would say that there is nothing at all appealing about that idea. And please, do what I asked of you before. Look into the subject before making comments about it that aren't true. The people that are being raped are not the violent criminals. The violent criminals are the ones doing the raping!!! The non-violent criminals (the drug offenders, the petty criminals and thiefs, etc.) are the victims here. PLEASE READ ABOUT IT! If you don't want to do extensive investigation, just go here or here. Or maybe read this article. This is just what I came up with on a quick and dirty search. Know the reality before making your judgements.Of course, that is not reality. Any educated person can realize that. Rape is a horrific crime and noone deserves to be raped.
So which stance are you taking? Do you not care, or do you care? I can't tell.I don't necessarily regret my comment though, because it is drawn from the same desire to avoid the real problem as your call to help the inmates. Our justice system just doesn't work. It needs to be fixed.
I agree with that sentiment (the justice system needs to be fixed), but I think you and I have different ideas of how to do that. But don't make the mistake of thinking that I'm avoiding or skirting any issues here! There is something that can be done about prison rape. Go read about it. As you said (in a matter of words), let's work on the things we can fix now, and focus on the harder stuff too. But we definitely need to fix the things we can fix, and asap!!I really won't shed many tears though over prisoners being raped. Instead, I'll say them for the much larger problems that we as a society face. Most inmates are just lifeless bodies, consumed by a life of drug abuse and poverty.
So you're flip-flopping again, which is why I don't understand some of your comments. Didn't you say that "Any educated person can realize that. Rape is a horrific crime and noone deserves to be raped"? Are you educated? Can you realize it or not? Why did you even say it then? Yes, put the majority of your energy into solving the larger problems (as you see them). But work on the smaller ones that we can actually fix too. It will go a long way towards solving the larger ones. As for "Most inmates are just lifeless bodies, consumed by a life of drug abuse and poverty", let me just say... What the hell are you smoking? Where do you come up with that? Can you show me backing evidence for that massively sweeping, broad generalization? Are you suggesting that most inmates have no capacity of self-awareness that they are incarcerated? That they are a shell of skin, bones and organs, and have no emotions nor capacity for conscious thought, like a gerbil? You need to think about that a little more. And consider this. 60% of federal inmates are incarcerated on drug-related charges. These aren't nearly all drug "abusers". These are casual users and sellers. Before you make more sweeping generalizations about these people, please... Educate yourself some more.It disturbs me more that these individuals live such empty lives than it does that they may be physically assulted.
I can't even comment on this. Read my previous comment.It's like the whole abortion issue, everyone is either pro-choice or pro-life, but noone is pro-helping the people who may be thinking of getting abortions overcome the problems that would lead them to that point in life.
Why are we talking about abortion now? What do you know about abortion besides rhetoric? Do you know that many times women get abortions that don't have any "problems" that would lead them to getting one? Would you say, a woman who is in college, getting a degree to pursue a career, and who accidentally gets pregnant, and decides that there is no way she can raise a child at this stage in her life, and still pursue her goals, has a "problem that needs to be fixed"? What is her problem, exactly? Consider it an exercise in creativity to come up with other scenarios with non-problem-related circumstances surrounding the decision to have an abortion. Or just go and read women's stories of how, when and why they chose to do so. But don't comment on this again. We don't need to discuss abortion now. We're discussing prison rape.So, if you really want to discuss things seriously, let's address the real issues and not dance around liberal nonsense.
You can't honestly expect to provoke positive dialogue from me after saying that my issues are "liberal nonsense", can you? Come on now, really... And believe me. I am discussing things with the utmost seriousness. Instead of throwing around trivial phrases like "liberal nonsense", how about pointing out to me which parts of what I'm discussing is nonsense? Just what have I said that is not to be taken seriously? -
Re:Thoreau vs. this moron
No matter though. I'm sure his bunkmates in Leavenworth will show him the meaning of passive resistance.
You should learn more about prison rape before spewing such vile sentiments. You completely insensitive, disguting excuse for a human. And believe me, I don't generally say such nasty things. But you earned it. -
The courts aren't going to help you
The problem here is that it's perfectly legal for large corporations to strong-arm the little guy with threatening letters, and subsequently fail to follow through with the threat.
I talked with a lawyer friend of mine once about this issue, and he remarked on the irony here: you can be arrested and jailed for threatening violence against somebody, but the courts will do nothing to you if you repeatedly threaten to abuse the legal system against somebody. What's a more potent weapon - a fist, or the state (and, by extension, the prison rape it supports)? You decide.
I guess the solution here is the tired old mantra that everyone on Slashdot says but never does: Write your congressmen. Lobby for your rights. Nobody else will stand up for you.
~wally -
Re:send the results to me
After all I live in the U.S and personally wouldn't mind 3 meals and a cott plus an extension to my summer vacation.
You forgot about the all the sex you can take part...
Seriously, those that are sitting around claiming that U.S. prisons are pieces of cake have obviously never been in one. My father, a minister, visits prisons all the times and it's not a nice place to be. Maybe if you're rich and in a fed prison for defrauding someone of 100 million bucks you're OK, but if you commit the more serious crime of holding up a 7-eleven for 20 bucks using the ole finger in the coat pocket trick, you get to do some hard time in a state pen...
p.s. slashdot can really suck at times. I try to be a nice @home customer and use their proxy servers to keep their inter-connect traffic down but whenever I try to post it says I can't cause my IP address has posted too many moded down posts recently. Well D'OH, that IP has a few million people behind it. Learn about how a proxy works guys. It just forces me to uncheck my proxy connection but then I can't post because I get an invalid key msg (probably cause my IP address changes). So I open up a new browser section, hit reply, copy/paste my reply over, and the bitch tells me I have to wait 20 seconds after hitting reply before I submit. Arrrgh...
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Re:Good to be arrested?
This from a country that still routinely murders its own citizens. So where does execution fall on the "barbarism" scale?
Slightly behind prison rape I would guess...
"The horrors experienced by many young inmates, particularly those who are convicted of nonviolent offenses, border on the unimaginable. Prison rape not only threatens the lives of those who fall prey to their aggressors, but it is potentially devastating to the human spirit. Shame, depression, and a shattering loss of self-esteem accompany the perpetual terror the victim thereafter must endure."
