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Give Humility a Chance

Picture of a Peace Dove with olive branch

© Svetlana Zhukova | Dreamstime.com – Dove with olive branch watercolor pencils drawing

This week has killed my spirit a little bit.

It began when I turned forty on Saturday.  The day itself was fun, but it marked a moment in my life I’d been dreading somewhat this entire year.  Mid-life is officially upon me, and I have little to show for it.  Yes, I have great friends and family, and I’m not bemoaning those, but I’m nowhere near where I expected to be at this point in my life. But this post is not about me and my admittedly self-indulgent little existential crisis.  Shortly after my birthday ended, one of our nation’s most horrific moments happened.  I’m obviously referring to the shooting in Orlando which claimed 49 innocent lives.  This is the third tragedy that will now be connected in my mind to my birthday. In 1994, O.J. Simpson murdered his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman on the day after my birthday (and the day I graduated from High School), and I’ve been obsessed with that ever since.  In 2001, terrorist Timothy McVeigh was executed on my birthday, for the worst terrorist attack in the US before 9/11 after blowing up the Federal Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people, including children. And now there’s Orlando.  And to add insult to injury, a small child was killed by an alligator in the happiest place on earth, Disney World.

The fact that these events happened near my birthday is meaningless except that I’ve been thinking about them this week, and its added to my malaise.  The Orlando shooting and the alligator attack are horribly sad events, involving many angles, invoking extreme emotions and opinions of all kinds in many people, which of course has caused the internet to go insane.  Not to mention that it was still reeling from the Stanford rapist’s verdict the week prior…

While the tragedies themselves have hurt my heart, its the activity I’ve seen in social media and elsewhere is what has my mind swirling, and draining me most this week.  I’ve found myself bowing out of the discussion altogether.  I don’t think I’ve really said anything about either tragedy or all the surrounding issues online at all.  If I have, it was in the most passive way possible.  That alone is odd.  I certainly have opinions and I get the passion that everyone has for their particular take on what happened.  I get it.  I love vibrant debate and discussion.  But what really saddens me is the predictable lines in the sand being drawn.  Rather than calm and rational discussions about complicated issues, friends and family have found new ways to tear each other down.

This post is not about my position on gun control, the 2nd Amendment, or radical Islam (or even my opinion on if I should use the phrase “radical Islam”), homophobia, Islamophobia, or unsupervised children, or how we may or may not be able to keep violence from happening in the future.  Maybe I’ll write another post about those things.  Maybe not.  This post is me pleading with everyone to remember that most people in the world are not psychopaths, or murderous, or evil, or even hateful. Most people are just like you, more or less.  They love their friends and family, and have people who love them. They are good at some things, and bad at other things. Have had ups and downs in their lives. They make terrible life-altering mistakes, and they have great victories, and all that comes in between just trying to survive daily life.  Each of them, even the most brilliant among them, is filled with imperfect knowledge of all things.  Most of them are doing their best at that moment in time.

So instead of unfriending your ignorant friend, or ripping your crazy uncle a new one for being so stupid, let me offer this humble request: If you can’t engage with people in a way that offers the benefit of the doubt that their opinion is not born from evil intentions, then block them or don’t engage with them online, but don’t shut them out of your lives completely.  I’m usually the last one to offer advice of censorship.  It actually makes me really sad to write such a thing, but every time something like this happens, its the same cycle over and over again.  We shout at each other, but never listen.  You don’t need to lose your passion, or change your mind on XYZ. I have opinions and thoughts on what happened and what to do (or not do) about it like anyone else, but the only thing I am certain of is this: I don’t have all the answers, and I could be wrong.  Life is too short to allow a deranged, selfish murderer ruin the bonds built over a lifetime.

Peace,
PersephoneK

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My Thought Evolution on Freedom: Remembering 9/11

http://www.dreamstime.com/royalty-free-stock-image-liberty-image26285626Two obvious points: 1) Its been a really long time since I’ve blogged!  2) Obviously, its the 14th anniversary of the attacks of 9/11/2001.

I’ll skip the boring and lame reasons for #1 and focus on #2 today.  Every year on 9/11 I feel like I should have something profound to say. I never really do, and today its especially true, but I do have something to say.  I started this post on my Facebook page, thinking it was just going to be a sentence or two, and it quickly blossomed into a full post, so it sparked my enthusiasm to fire up the old blog again.  This should be a short one, though.

