Subject: Tessa Comments (1 of 2) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I watched Aaron Zellman’s movie, “Innocents Betrayed,” with Larken yesterday. I recommend that everyone see it--adults, that is. It’s too gruesome and scary for children. Government is analogous to fire. If it’s controlled and confined to the hearth, it is very useful, even necessary for life in some climates.* But we all know that fire must be carefully contained in the hearth and kept under control lest it burn down the house and perhaps kill the whole family. We must have strict rules of behavior in the home about where and when to use fire. Never take candles to bed with you, never place them near the curtains, never leave an open fire unattended, never smoke in bed, and so on. A careful family will not likely be harmed by their fire. But the fire in the hearth has a way of constantly reminding us that it’s dangerous. It’s when we forget that fire can be dangerous, and become careless with it that it’s most likely to become a raging inferno. Take the case of smokers, who hold a tiny fire in their fingers many times a day. It’s so small and so familiar, it’s easy to forget that it’s fire at all. And most house fires are started by these tiny incendiary devices. But our society suffers from a deplorable lack of awareness of the danger of government. The founders of this country did a fairly good job of setting up a government-proof country, and laying down rules that would keep this deadly force contained and controlled in its proper place (at least for white people). Ownership of firearms by the populace is perhaps the most important of those rules. The problem is that the founders’ system has protected us for so long, that people have forgotten the reasons behind the rules. Because they personally have never been harmed by government, they think those who take precautions against it are simply a little wacky. A close friend of mine, who disagrees with me about the importance of civilians keeping guns, once said, “I don’t live in fear of the government like you do.” First of all, I don’t think I “live in fear of the government,” do you? And secondly, folks like her put their kids to bed in flame- retardant jammies, and wear their seat belts in the car, and no one accuses them of having pathological fears. Yet when you take a simple precaution against murder, mayhem, and genocide, they think you’re being unreasonable. It seems that for many people, sanity consists of believing that government is a harmless and benevolent institution despite mountains of horrific evidence to the contrary. One hundred seventy million victims of 20th century government have been silenced forever. I think that those of us who have been lucky enough to survive the bloodiest century in human history have a duty to give voices to these millions. This movie does that. Please spread it around. http://shop.jpfo.org/cart.php?m=product_detail&p=8 Tessa Rose *I’m taking a “limited government” position here for the sake of the analogy. The fact that governments perform some useful and necessary functions does not mean that those functions could not be provided without government. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Note: This signature can be verified at https://www.hushtools.com/verify Charset: UTF8 Version: Hush 2.5 wpwEAQECAAYFAkbi0qoACgkQGmVFo/iGj33F1wP/a44Ddvro2oh1mRiG32tgydf4f3ZA qm0a3W69eJmbzO4/SVuIdm15Fas5dhdGHRb3FZzRqdsaJLLgB6iBkAoNgROvzFImbvNe 2mqlvh05aQ/srw7j0rZL6CnP5NX+M6R60Tr5z8rdJuRtRiju18PxN0HiZZkgBT/I768g 2zJmwxs= =N9AY -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- Click for information on obtaining a VA loan. http://tagline.hushmail.com/fc/Ioyw6h4d9CtPHqpf9k5kgaFYBuipmOnSSEqacvPrtxbJpZlLno14kv/ -------------------------------------------------------------------- To subscribe, send a blank message to 861-on@mail-list.com To contact the list owner, send your message to 861-list-owner@mail-list.com