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun, Farmer v. Brennan
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Re:Wake UP!
actually it's very rare that someone gets fucked in the ass in prison. Well except for the gay dudes who like it and do it by choice. Most prisoners are very homophobic and would never do it. Most likely Dmitri is playing cards, lifting weights, or watching cable tv right now...
Really? Do you have experience in this area? I do. My company does a lot of work with prisons, and I guarantee that this does actually happen a great deal. I also have a family member who has a pretty checkered past and has done quite a few years in prison, and though he won't speak about it directly, he made it pretty clear that that stuff still happens. So, I'd like to see your evidence to support your case.
I have evidence. Check here and here if you want a lot of references. Or, try this on Google.
Then tell me that this is a thing of the past.
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Sadomasochistic Money and "Society"American society is essentially capitalist. Capital is another one of those social fictions which has effaced its own socially-constructed nature to the point that most people accept it as "real," in and of itself, and beyond their ability to control. Like murder, though, money has no reality beyond that which we collectively grant it.
This is false. Money buys protection against punishment for nonpayment of taxes and taxes are not "collectively" collected -- they are collected by sadistic police-power:
Federal Reserve + IRS = The Protection Racket Coup of 1913
by Jim Bowery
Jim Bowery, January 13, 2001 -- The author grants the right to copy, without modification.INTRODUCTION
Federal Reserve money buys protection from punishment. You are punished if you don't pay taxes. This has become the Federal Reserve's primary monetary authority. The moral hazard of basing monetary authority on punishment has now been realized in the systemic and out-of-control gang rapes of prisoners in the US. All other unlawful acts by US governments are now overshadowed by the murderous, sexually sadistic character of governmental authority that has developed in US penal systems. Federal Reserve money is now protection racket money, or, if you prefer "punishment protection money". Calling it "fiat money", "debt money" or even "legal tender" obscures its true character. The transition to this form of money began in 1913, when the 16th Amendment dramatically expanded the potential need for legal tender in the form of taxes while, in that same year, the Federal Reserve Act started the process of removing from legal tender any backing value other than the protection it affords against punishment. That the redefinition of "legal tender" was unconstitutional(1) has become only a minor dimension of the massive decay in legitimacy and moral leadership during the 20th century triggered by these acts of 1913. These acts were largely in the interest of continental European banking concerns doing business under the name of J. P. Morgan. As vital interests of the United States were sacrificed on their behalf, those foreign interests are reasonably called "enemies of the United States", the acts of U.S. citizens on their behalf "treasons", and all such citizens "traitors".
THE MORAL HAZARD OF GOVERNMENT AND MONEY
Legitimate governments provide assurance that we are secure in our lives and properties by protecting our legal rights in exchange for taxes and other duties. The most legitimate governments will even back up their commitment by providing some sort of compensation if our legal rights are breached, much the same as insurance companies do when they pay out on an insurance policy. But there is a fine line between protection rackets and insurance companies. Indeed, gangsters frequently call their protection rackets "insurance" and the payments they extort from their victims "insurance premiums". That fine line between protector and protection racket is crossed when "moral hazard" tempts the "protector" beyond the limits of his character.
In conventional insurance terminology, "moral hazard" is the temptation to artificially increase hazards. A classic case of moral hazard is an otherwise unprofitable business buying lots of fire insurance and then hiring an arsonist to burn down the place of business.
Insurers, too, can profit by increasing hazards if it is the uninsured who suffer the exposure to risk. A classic example of an insurer's moral hazard is the temptation to parasitize a productive business by threatening it with destruction unless the owners pay regular "insurance premiums".
And that brings us to the morality of governance.
The most profound moral hazard for governance is the penal system combined with taxation.
The framers of the US Constitution included prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishment under the 8th Amendment. They also made it difficult to parasitize productive States. This they did by requiring that taxation on a State's citizenry be proportional to the State's population under Article. 1. Section. 2. Clause 3. and Article. 1. Section. 9. Clause 4. Making taxes proportional to State population helps control the moral hazard of governance at the Federal level by making it difficult for the Federal government to transfer wealth to States that are politically active from States that are economically productive. Also, States are more capable of defending themselves from the Federal government than are individuals. Unfortunately, the requirement for taxation proportional to State population ("with apportionment" and "with regard to the census") was removed by the 16th Amendment, thereby promoting political porkbarrel at the Federal level and punishing productivity. In the same year the Federal Reserve Act gave license to gradually reduce legal tender's reliance on gold and silver as backing value, leaving the protection legal tender afforded against government punishment it's primary backing value. (Shortly thereafter, the 17th Amendment also removed from the States the power to elect Senators, further eroding the States' ability to protect their citizens from the federal government.)
These acts of treason have produced profound moral hazard at the Federal level, and set the stage for the relentless and radical decay of moral leadership during the 20th century.
WARRIOR INSURANCE
The proper role of government is protection against force and fraud. Therefore, to keep it honest, government's source of revenue should be insurance premiums against loss due to force and fraud. Said premiums could be payable in notes issued by the insurer/protector, but the insurer/protector should merely cancel the insurance policy and cease protecting those who do not pay. An insurer/protector should not generate the market for their own notes by threatening to punish those who do not pay -- as that is a protection racket, even if the insurer/protector honorably indemnifies those who do pay in the event of a covered loss. Such insurance premiums and corresponding insurance coverage would, necessarily, stipulate other conditions under which the insurance/protection continued to be provided at the agreed upon rates. This amounts to taxation on asset value, adjusted for various conditions that may affect risk -- with the added guarantee of indemnification in the event that asset value is lost due to force or fraud.
Such a system actually eliminates governance, as we know it. I call it "warrior insurance".
