Ninety miles from the South Eastern tip of the United States, Liberty has no stead. In order for Liberty to exist and thrive, Tyranny must be identified, recognized, confronted and extinguished.
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Monday, January 4, 2021
Sunday, January 3, 2021
I Mean... Is There Nothing Left We Can Hold On To?
Got me the strangest woman
Believe it, this chick's no sinch
When I wanna get her goin'
Then I whip out my Big Ten Inch
Record of the band that plays the blues
Well the band that plays the blues
She just loved my Big Ten Inch
Record of her favorite blues
Last night I tried to tease her
I gave my love a little pinch
But she said now stop that jivin
now whip out your big ten-inch
Utopia: Bill Gates Is Mr. Rabbit....
"Once upon a time there was a little girl named Jessica Hyde. Jessica Hyde had a daddy who was a genius scientist. Now, Jessica Hyde and her daddy were held by an evil villain named Mr. Rabbit..."—Wilson Wilson reading from Dystopia, "Life Begins"
Utopia is an Amazon remake of the Original English Series.
Boiled Down, A Rich Entrepreneur (like Bill Gates) Believes He Needs To Drastically Reduce The World's Population. He Uses A Vaccine To Cure A World Pandemic To Render Much Of The World's Population Sterile, "The Undoing".
He Uses His Organization called "The Harvest", To Manage The Chaos.
He Always Asks: "What have you done today to earn your place in this crowded world?"
Here Are Some Fandom Pages To Describe The Series:
In the mythos of the Dystopia and Utopia comics, Mr. Rabbit is said to have kidnapped Jessica Hyde's father and forced him to create horrible viruses which were then unleashed upon the world. Eventually, Hyde escaped, aided by her erstwhile protector Artemis. Mr. Rabbit is depicted in many scenes from Utopia, drawn as man with the head of a rabbit. In various scenes, he is shown holding a box filled with pigs, standing behind Hyde and having variously tied Hyde's father to a tree, trapped him in a cage, or placed a gun to his head. The cover of Dystopia depicts him holding a Jessica Hyde doll, while the cover of Utopia depicts Hyde holding one-handedly a withered version of him, his entrails dripping out the bottom, sitting on a rock outside some distance from her childhood house at Home.
The identity of Mr. Rabbit is unclear, though it seems to possibly be a shared name between Kevin Christie, the leader of the Harvest and Katherine Milner. When Jessica Hyde returns Home, Milner refers to herself as "Home," telling Hyde that the Utopia comic was only bait to bring her back Home. She then knocks Hyde out and leaves her laying on her bed upstairs before going to the house's basement and informing her father that she's found his daughter.
The identity of Mr. Rabbit is unclear, though it seems to possibly be a shared name between Kevin Christie, the leader of the Harvest and Katherine Milner. When Jessica Hyde returns Home, Milner refers to herself as "Home," telling Hyde that the Utopia comic was only bait to bring her back Home. She then knocks Hyde out and leaves her laying on her bed upstairs before going to the house's basement and informing her father that she's found his daughter.
Rabbits are a major symbol and motif throughout the series, representing danger, control and fear. Within The Utopia Experiments, the devil appears to the scientist in a variety of forms, "but always as an animal-human hybrid, most notably a rabbit."
In the Amazon remake of Utopia, Mr. Rabbit is a codename that seems to be shared between two characters: Dr. Kevin Christie and Katherine Milner.
Milner tells Ian Ackerman and Becky Todd that after 9/11, the U.S. government recruited a group of scientists to create deadly viruses in order to try to win the biological arms race. Unknown to them, there were a few rogue scientists within the group, who became the Harvest, controlled by Mr. Rabbit. In 2002, Mr. Rabbit made a deal with a group in China to provide them a particularly vicious strain of flu. His clients reneged, so he went to China and killed more than 800 people. They caught and tortured him, then released his identity and set him loose, a game to see who would kill him first. Instead, he himself went around and killed everyone who might knew who he was, then went underground...
SHOCK! Portland Mayor Beginning To Suspect That Antifa Isn’t Interested In A Peaceful Resolution
In case you hadn’t heard, there was another riot in Portland on New Year’s Eve. Antifa and other mob members hurled firebombs at the police, fired commercial-grade fireworks at the courthouse, broke windows and set fires around the area.
Those of you who have been following the news over the past year are probably already yawning and thinking of this as another day that ends in a Y. But this particular riot produced something of a twist. For the first time that I can recall, Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler made a public statement blaming the actual people who were responsible for the riot and promised to crack down on them going forward. As usual, the indispensable reporting of Andy Ngo brought us the video and a few choice quotes.
Fox News has more on this story, along with some of the background and history needed to put it in context:
Fox News has more on this story, along with some of the background and history needed to put it in context:
Legal analysis published in October finds today's scenario favors Trump victory
As thousands of Trump supporters prepare to descend upon the Capitol this coming week amid a presidential election they are contesting, there is a mass of confusion and conflicting information about what happens next.
You may have heard that a growing list of Republican members of the House and Senate have pledged to object to the electoral count of some states during Wednesday's joint session of Congress.
Most analysts have said such objections, in practical terms, amount to nothing because while they can trigger debates lasting up to two hours, it would take a majority in both the House and Senate to reject the state results naming Joe Biden the next president of the United States.
There are other less discussed and, some insist, less likely scenarios. Some of them are examined in a legal analysis by John Yoo and Robert Delahunty. Published in October, about two weeks before the presidential election, it plays out multiple scenarios including under circumstances like the ones we face today. It is titled "What Happens if No One Wins? The Constitution provides for election crises—and its provisions favor Trump."
Here are some applicable excerpts from the analysis.
"Suppose states send electoral votes that—even if certified by the governor—remain under question, whether because of fraud in the vote, inability to count the ballots accurately under neutral rules, or a dispute between branches of a state government...An extended excerpt from the analysis follows:
...Vice President Pence would decide between competing slates of electors...
...If the electoral count remains uncertain enough to deprive either Trump or Biden of a majority in the Electoral College, then the 12th Amendment orders that “the House of Representatives shall choose immediately, by ballot, the President...
...If today’s House chose the president, voting by state delegations, Trump would win handily."John Yoo and Robert Delahunty, Oct. 19, 2020
...Suppose states send electoral votes that—even if certified by...
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