9/11 changed the course of my life. That is not hyperbole. If it had not happened, I’d be leading a different life in many ways. Not a better or worse life, just a different one. And I’d be a different person with very different viewpoints on many topics, if I had a viewpoint on those topics at all. 9/11 was the butterfly flapping its wings across the world creating the storm of my life.

I’ve spoken before about how 9/11 changed my views of religion (specifically here and here), but I think what stands out most to me today, is how 9/11 changed my view of what it means to be free. 9/11 was also my birth, or maybe the beginning of my adolescence, as a libertarian (although I had no idea what that term meant at the time).  9/11 itself evoked extreme feelings of patriotism for me, as it did for many Americans.  It sparked me to join the fight by going to work for an agency involved in the “Global War on Terror”.  That experience led me to learn more than I ever had before about economics and Classical Liberal philosophy.  Perhaps a future post will dive more into why that happened.  In turn, what I learned in those areas has altered my view of 9/11 from what it was the day it happened and the first few years afterwards.  I no longer think of today as a day of unbridled patriotism.  Instead I think of it as a reminder of how far the country has come from the ideals it was founded upon.  I still believe that the “American Experiment” was one of the greatest endeavors humans have ever attempted. We always have been and always will be a work in progress. I’m worried that we have given up on the effort to live up to our ideals, however, and are heading down a path of becoming the thing we fought against.

I feel truly lucky to have been born in America.  I’m one of the lucky few of the billions who have lived in my time and before.  9/11 taught me that where a person was born shapes a lot of who they become, and I don’t take that for granted.  But I also don’t accept blind patriotism anymore.  I believe in the ideals of individual liberty, and I fear that 9/11 pushed us as a nation further away from living up to those ideals.

That terrible day should never have happened. The lives lost should have been able to continue their days as if nothing had happened, but instead they were stopped in time too early. Not a single person deserved what happened to them that day, except for the 19 participants in the plot. So, I remember those lives today with honor, even though I never met one of them.  And I will continue to honor them by remembering that they were individuals with hopes and dreams, wanting to live their own lives in peace.  That those men who took their lives thought more of the next life than this one, and took away the choices of 2,958 (I do not count the hijackers in this total) in this life is haunting.  9/11 taught me that this life is the only one we know we have, and that my right to interfere in the lives of others going about their own business is (or should be) limited.

Peace,

PersephoneK

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Tearing Down the Two Party System Benefits All

PoliticalPartiesLogosAs a Minnesota Native, I disagreed with almost everything the late Democratic Senator Paul Wellstone tried to do as a politician.  But I, along with many of his colleagues on both sides of the isle, respected him for his principled stances on issues he passionately believed in.  He was an ideologue who made no apologies for it.  He wasn’t afraid to stand against his own party if it meant doing what he believed was the right thing, and the thing he believed his constituents elected him to do.  In that way, he reminds me of former US Representative (Texas) Ron Paul, the defacto spiritual leader of the modern libertarian movement.

We need more Paul Wellstones and Ron Pauls in politics.

I don’t mean we necessarily need more who think exactly like them, or who agree with their specific ideology, but we need more politicians who are less concerned with the games of politics than they are with doing things they believe are right.  We need politicians who stand up for powerful principals instead of clinging to party loyalty.  Ironically, I think we have more people like that on Capitol Hill now more than ever before in my lifetime.  It takes a lot for me to admit that, as those who know me know I’m generally cynical about politics, and politicians in general.  Even more ironically, those same “trouble-making” politicians have been accused (unfairly in my view) of the very political games many Americans are tired of, and causing the latest government shutdown which ended essentially in a stalemate today.

While political games will always be part of the system, the games played in the latest shutdown spectacle were different than business as usual in the Beltway.  Much different.  In a way that might not seem obvious, they signal one of the greatest problems with the American political system.  Its not what you think I’m going to say…. The shutdown more than anything else highlights the problem with the two-party system.  Specifically, the two party system makes principled rebellion a dirty word when in fact it should be celebrated.  That is, after all, why this country exists in the first place.  If we broke free of the two party duopoly, I think two seemingly contradictory things would begin to be more common in Washington politics: Principled (Ideological) Stances and Cooperation.  Let me try to explain why.