Under warrior insurance, reinsurance networks take the place of existing international treaties and alliances. Intelligent warrior reinsurance networks will check loss of asset value resulting from gang, or "protection racket" formation well in advance of any need for warfare. Warrior insurance premiums eliminate taxation. Competition between warrior insurance companies creates checks and balances supporting liberty. Formation of mass armies on ideological/political grounds is suppressed by exposing the underlying quid-pro-quo of reciprocal altruism that actually exists between people and their sovereignties -- over-extended kin identification, the basis of political and religious warfare as well as one-world ideology, is rendered less viable. Warrior insurance companies are much like the original sovereignties that defended newly formed civilizations -- they are, in fact, quite traditional. Empires subsumed the original sovereignties because trade, communication and literacy were so centralized. In the information age, this is decreasingly the case. What is increasingly necessary is a strong, distributed militia living lives bonded to their communities and lands from generation to generation, who value honor above their own lives. Unlike systems of taxation, warrior insurers will compensate those who are bonded for conscription in time of war, or deputized in times of civil emergency. Those so bonded would naturally demand a vote, or representation, in declarations of war or civil emergency.Under warrior insurance, the citizens' militias traditionally enjoy tax relief, since they are in effect, protecting themselves. In Scotland, rather than forming a Yeoman class from the "kindly tenants", "feu fees" were imposed to pay for foreign war debts during the Protestant Reformation, thereby dispossessing ancient families of their lands to make way for revenue generating land use such as wool-producing sheep. Kindly tenants were kindred or clan members who had traditionally been given relief from economic rent/taxation in exchange for sworn allegiance to their clans' militias under the command of their chiefs. But the clan chiefs were corrupted by the royalty which had become more interested foreign adventures than they were in allowing the clans to support and protect themselves and their families on their own lands. The royal war debts began consuming the livelihoods of the folk. Many were forced to flee for their lives. This was the primary origin of the Scotch-Irish pioneers who attempted to create a society in "the New World", free from such betrayals of clan loyalty. The earliest pioneers suffered a 25% mortality rate in the first year of migration in their desperation to create that "New World". This was not merely the moral equivalent of war -- it was death on a massive scale in a struggle with nature herself (war with natives was not the primary cause of these deaths), on the one hand, and tyranny on the other. As usual mostly men went to the frontier to risk everything for their new lands, but many women and children also suffered similar fates. As a consequence, the founders of the United States, folk memory still fresh, thought the avoidance of foreign wars to be common sense. This gave rise to the Monroe Doctrine and the avoidance of foreign wars.
Compare and contrast such a system to the internationally adventurous protection racket posing as a government we have today.
THE MURDEROUS, SEXUALLY SADISTIC BASIS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE
The US Federal Government, by basing its monetary authority on punishment protection with the treasons of 1913, has degenerated into an irredeemably murderous and sexually sadistic regime operating without lawful authority.
When Pennsylvania Quakers established the original penitentiaries, they were places where a man was to spend time alone in a room with a bible to contemplate the error of his ways. Now they are the source of most acts of rape in our society as well as a primary dissemination point of the deadly Human Immunodeficiency Virus that causes AIDS(2).
This is so much the case that a standard book on preparing for prison life "You Are Going to Prison" by Jim Hogshire, answers the question "Will I get butt-fucked?" quite simply and in the affirmative. Government itself routinely uses the EXPLICIT threat of gang rape in 'crime prevention' programs aimed at youth, such as that depicted in the public television broadcast of "Scared Straight"(3) where youth offenders are warned about their fate as sex slaves if they go to prison. Awareness is so widespread that Hollywood movies routinely make light of the pervasive nature of prisoner rape. Until recently, federal officials have avoided, like the AIDS epidemic they help spread, any indication that they are conscious of the fact that their authority relies, in large measure, upon cruel and unusual punishment. But even that taboo may be crumbling(4).
Any reasonable man must ask and demand an answer to this question:
"How has the Quaker conception of the penitentiary been so perverted that the threat of HIV-infected gang rape of prisoners is now a primary component of the government's authority?"
The answer is simple yet profound. It lies in the distinction between the two bases of money:
Reward VS Punishment protection
Everyone is familiar with the concept of reward money -- money issued with a promise from the issuer to reward the bearer usually with some commodity, such as gold or silver, upon presentation to the issuer.
The concept of money backed by punishment protection sounds unfamiliar to all but a very few scattered individuals. It is unfamiliar even to Nobel Prize winning economists, let alone the vast pool of PhDs from whence they are chosen.
Yet punishment protection money is as simple and obvious as it is pervasive:
Money issued with a promise from the issuer to protect the bearer from punishment upon presentation to the issuer.Forget the Clothes --The Emperor is a Murdering Rapist Run Amok
Many critics of President Clinton accused him of being a murdering rapist. But President Clinton was simply the by-product of an epic perversion that has overtaken the lawful government of the United States. It would be understatement to call this perversion a criminal gang. Criminal gangs only occasionally commit rape and murder against their own community. They don't pretend to be a lawful authorities in public. They don't issue their own currency as protection racket money and then demand it as "legal tender". They may rationalize their criminal conduct, but they don't convince themselves that what they are doing is lawful. They admit to themselves that they are gangsters. At least they are that honest. But, perhaps this is simply because gangsters are afraid to compete with the most massive criminal organization in history, whose roots extend back at least to 1913 when the Income Tax and Federal Reserve were created.
The Federal Reserve was created in the same year as the Income Tax for one simple reason:
The US Federal Government was shifting from Reward to Punishment Protection as the basis for its monetary authority.
Federal Reserve Notes are promises to reduce the bearer's risk of punishment for tax code violation, upon presentation to its collection agency, the IRS, in the form of Income Tax.
Note here that it is impossible to reduce the risk of punishment for violation of the income tax code to a level commensurate to the threat of prisoner gang-rape(5). This has become the foundation of the IRS/Fed's all-pervasive aura of fear(6) upon which their punishment protection money is based. The Income tax code is so complex that not even the IRS with all its private contractors from law and accounting firms, can reliably and reproducibly interpret it. This makes it possible only to _reduce_ the risk of punishment -- no matter how much wealth you turn over to the IRS.
In this manner the federal government creates demand for the Federal Reserve's otherwise worthless paper(7). Under the evil monetary basis of punishment protection, the government's monetary authority is limited only by the degree to which it can create pervasive terror of its prison system in the hearts of nonviolent potential tax code "offenders" -- and that means you.
