Part 6: Epilogue
August 28, 2007
It is my sincere hope that all citizens care enough about their own lives and truly desire the freedoms promised in the US Constitution, that they are willing to act and find value in Collaborative Democracy. To do otherwise puts the US Constitution in peril of one day being so irrelevant that all hope will be lost of ever regaining of what could have been.
I look to a day when men and women are free throughout the world to live their lives as they choose in harmony, dignity and have true collaborative democratic freedom. Where local conditions, wherever they may be, are fair for one and all. Where each citizen has the chance to achieve the personal enrichment required for him or her to actuate as the unique human being they are capable of being.
It broke my heart to write these words as I too held dear the ideas of the US Constitution. This journey has been riddled with disappointment and despair as these self-evident truths came to show that the American dream is just a dream and not a reality.
I am a fallible man and far from perfect. If I have written one word that does not describe the truth show me the errors in my thinking or the facts as I present them so I may right whatever I have wronged. I strive for progress in Democratic thought, actions and deeds and do not wear the dishonest cloak of proporting perfection.
The purpose of this project is to prove unequivocally that Freedom is possible based Collaborative Democracy and employing the technology that exists in today’s world.
Currently, the US society is devolving. We now have citizens who lack the two primary skills that separates primitive man from civilized man, the skills of the hunter gather and early agrarians. Hunter gathers excelled at finding, choosing and consuming the best possible food choices the environment afforded them on any given day and discarded the others.
The members of the early agrarian societies learned that patience was required to grow crops, raise animals and process them. The people who could not adopt patience soon became extinct. This patience gave other people the time to develop new valuable skills. With patience civilization advanced and grew.
America has a growing population of fat, impatient people whose only concern is their immediate needs and participation in a variety of self centered, escapist activities. These people are like a child, very easily distracted by novelty. Curiously, there is a minority group in the US who is not fat but equally as impatient and very easily distracted. They seem to take great joy in pointing out the fat people while ignoring their own defects. These people live where they take no responsibility for their own lives and add nothing to civilization other than their consumption, which is taken back by them when they become sick from their lifestyles.
At the rate we are going, one day in the very near future not a single American will be able to have penetrative sex. We are on the verge of becoming like broad breasted-turkeys that require artificial insemination to mate, as they are physically too big to do it themselves. Broad-breasted turkeys are also too stupid to stop eating when they are full, are very easily distracted and need to be cared for. Maybe Ben Franklin was right in thinking the turkey should have been the national bird, as the turkeys that Franklin knew were autonomous and intelligent. Their descendants are what we made them.
People today, with absolutely no shame, claim that they do not have the skills of the hunter gathers and early agrarians; the time has come to separate the primitive from the civilized.
People are losing their ability to think. They confuse consciousness with thinking. Thinking is weighing the facts, as one knows them to be and choosing the best course of action for oneself, not creating a fantasy based on ones subjective thoughts and hoping for it to become true.
I hope all who read this join me.