An unpleasant fact of politics is that it takes money to win elections.  The only real way to get money in our modern system is by being affiliated with a political party.  Parties are basically election machines.  Once a candidate has its support, all of the components of that machine work together to fundraise, promote, and otherwise support that candidate.  The bigger the political stage (i.e. Presidential election vs local city mayor), the more the machine grinds away for the candidate, and the more important it is for the candidate to have a party affiliation.  In short, the candidate can’t do it alone without the Party.  Its no surprise then, that Party loyalty has become the primary factor in most political gamesmanship in Washington.  Whether they say it or not, politicians generally put Party first.  To do otherwise is potential (likely) career suicide.

Yet, during the latest shutdown a curious thing happened.  Several “Tea Party” Republicans defied the Republican establishment and stood on principle.  They’ve been demonized heavily by the media, (TeaBaggers anyone?), other Republicans, and many of my more politically vocal Facebook friends (LOL!), but in truth, they did exactly what they were elected to do.  Each of those Republicans had run their election campaigns primarily on the idea that the Affordable Care Act (ACA aka “ObamaCare”) was a terrible law that should be killed.  Of course, almost every other (if not all) Republican(s) also think ObamaCare is a terrible law, and have tried to kill it from the beginning.  Unfortunately for them, they did not have the majorities necessary to defeat the bill from passing in the first place, or to change portions of it once passed.  That’s how many of the Tea Party Republicans got their seats in Congress and the Senate.  Although polling has consistently shown that the American public does not like ObamaCare, with the popularity level peaking around 40% in 2012, it has remained the primary platform for the Democrats and President Obama in particular during his administration.  With the Democratic majorities, they were able to ram the unpopular bill through and pass it into law.  Once passed, they fortified their commitment to keeping it largely in tact.  And they’ve had the political upperhand to do so, especially since the Republican Party is so divided between the “established” faction and the Tea Party faction.

So, in this latest battle, what we have are Democrats united on a law that most Americans hate, and having the power to remain so without compromise, partially because they control the Senate, and the Executive Branch (aka the President), but also because the Republican Party, which controls the House is divided into two camps.  One camp, the majority of the Republican Party (the Establishment), believes in maintaining power at all costs, and the other camp (Tea Party) is willing to lose all power (Polling has shown the entire Republican Party has been largely blamed for the shutdown) because they believe it is the right thing to do.

You may disagree with me, but all other things being equal, I would rather stand with a minority that has integrity than a majority that cares more about keeping its political power in place.

What does this have to do with the two party system being a problem? My point with all of this is not about whether or not I think ObamaCare is a good law or whether or not the Tea Party has the right plan for America.  This shutdown situation could have just as easily happened with any other contentious issue, where the political players are aligned in a similar way.  When one party has such tremendous power it can push unpopular laws through, and then hold that power over the other minority power.

For some proponents of government, maybe even for a majority of Americans, this might seem like a good thing.  It means that Washington politicians are seemingly doing what we want them to do.  They’re “getting things done.”  They’re passing laws left and right.  Americans were largely unhappy with the shutdown because they feel politicians should be cooperating and compromising.  I agree that politicians should pass necessary laws.  I agree that to do so they must often compromise (unless they have absolute majority) and cooperate.  They must build relationships.  What the two party system does is corrupt those goals.  It allows two behemoths to have overall power over the American people despite most Americans not being aligned entirely with one Party’s platform over the other.  The crack in the Republican party that lead to the shutdown ironically probably would not have done so if there were more cracks in both parties that called themselves something else entirely… In short, if there were many parties instead of two, it would be less possible for a small faction to shutdown the government in the first place because it would have never gotten to that point.

Most Americans may lean one way or the other, but they are not Party loyalists.  Those they elect are by necessity, but they are not.  A recent Gallup poll says that 60% of Americans think a third party is needed and that the current system does not reflect their ideals.  The two party system forces Americans to choose between two groups that may preach very different messages, but in practice behave exactly the same.  They serve to maintain their own power, not to serve the ideals their platforms espouse.  At least until a “radical faction” breaks away, stands on principle (does what they say they will do) and gains the ire of both established groups.  From my perspective, this group of politicians willing to risk their political careers because they believe its the right thing to do is what we need more of in Washington, and it makes me tremendously sad that they are getting labeled as “shameful” or “despicable” or even laughably the “radical right wing.”  By breaking the two party system apart these smaller voices would simultaneously lose their power, forcing compromise, and more accurately reflect the American people’s ideals in the right proportions.