With punishment protection as the basis of its monetary authority, and therefore its ability to buy votes, it was only a matter of time before the US Federal Government, as though an animal trained by operant conditioning, would find ways of increasing the severity and cruelty of its punishments.
But like rat in a maze, the US Federal Government had a problem to solve:
How to impose cruel and unusual punishment without arousing the wrath of a people whose ancestors had risked a 1 in 4 chance of dying in the first year of migration to the New World in order to escape just such evils?
The solution, reached without conscious intent (conspiracy) of individuals was a form of punishment so cruel and unusual -- SO TABOO -- that no decent human being would even want to think about it, let alone use freedom of speech and the press to talk about it:
Gradually cultivate prisoner rape as the basis of government authority.
By replacing pillory, open corporeal punishments and work restitution, so common before the 20th century, with an environment in which Mafiosi and other gangster types are protected from prisoner rape while the American pioneer cultures, less prone to prison gang formation, are systemically gang-raped, an ethnic bias was created against the very peoples who founded the country to escape government predation. The actual bias is apparent as at least 3 out of 4 prisoner rapes involve blacks victimizing men of Protestant heritage while Mediterranean Mafiosi are somehow immune.
The ruthlessly pragmatic and sadistically sociopathic genius of this is that its very intensity, both as physical trauma and moral outrage, rendered it invisible.
Such is the mentality of the child molester who relies on the traumatic nature of his crime to cover his tracks -- seemingly unable to control his subconscious urges. Such was the mentality of those men who, in 1913, gave us the Federal Reserve and the Income Tax.
CONCLUSIONAs with a molested child whose shame and guilt compound his trauma, so the American people have come to accept as, as fated, a life lived with this filthy family secret(8). The US Federal Government, now basing its authority on cruel and unusual punishment, cannot be considered legitimate by any reasonable man . The fundamental role that the application of force against citizens plays in defining legitimacy demands such a radical conclusion.
Warrior insurance will be a crucial tool in the triumph of honor over the political will that has so corrupted the rule of law. But honorable warriors need something to protect. Pioneers risk their lives creating new lands. Women then risk their lives giving birth to new folk. Finally, warriors risk their lives protecting their lands and their folk.
The burden of leadership falls, as it did after the feu fees that so motivated the Scotch-Irish, on pioneers.
The dilemma, facing those of us who value the heritage of those early Americans who risked so much to escape sadistic authority in the old world, is not whether we are willing to risk our lives for freedom from such tyranny, but whether we can pioneer a 'New World' where our love of freedom can bear fruit in the face of death.
References
(1) This is a consequence of the unlawful declaration that Federal Reserve Notes are "legal tender". "Legal tender" is called such because courts are required to accept it as money for legal purposes (by far, the largest legal purpose of money is payment of taxes). The US Constitution, under Article 1, Section 10 requires the States to use only gold and silver as payment for legally recognized debts. Article 1, section 8 does not give Congress power to make legal tender. Therefore, the declaration that Federal Reserve Notes are "legal tender for all debts public and private" is unlawful. The best counter arguments to this generally ignore the fact that the paper currency issued by the original central banks were presumed to not be backed by legal tender's value as protection against punishment, let alone cruel and unusual punishment.
(2) See http://www.spr.org/docs/stats.html
(3) The "Scared Straight" program from the 1970s is still going strong as evidenced by this April 5, 1997 article from the Lubbock Avalance- Journal: http://www.lubbockonline.com/news/040697/prison.ht m
An excerpt:
"DALLAS (AP) - A grand jury has refused to indict prison inmates in connection
with a ''scared straight'' prison visit during which several boys claimed to have been molested."
(4) Assistant U.S. attorney Gordon Zubrod from Harrisburg, PA made the following public statement to 3 suspects who fled to Canada (this statement was captured for the public record during a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation interview):
"You're going to be the boyfriend of a very bad man if you wait out your extradition."(5) Look at the classic paper on the value of human life by Nobel prize winning economist George Stigler of the University of Chicago School of Business. He measured the effect of danger on wage rates in different professions. Prison is more of a danger in some lines of activity than others. We should be able to apply similar analytic techniques to the relationship between taxation and the prison system.
(6) "Prison Rape: Every Man's Greatest Fear", August 1995, Penthouse.
(7) Although the thesis of this paper does not necessarily predict it, an increase in the rate of prisoner suicide negatively correlating with the rate of inflation would be supportive.(8) A final anecdote on silence: When the author of this white paper was called in for an audit by the IRS in 1994, he sought a tax attorney to represent him. During an interview with a prospective attorney the author told the attorney he thought the audit might have been politically motivated. When asked for details, the author related that the author had published articles on the Internet advocating a judical review of the legitimacy of the ratification of the 16th Amendment about one month prior to the notice of audit. The attorney then told the author that he could not represent the author. According to this tax attorney, he had attended a seminar given by the IRS in which the distinct impression was given that "tax protesters" were not to be defended and that any attorney who defended a "tax protester" would be subjected to a lifetime of audits. This was later confirmed during an interaction with a prominent southern California tax attorney when it became known that the IRS auditor had verbally admitted to his consulting accountant that the author was being audited because of his advocacy of a judicial review of the 16th Amendment's ratification.
In a related situation currently ongoing in China, a spokesperson for the Falun Gong Practitioners in North America has stated that: "lawyers in China have already been told not to defend these innocent civilians unless they agree with the government propaganda." The U.S. House and Senate unanimously passed resolutions on 1999-NOV-18 and 19 which criticized the Chinese government for its crackdown of the Falun Gong.
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The Sadistic Nature of Money
Federal Reserve + IRS = The Protection Racket Coup of 1913
by Jim Bowery
Jim Bowery, January 13, 2001 -- The author grants the right to copy, without modification.INTRODUCTION
Federal Reserve money buys protection from punishment. You are punished if you don't pay taxes. This has become the Federal Reserve's primary monetary authority. The moral hazard of basing monetary authority on punishment has now been realized in the systemic and out-of-control gang rapes of prisoners in the US. All other unlawful acts by US governments are now overshadowed by the murderous, sexually sadistic character of governmental authority that has developed in US penal systems. Federal Reserve money is now protection racket money, or, if you prefer "punishment protection money". Calling it "fiat money", "debt money" or even "legal tender" obscures its true character. The transition to this form of money began in 1913, when the 16th Amendment dramatically expanded the potential need for legal tender in the form of taxes while, in that same year, the Federal Reserve Act started the process of removing from legal tender any backing value other than the protection it affords against punishment. That the redefinition of "legal tender" was unconstitutional(1) has become only a minor dimension of the massive decay in legitimacy and moral leadership during the 20th century triggered by these acts of 1913. These acts were largely in the interest of continental European banking concerns doing business under the name of J. P. Morgan. As vital interests of the United States were sacrificed on their behalf, those foreign interests are reasonably called "enemies of the United States", the acts of U.S. citizens on their behalf "treasons", and all such citizens "traitors".
THE MORAL HAZARD OF GOVERNMENT AND MONEY
Legitimate governments provide assurance that we are secure in our lives and properties by protecting our legal rights in exchange for taxes and other duties. The most legitimate governments will even back up their commitment by providing some sort of compensation if our legal rights are breached, much the same as insurance companies do when they pay out on an insurance policy. But there is a fine line between protection rackets and insurance companies. Indeed, gangsters frequently call their protection rackets "insurance" and the payments they extort from their victims "insurance premiums". That fine line between protector and protection racket is crossed when "moral hazard" tempts the "protector" beyond the limits of his character.
In conventional insurance terminology, "moral hazard" is the temptation to artificially increase hazards. A classic case of moral hazard is an otherwise unprofitable business buying lots of fire insurance and then hiring an arsonist to burn down the place of business.
Insurers, too, can profit by increasing hazards if it is the uninsured who suffer the exposure to risk. A classic example of an insurer's moral hazard is the temptation to parasitize a productive business by threatening it with destruction unless the owners pay regular "insurance premiums".
And that brings us to the morality of governance.
The most profound moral hazard for governance is the penal system combined with taxation.
The framers of the US Constitution included prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishment under the 8th Amendment. They also made it difficult to parasitize productive States. This they did by requiring that taxation on a State's citizenry be proportional to the State's population under Article. 1. Section. 2. Clause 3. and Article. 1. Section. 9. Clause 4. Making taxes proportional to State population helps control the moral hazard of governance at the Federal level by making it difficult for the Federal government to transfer wealth to States that are politically active from States that are economically productive. Also, States are more capable of defending themselves from the Federal government than are individuals. Unfortunately, the requirement for taxation proportional to State population ("with apportionment" and "with regard to the census") was removed by the 16th Amendment, thereby promoting political porkbarrel at the Federal level and punishing productivity. In the same year the Federal Reserve Act gave license to gradually reduce legal tender's reliance on gold and silver as backing value, leaving the protection legal tender afforded against government punishment it's primary backing value. (Shortly thereafter, the 17th Amendment also removed from the States the power to elect Senators, further eroding the States' ability to protect their citizens from the federal government.)
These acts of treason have produced profound moral hazard at the Federal level, and set the stage for the relentless and radical decay of moral leadership during the 20th century.
WARRIOR INSURANCE
The proper role of government is protection against force and fraud. Therefore, to keep it honest, government's source of revenue should be insurance premiums against loss due to force and fraud. Said premiums could be payable in notes issued by the insurer/protector, but the insurer/protector should merely cancel the insurance policy and cease protecting those who do not pay. An insurer/protector should not generate the market for their own notes by threatening to punish those who do not pay -- as that is a protection racket, even if the insurer/protector honorably indemnifies those who do pay in the event of a covered loss. Such insurance premiums and corresponding insurance coverage would, necessarily, stipulate other conditions under which the insurance/protection continued to be provided at the agreed upon rates. This amounts to taxation on asset value, adjusted for various conditions that may affect risk -- with the added guarantee of indemnification in the event that asset value is lost due to force or fraud.
Such a system actually eliminates governance, as we know it. I call it "warrior insurance".
Under warrior insurance, reinsurance networks take the place of existing international treaties and alliances. Intelligent warrior reinsurance networks will check loss of asset value resulting from gang, or "protection racket" formation well in advance of any need for warfare. Warrior insurance premiums eliminate taxation. Competition between warrior insurance companies creates checks and balances supporting liberty. Formation of mass armies on ideological/political grounds is suppressed by exposing the underlying quid-pro-quo of reciprocal altruism that actually exists between people and their sovereignties -- over-extended kin identification, the basis of political and religious warfare as well as one-world ideology, is rendered less viable. Warrior insurance companies are much like the original sovereignties that defended newly formed civilizations -- they are, in fact, quite traditional. Empires subsumed the original sovereignties because trade, communication and literacy were so centralized. In the information age, this is decreasingly the case. What is increasingly necessary is a strong, distributed militia living lives bonded to their communities and lands from generation to generation, who value honor above their own lives. Unlike systems of taxation, warrior insurers will compensate those who are bonded for conscription in time of war, or deputized in times of civil emergency. Those so bonded would naturally demand a vote, or representation, in declarations of war or civil emergency.Under warrior insurance, the citizens' militias traditionally enjoy tax relief, since they are in effect, protecting themselves. In Scotland, rather than forming a Yeoman class from the "kindly tenants", "feu fees" were imposed to pay for foreign war debts during the Protestant Reformation, thereby dispossessing ancient families of their lands to make way for revenue generating land use such as wool-producing sheep. Kindly tenants were kindred or clan members who had traditionally been given relief from economic rent/taxation in exchange for sworn allegiance to their clans' militias under the command of their chiefs. But the clan chiefs were corrupted by the royalty which had become more interested foreign adventures than they were in allowing the clans to support and protect themselves and their families on their own lands. The royal war debts began consuming the livelihoods of the folk. Many were forced to flee for their lives. This was the primary origin of the Scotch-Irish pioneers who attempted to create a society in "the New World", free from such betrayals of clan loyalty. The earliest pioneers suffered a 25% mortality rate in the first year of migration in their desperation to create that "New World". This was not merely the moral equivalent of war -- it was death on a massive scale in a struggle with nature herself (war with natives was not the primary cause of these deaths), on the one hand, and tyranny on the other. As usual mostly men went to the frontier to risk everything for their new lands, but many women and children also suffered similar fates. As a consequence, the founders of the United States, folk memory still fresh, thought the avoidance of foreign wars to be common sense. This gave rise to the Monroe Doctrine and the avoidance of foreign wars.