Imagine for a moment that instead of two entrenched parties, there were many parties in Washington (more than three ideally).  If no single party had a greater than 50% majority hold I envision a few things resulting.

  1. Parties could stand for one or two principals instead of having to fit numerous agendas on their platforms.  Americans would know exactly what the primary focus of a politician is.  In that way, party loyalty would be tightly entwined with the principals the party stands for.  Americans would have more choices that more accurately reflect their own ideals and beliefs on how best to most the country forward.  Would you prefer to live in a world where you could only pick between vanilla and chocolate?  As a lover of combinations of flavors, I would find that terrible.  Vanilla with chocolate syrup please!  Remember when there were only four channels on TV?  Hell on earth.  Why do we allow that system to survive in something as important as politics?  Politics is how we decide how we want to live our lives as a society.  It is the method we use to determine the freedoms we have and don’t have, and the repercussions for defiance of the laws we deem important.  Politics is surely more important than ice cream flavors or TV channels.  Isn’t it?  I can’t even imagine the ideas that could be generated if the two parties lost their duopoly control on the system.  Thirty-one flavors for all with never-ending refinement depending on demand!

  2. Compromise between parties would be essential to pass laws in a multi-party system.  If no single monstrously large party had a true majority, in order to pass laws politicians would be forced to build relationships with other party members on issues they are in agreement.  You would find all kinds combinations of alliances on different issues.  As a libertarian, I often find myself agreeing more often with Republicans on fiscal policy (though they don’t usually live up to their rhetoric), but agreeing with Democrats on social issues (but not usually the details of social policy).  While I have agreed largely with Tea Party republicans on their ideas about taxes and financial reforms, I disagree with them largely on social issues like abortion and gay marriage, to name a few (although one can be against gay marriage but for a law supporting gay marriage — a nuance lost in our current duopoly).  Essentially, none of the two major parties reflects my ideals in any serious way.  I’m not an anomaly.

  3. Laws would be harder to pass and there would be fewer of them.  To some people this may be a terrible prospect.  After all, that’s what we send our Representatives and Senators to Washington to do, right?  Pass laws!!!  I found this article calling the 113th Congress the worst ever because they failed to do anything by passing only 22 laws (as of August 2013).  I personally see that as a victory.  The worst situation is when one party controls all branches of government.  This is when tyranny of the majority happens, and is not what the writers of the constitution envisioned for the democratic process of our Constitutional Republic.  My perspective is that each and every law that is passed should be done so as a solemn last resort, and after only careful consideration of what it will and should do, and the consequences that will result.  Laws almost always mean limits on liberty, both personal and economic.  Very rarely are laws repealed once enacted, and each new law forces Americans to alter their lives in very real and serious ways.  There should be public debate and transparency with each law considered.  They should never be passed frivolously, and always only* according to the Constitution.  They should never be passed because one party has a majority and does so anyway in defiance of the public’s wishes.   This couldn’t happen in a multi-party system.  Additionally, the public should have full access to the reasoning behind the law and the possible unintended consequences of its enactment.  If politicians were forced to focus on fewer laws, I believe that would be a step in the right direction for engaging the American people on exactly what they’re doing on our dime.  As a bonus wish, I’d also require all bills to be single issue focused (aka no “pork”) and short (Have you read the Constitution… the longest Amendment is the 12th and has 403 words, the equivalent of little more than ½ a page single spaced in Word with 12 point font.  ObamaCare had reportedly 2700 pages!), and all laws should have a sunset date (of no more than 5 years from enactment)*.

Unfortunately, changing the two party system is an uphill battle. The current party system exists not because it was what the Founders envisioned (President Washington belonged to no party), but because of a systematic power-grab of the two major parties over 150 years of politics.  Throughout our nation’s history, parties have changed both in name and in their ideals, but in the modern age, change seems unlikely to gain a foothold primarily because of laws that exist in many states and federally that make it all but impossible for third (or more) parties to gain any traction in elections.  The issues are complex and vast, and vary from state to state, but in summary, a third party gaining traction in a national election has little to do with their ideas not aligning with a large number of voters and more to do with the two big parties liking the system to stay that way.