Compare and contrast such a system to the internationally adventurous protection racket posing as a government we have today.
THE MURDEROUS, SEXUALLY SADISTIC BASIS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE
The US Federal Government, by basing its monetary authority on punishment protection with the treasons of 1913, has degenerated into an irredeemably murderous and sexually sadistic regime operating without lawful authority.
When Pennsylvania Quakers established the original penitentiaries, they were places where a man was to spend time alone in a room with a bible to contemplate the error of his ways. Now they are the source of most acts of rape in our society as well as a primary dissemination point of the deadly Human Immunodeficiency Virus that causes AIDS(2).
This is so much the case that a standard book on preparing for prison life "You Are Going to Prison" by Jim Hogshire, answers the question "Will I get butt-fucked?" quite simply and in the affirmative. Government itself routinely uses the EXPLICIT threat of gang rape in 'crime prevention' programs aimed at youth, such as that depicted in the public television broadcast of "Scared Straight"(3) where youth offenders are warned about their fate as sex slaves if they go to prison. Awareness is so widespread that Hollywood movies routinely make light of the pervasive nature of prisoner rape. Until recently, federal officials have avoided, like the AIDS epidemic they help spread, any indication that they are conscious of the fact that their authority relies, in large measure, upon cruel and unusual punishment. But even that taboo may be crumbling(4).
Any reasonable man must ask and demand an answer to this question:
"How has the Quaker conception of the penitentiary been so perverted that the threat of HIV-infected gang rape of prisoners is now a primary component of the government's authority?"
The answer is simple yet profound. It lies in the distinction between the two bases of money:
Reward VS Punishment protection
Everyone is familiar with the concept of reward money -- money issued with a promise from the issuer to reward the bearer usually with some commodity, such as gold or silver, upon presentation to the issuer.
The concept of money backed by punishment protection sounds unfamiliar to all but a very few scattered individuals. It is unfamiliar even to Nobel Prize winning economists, let alone the vast pool of PhDs from whence they are chosen.
Yet punishment protection money is as simple and obvious as it is pervasive:
Money issued with a promise from the issuer to protect the bearer from punishment upon presentation to the issuer.> Forget the Clothes --The Emperor is a Murdering Rapist Run Amok
Many critics of President Clinton accused him of being a murdering rapist. But President Clinton was simply the by-product of an epic perversion that has overtaken the lawful government of the United States. It would be understatement to call this perversion a criminal gang. Criminal gangs only occasionally commit rape and murder against their own community. They don't pretend to be a lawful authorities in public. They don't issue their own currency as protection racket money and then demand it as "legal tender". They may rationalize their criminal conduct, but they don't convince themselves that what they are doing is lawful. They admit to themselves that they are gangsters. At least they are that honest. But, perhaps this is simply because gangsters are afraid to compete with the most massive criminal organization in history, whose roots extend back at least to 1913 when the Income Tax and Federal Reserve were created.
The Federal Reserve was created in the same year as the Income Tax for one simple reason:
The US Federal Government was shifting from Reward to Punishment Protection as the basis for its monetary authority.
Federal Reserve Notes are promises to reduce the bearer's risk of punishment for tax code violation, upon presentation to its collection agency, the IRS, in the form of Income Tax.
Note here that it is impossible to reduce the risk of punishment for violation of the income tax code to a level commensurate to the threat of prisoner gang-rape(5). This has become the foundation of the IRS/Fed's all-pervasive aura of fear(6) upon which their punishment protection money is based. The Income tax code is so complex that not even the IRS with all its private contractors from law and accounting firms, can reliably and reproducibly interpret it. This makes it possible only to _reduce_ the risk of punishment -- no matter how much wealth you turn over to the IRS.
In this manner the federal government creates demand for the Federal Reserve's otherwise worthless paper(7). Under the evil monetary basis of punishment protection, the government's monetary authority is limited only by the degree to which it can create pervasive terror of its prison system in the hearts of nonviolent potential tax code "offenders" -- and that means you.
With punishment protection as the basis of its monetary authority, and therefore its ability to buy votes, it was only a matter of time before the US Federal Government, as though an animal trained by operant conditioning, would find ways of increasing the severity and cruelty of its punishments.
But like rat in a maze, the US Federal Government had a problem to solve:
How to impose cruel and unusual punishment without arousing the wrath of a people whose ancestors had risked a 1 in 4 chance of dying in the first year of migration to the New World in order to escape just such evils?
The solution, reached without conscious intent (conspiracy) of individuals was a form of punishment so cruel and unusual -- SO TABOO -- that no decent human being would even want to think about it, let alone use freedom of speech and the press to talk about it:
Gradually cultivate prisoner rape as the basis of government authority.
By replacing pillory, open corporeal punishments and work restitution, so common before the 20th century, with an environment in which Mafiosi and other gangster types are protected from prisoner rape while the American pioneer cultures, less prone to prison gang formation, are systemically gang-raped, an ethnic bias was created against the very peoples who founded the country to escape government predation. The actual bias is apparent as at least 3 out of 4 prisoner rapes involve blacks victimizing men of Protestant heritage while Mediterranean Mafiosi are somehow immune.
The ruthlessly pragmatic and sadistically sociopathic genius of this is that its very intensity, both as physical trauma and moral outrage, rendered it invisible.
Such is the mentality of the child molester who relies on the traumatic nature of his crime to cover his tracks -- seemingly unable to control his subconscious urges. Such was the mentality of those men who, in 1913, gave us the Federal Reserve and the Income Tax.