The current election system is, to put it bluntly, rigged to prop up the parties in power, and squash all attempts to add other voices to the political dialogue.  As a result, most Americans find themselves picking the lesser of two evils during elections, or trying to pick the candidate they align on with most issues.  Rarely do Americans pick a third party.  The main reason for that is they “want their vote to count.”  This pattern only perpetuates the cycle of Republicans and Democrats maintaining control, further entrenching them into our psyche, and defining the dialogue.  Its no secret that I consider myself libertarian (small ‘l’) or classical liberal.  I didn’t really know what that was until less than ten years ago.  Up until the last election, I found myself falling into the trap as well.  I didn’t want to waste my vote, so I picked the candidate that I thought was “kinda close” on the issues that I felt were most important.  During the last election, I finally decided that I couldn’t do that any longer.  I’d rather have my vote wasted than vote for a candidate that I find impossible to live with.  So for the first time ever, I did not vote for a major party candidate.  Obviously, my guy lost, but I slept easy at night knowing I followed my conscience.  I would love if more Americans didn’t have to choose the lesser of two evils in order for their voice to be heard.  Paul Wellstone once said, “I would just feel like a shill if I didn’t vote for what I thought was right. I just couldn’t do it.”  If we could tear down the two party duopoly, I think we’d finally get to the point where most Americans wouldn’t have to feel like shills.  We could all stand on principle, and debate each issue on its own merit instead of fall in line behind our tribal tendencies to defend “our side” against “them.”  And we’d be more inclined to reach across the aisle to find common interests with people who mostly align with another party.  Events like the government shutdown would be things of the past because cooperation would be a requirement for achieving any result on The Hill, but at the same time, politicians would be closely aligned with very specific agendas and ideologies that would take precedence over party loyalty purely due to necessity.  We’d find a lot more Paul Wellstones and Ron Pauls — men and women with integrity unafraid to show that what they stand for is what they will act upon, but while simultaneously allowing many more voices and ideas to be front and center in the debate.  Tearing down the two party system will create a new system that more closely resembles what America stands for and is — a melting pot of all the different cultures and best ideas of the world where we cooperate and work with people everyday who believe differently from us on some issues.  That’s the American dream realized.  Our political system should reflect that.

As with all of my posts, this blog serves as a forum for me to work out my ideas, and are never meant to stand the test of time or be forever set in stone.  I tend to write my posts on the fly with little preparation, although I usually have thought a lot about a topic for a while.  I have a life to live and don’t spend hours writing my posts (usually).  In a way, my blog serves as a place where I publish rough drafts of my ideas that I will refine over time.  As a result, sometimes clarity of idea can be lost.  What makes sense in my brain isn’t always translated well to the page on the first (or sometimes second, third, etc) go-round.  This is why I have this blog in part… to improve that communication skill, and to see the progression of my ideas.  I rely on comments and questions from you to help me plug up holes in either my thinking, or my communication of my thinking.  I’m sure this blog will be my most contentious yet.  Please, have at it!

Cheers,

PersephoneK

*Edits added after original publication to increase clarity.

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Executive Branch Hypocrisy

Photo Credit: http://dronewarsuk.files.wordpress.com

 

The other day, as I finally got around to finishing up my latest copy of reason magazine (not capitalized intentionally), I apparently had saved the best for last.  If you have time to read anything on my blog this week, pick reason’s interview (by Matt Welch) of the politically left’s Jeremy Scahill as he outlines with incredible clarity and detail his extreme concerns over the executive branch’s continuation of Bush era policies under the guise of national security:

Executive Branch Dictatorship

What are your thoughts?

~PersephoneK

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Remembering 9/11 Differently on the 12th Anniversary

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So, its 9/11 today, obviously, and for the first time since it happened, I am feeling… ambivalent.  I still remember that day.  And I think its important to remember what happened, but over the past few years, my perspective on the day’s meaning and our nation’s response to the tragedy has changed quite a bit, and I’m not sure how to define it yet.  If nothing else, today I’m thinking about how I wish our discussion of 9/11 could involve more nuance and reflection of what we want our world to look like going forward.  For me, that future world involves the freedom envisioned by the Founders, the freedom to pursue our individual happiness so long as we do not impede others to do the same, and with that, peace.