CONCLUSIONAs with a molested child whose shame and guilt compound his trauma, so the American people have come to accept as, as fated, a life lived with this filthy family secret(8). The US Federal Government, now basing its authority on cruel and unusual punishment, cannot be considered legitimate by any reasonable man . The fundamental role that the application of force against citizens plays in defining legitimacy demands such a radical conclusion.
Warrior insurance will be a crucial tool in the triumph of honor over the political will that has so corrupted the rule of law. But honorable warriors need something to protect. Pioneers risk their lives creating new lands. Women then risk their lives giving birth to new folk. Finally, warriors risk their lives protecting their lands and their folk.
The burden of leadership falls, as it did after the feu fees that so motivated the Scotch-Irish, on pioneers.
The dilemma, facing those of us who value the heritage of those early Americans who risked so much to escape sadistic authority in the old world, is not whether we are willing to risk our lives for freedom from such tyranny, but whether we can pioneer a 'New World' where our love of freedom can bear fruit in the face of death.
References
(1) This is a consequence of the unlawful declaration that Federal Reserve Notes are "legal tender". "Legal tender" is called such because courts are required to accept it as money for legal purposes (by far, the largest legal purpose of money is payment of taxes). The US Constitution, under Article 1, Section 10 requires the States to use only gold and silver as payment for legally recognized debts. Article 1, section 8 does not give Congress power to make legal tender. Therefore, the declaration that Federal Reserve Notes are "legal tender for all debts public and private" is unlawful. The best counter arguments to this generally ignore the fact that the paper currency issued by the original central banks were presumed to not be backed by legal tender's value as protection against punishment, let alone cruel and unusual punishment.
(2) See http://www.spr.org/docs/stats.html
(3) The "Scared Straight" program from the 1970s is still going strong as evidenced by this April 5, 1997 article from the Lubbock Avalance- Journal: http://www.lubbockonline.com/news/040697/prison.ht m
An excerpt:
"DALLAS (AP) - A grand jury has refused to indict prison inmates in connection
with a ''scared straight'' prison visit during which several boys claimed to have been molested."
(4) Assistant U.S. attorney Gordon Zubrod from Harrisburg, PA made the following public statement to 3 suspects who fled to Canada (this statement was captured for the public record during a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation interview):
"You're going to be the boyfriend of a very bad man if you wait out your extradition."(5) Look at the classic paper on the value of human life by Nobel prize winning economist George Stigler of the University of Chicago School of Business. He measured the effect of danger on wage rates in different professions. Prison is more of a danger in some lines of activity than others. We should be able to apply similar analytic techniques to the relationship between taxation and the prison system.
(6) "Prison Rape: Every Man's Greatest Fear", August 1995, Penthouse.
(7) Although the thesis of this paper does not necessarily predict it, an increase in the rate of prisoner suicide negatively correlating with the rate of inflation would be supportive.(8) A final anecdote on silence: When the author of this white paper was called in for an audit by the IRS in 1994, he sought a tax attorney to represent him. During an interview with a prospective attorney the author told the attorney he thought the audit might have been politically motivated. When asked for details, the author related that the author had published articles on the Internet advocating a judical review of the legitimacy of the ratification of the 16th Amendment about one month prior to the notice of audit. The attorney then told the author that he could not represent the author. According to this tax attorney, he had attended a seminar given by the IRS in which the distinct impression was given that "tax protesters" were not to be defended and that any attorney who defended a "tax protester" would be subjected to a lifetime of audits. This was later confirmed during an interaction with a prominent southern California tax attorney when it became known that the IRS auditor had verbally admitted to his consulting accountant that the author was being audited because of his advocacy of a judicial review of the 16th Amendment's ratification.
In a related situation currently ongoing in China, a spokesperson for the Falun Gong Practitioners in North America has stated that: "lawyers in China have already been told not to defend these innocent civilians unless they agree with the government propaganda." The U.S. House and Senate unanimously passed resolutions on 1999-NOV-18 and 19 which criticized the Chinese government for its crackdown of the Falun Gong.
-
Prisons Are the TestThe U.S. is a great place to be a female. It isn't such a great place to be a white heterosexual male.
"The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons."
Feodor Dostoevski, Russian novelist, 1821-1881By this standard, one might be better off in Russia, even with its huge incarceration rate and multi-drug resistant TB epidemic in its prisons, than in the US.
Here's why:
The US incarceration rate has more than tripled since 1980.
A THIRD of the Russian prison population, about 350,000 inmates, will be released this year.
-
Prisons Are the TestThe U.S. is a great place to be a female. It isn't such a great place to be a white heterosexual male.
"The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons."
Feodor Dostoevski, Russian novelist, 1821-1881By this standard, one might be better off in Russia, even with its huge incarceration rate and multi-drug resistant TB epidemic in its prisons, than in the US.
Here's why:
The US incarceration rate has more than tripled since 1980.
A THIRD of the Russian prison population, about 350,000 inmates, will be released this year.
-
The Origin of "Punk"
Read A Million Jockers, Punks, and Queens: Sex among American Male Prisoners and its Implications for Concepts of Sexual Orientation and discover where the show-biz "punks" go the word "punk" from.
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Ethnic Gang Rape of Imprisoned "Hackers""The horrors experienced by many young inmates, particularly those who are convicted of nonviolent offenses, border on the unimaginable. Prison rape not only threatens the lives of those who fall prey to their aggressors, but it is potentially devastating to the human spirit. Shame, depression, and a shattering loss of self-esteem accompany the perpetual terror the victim thereafter must endure."
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun,
Farmer v. BrennanThis statement by a United States Supreme Court judge was made before prisons had become a primary breeding ground for AIDS, not to mention Hepatitis-C (which is at 40% of inmates in California prisons).
There is a false myth being promulgated by a woman named Carolyn Meinel, "the Happy Hacker" that young hackers are not subject to sexual exploitation in Federal prisons. Carolyn Meinel has been published as lead author for such establishment magazines as "Scientific American" concerning computer security, makes frequent use of the FBI's services and is rumored to have been in the pay of the FBI on more than one occasion.
The truth is, rape of young men in Federal prisons is not as frequent as it is in some of the worst state prisons, but is more directly targeted by US Government authorities themselves.