Cheers,

PersephoneK

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The Forgotten Risks of Liberty: Honoring the Original Patriots

On this day 237 years ago a midst the heat of a Philadelphia summer, the Continental Congress officially adopted Thomas Jefferson’s beautifully crafted words and Declared Independence from King George and Britain. Americans have celebrated that day ever since as our Independence Day. While it has become a day of outdoor fun and family get-togethers, hot dogs, beer, burgers, parades, and fireworks, its meaning has not been completely lost, but its not at the forefront of our minds, either.  So, I wanted to take a moment to briefly consider what July 4th means to me.

As a Libertarian who is anything but happy with the current state of politics, government intrusion, lost liberty, and an ever more powerful central government, I want to cast aside that mask necessarily painted with cynicism for a moment. After all, cynicism is not actually my dominant disposition, despite assumptions people make of me.  Neither am I a Pollyanna.  I think I tend to see the world as both glass half full and half empty, but overall my I see myself as a realistic idealist, if that can be a thing.  At heart, on a macro level, I’m an optimist.

And, I’m glad I’m alive at this time in history, and live in the United States of America.

There are real problems in the country today, and in the world, some of them are seemingly unsolvable, but I understand that my life today would no doubt be far from the relatively easy and joyful life it is without the foresight, wisdom, guile, and courage of American Patriots living in the late 1700’s, many of whom died on a battlefield before their goal had been achieved, and was far from certain. In an age when it was undisputed that men should be ruled by oligarchies, those Patriots dared to try a radical experiment.

Source: Library of Congress

Signing of the Declaration of Independence

They renounced loyalty to their inept King after he refused their right to have a voice in their governance, and said, we can not only do this better, but we’ll do it without a supreme, single ruler. We’ll do this together. We’ll give power to all citizens, and we’ll restrict and monitor power from our heads of state. We’ll fight to the death to prove that individuals, not some fat and detached man who never earned anything he had been given living thousands of miles away, are best suited to determine what’s best for them. Not anyone else. They dared to decry that noblemen and monarchs are not imbued with divine powers, nor are they better than their subjects, but that “all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

This World is On Fire

The Americans who took up arms against their King under penalty and strong risk of death, risking wealth, reputation, honor, and livelihoods to carve out a piece of the world devoted to treating human beings as equals, deserve our respect and admiration. They were imperfect, flawed people. Although they eloquently clarified a vision of human lives lived with freedom, they were not always (or often) able to live up to their own rhetoric.  They allowed the shameful institution of slavery to exist in stark contradiction to their ideals, to be determined through much bloodshed nearly a century later.  Yet they did something that had never been done on such a scale in the history of mankind: They set the world on fire with dreams of liberty and self-determination. They showed that the pursuit of individual endeavors is worth fighting for, and achievable. Despite all of our flaws as a nation, Americans and all citizens of the world who enjoy the benefits of democracy, civil rights, and self-rule, owe a great debt to these brave souls – from soldiers, to statesmen, to farmers, to merchants, to writers, and ordinary citizens who supported the crazy dream — who risked it all 237 years ago.

And for all our bumps in the road, all our mis-steps — many of them appallingly huge — it is an astonishing thing, this American Experiment. This week in Egypt, a coup ousted its president just two short years after the Arab Spring and that country’s institution of a new democratic government.  It’s truly amazing that I sit here 237 years after my nation’s founding, free to openly criticize the rhetoric of its 44th President, who like all those before him were elected peacefully. More astonishingly, all those before him left office freely upon the end of their terms, of their own accord, and in peace. To an American, the word coup sounds exotic, and primitive. We’ve never faced such a scenario.  For all its hiccups and imperfections, this American Dream is an awe-inspiring thing to be a small part of. I feel so fortunate to be alive and on this piece of dirt at this time in the history of the Earth. As thanks, I promise to do my best to advance the causes of liberty and individual happiness in honor of all of those men and women through the ages who made this amazing existence possible for the rest of my life.  And I promise not to allow comfort to lull me into accepting anything less than that perfect dream of individual liberty and happiness.

Cheers,
PersephoneK

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