Assistant U.S. attorney Gordon Zubrod from Harrisburg, PA made the following public statement to 3 suspects who fled to Canada (this statement was captured for the public record during a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation interview):
"You're going to be the boyfriend of a very bad man if you wait out your extradition."
Here are a couple of letters written by young men to the late Steven Donaldson, the dead founder of Stop Prisoner Rape:
I was raped by an inmate that was assisted by an federal correctional officer [at FCI Memphis, Tennessee]. I have attempted to file a law suit in the matter, but with no money and without the legal knowledge to pursue a legal confrontation, I was simply forced to accept what happened to me as if it was the normal thing to do/or happen.
The incident was also investigated by the Office of Internal Affairs. The officer was then fired and I was simply transfered.
It is hard for alot of rape victims to seek help from the prison law assistance without the other inmates becoming aware of the fact that a male has been raped. Once this information has been set out there, the rape victims become victims of another type. This could be the reason that many cases such as min[e] never even reaches a court of law, simply becasue we can not initiate this kind of legal process without the help of other inmates. There are some inmates that have been raped in prison that cant even read. Not to mention the mere shame that comes with having your manhood stripped away as concieved by other male prisoners, so it becomes something that is hidden in your past if you are transfered to an institution where it is not known.-Valgene Royal, San Pedro, California
From Royal's BP-10 administrative appeal: "On July 3, 1991 I was laying in my bed sleeping in disciplinary segregation, when I was awakened by my door being unlocked, at which time an inmate entered my room and appeared at my bedside. The officer that let the inmate into the room left and locked the door before I could identify him. The inmate forced himself on me and proceeded to rape me....Eventually an officer whom I was able to identify...let the inmate out of the room and locked the door back and they left together.
[Royal reported the rape and was moved to the prison hospital.] I remained in the hospital cell from July 3th until July 9th, 1991 without being allowed to shower or exercise....On a few occasions I was only fed once a day....A F.B.I. polygraph examiner verified my claim `via' polygraph examine." [Royal was kept in segregation involuntarily even after his disciplinary time expired and both the attacker and the officer involved had been transferred from the institution.]
And another:
In 1986, at the age of 20...I pleaded guilty to one count of bank fraud....On March 14, 1987, while sun-tanning on a hill away from [the federal prison camp at Lompoc, Calif.], [Tony] Armstrong and his two friends approached me. I was tackled and punched in my gut. I couldn't scream for help because I had the wind knocked out of me. I struggled and twisted, trying to get free, then I was hit and almost became unconscious. They raped me. After they were through, they said that, if I complained to the authorities, I would be killed. No matter where I went, they, or their gang members, would be able to kill me. Later, at dinner, Armstrong and his friends came over to my table and warned that they wanted to rape me again that night. I believed them because we lived in dorms and could move freely. The rape resulted in a large triangular piece of skin being torn off near the base of my tail bone. I still have a scar.
At 5:30 a.m., on March 15, 1987, I escaped by walking away from Camp. There were no fences around the camp.
Three months after I was raped [having been rearrested May 4 or 5 and incarcerated at VCI Terminal Island] I tested positive for HIV in a routine medical check up. This test was the first test among other routine ones in which I tested positive.
While at FCI Terminal Island, I wrote to...the Bureau of Prisons...My letter contained complaints about the amount of protection given to inmates from other inmates....[2 ½ weeks later] prison authroities asked if I had written the letter. I said that I did. The guard, Lieutenant Webb, at that point (and other times) mocked me and said that I should stop complaining and that I "should take it like a man." Other prison guards also made derogatory remarks. I was immediately placed in solitary confinement for over 100 days (January to April) "for my own protection."-Kevin Borkowski, California
Obscene are the arguments about whether any of the things the government does: treaties, taxes, etc., are "constitutional". Clearly it is well beyond the stage where the US Government gives your rat's ass to one of their civil sodomites whether or not anything they do is "constitutional" in the slightest. The only thing they care about is whether they can get away with what they want to do -- and, since their authority is based on criminal conduct at its very root, this has much more to do with who has the power than who has the law on their side.
The message the US Government is sending via its well-targetd prisoner rapes in Federal "corrections" institutions is clear:
Acquire power now.
Acquire power before they come and batter your door down and take you off to be gang raped by their alpha disease vectors "just to show you who's boss". You should be prepared to defend yourself from these murderous sexual sadists posing as "law" enforcement officers by whatever means necessary.
Since the US Government has taken to pitting ethnic groups against each other in prisons as a means of enhancing the degree of torment and control of prisoners, the primary means of defense, if you are black, Hispanic, Asian, Jewish or Italian, is to make sure you have friends who are connected with gangs of your ethnicity so that when you enter prison you can be protected from the other ethnic gangs. Be sure you have access to lots of money in the bank to provide insurance payments to your ethnicity's gang.
Unfortunately, most young "hackers" are Protestant heritage men who, as a result of that ethnicity, have an even bigger problem in prison:
With the encouragement of the prison system, young Protestant men (especially ones with light-hair color) are considered "prime chicken meat" by other ethnic gangs and the only gangs you can seek out for protection are those targeted by legislation as "terrorist hate groups" and receive correspondingly intense scrutiny, infiltration and even covert control by Federal authorities. Get anywhere near one of those groups and you are almost certainly going to run directly into an FBI operative as one of your first contacts within the group. Some of these under cover FBI operatives pad their reports out to make it look like they are doing some "good" for their civil sodomite paycheck. Furthermore, those Protestant ethnicity gangs are singled out in the prison system for suppression of their activities. In many prisons you can't even get a copy of the Poetic Eddas (a pre-Christian book of religious mythology from tribes that later became Protestant) because it is deemed "hate literature" by the government. Political asylum in other countries is a possibility, but once you have been labeled a "neoNazi" or "white supremacist" by any western country, you effectively lose your rights to political asylum anywhere in the West -- unlike those who are declared by the US Government to be members of gangs of ethnicities other than Protestant heritage.
PS: Setting up alternative monetary systems like DBarter can't hurt either. If they want to back their money with protection from the very threats they create, then it is high time to dispense with their monetary system.