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If it's wrong for cops to do these things doesn't that imply that the people have a right to resist such actions? |
And of course, state mercenaries don't take kindly to being resisted, even non-violently. |
If you question their right to detain you interrogate you, search you invade your home, and so on you are very likely to be tasered physically assaulted, kidnapped put in a cage or shot. |
If a cop decides to treat you like livestock whether he does it legally or not you will usually have only two options submit, or kill the cop. |
You can't resist a cop "just a little" and get away with it. |
He will always call in more of his fellow gang members until you are subdued or dead. |
Basic logic dictates that you either have an obligation to let law enforcers have their way with you or you have the right to stop them from doing so which will almost always require killing them. |
Politely asking fascists to not be fascists has a very poor track record throughout history. |
Consider the recent Indiana Supreme Court ruling which declared that if a cop tries to illegally enter your home it's against the law for you to do anything to stop him. |
Aside from the patent absurdity of it since it amounts to giving thugs with badges permission to break the law and makes it a crime for you to defend yourself against a criminal if he has a badge consider the logical ramifications of that attitude. |
There were once some words written on a piece of parchment those words now known as the Fourth Amendment that said that you have the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures at the hands of government agents |
In Indiana today, what could that possibly mean? |
The message from the ruling class is quite clear and utterly insane. |
It amounts to this: |
"We don't have the right to invade your home without probable cause but if we do, you have no right to stop us and we have the right to arrest you if you try." |
Why not apply that to the rest of the Bill of Rights while we're at it? |
"You have the right to say what you want but if we use violence to shut you up you have to let us." |
I can personally attest to the fact that that is the attitude of the U.S. so called "Department of Justice." or maybe "You have the right to have guns but if we try to forcibly and illegally disarm you and you resist, we have the right to kill you." |
Ask Randy Weaver and the Branch Davidians about that one. |
"You have the right to not testify against yourself but when we coerce you into confessing and call it a "plea agreement" you can't do a thing about it." |
What good is a "right" what does the term "right" even mean if you have an obligation to allow jackboots to violate your so-called "rights"? |
It makes the term absolutely meaningless. |
To be blunt if you have the right to do "A" it means that if someone tries to stop you from doing "A" even if he has a badge and a politician's scribble sometimes called "law" on his side you have the right to use whatever amount of force is necessary to resist that person. |
That's what it means to have an unalienable right. |
If you have the unalienable right to speak your mind a la the First Amendment then if all else fails you have the right to kill government agents who try to shut you up. |
If you have the unalienable right to be armed then if all else fails you have the right to kill government agents who try to disarm you. |
If you have the right to not be subjected to unreasonable searches and seizures then if all else fails you have the right to kill government agents who try to inflict those on you. |
Those who are proud to be "law-abiding" don't like to hear this and don't like to think about this but what's the alternative? |
If you do not have the right to forcibly resist so called legal injustice that logically implies that you have an obligation to allow government agents to do absolutely anything they want to you your home your family, your neighbors and so on |
Really, there are only two choices you are a slave, the property of the politicians without any rights at all or you have the right to violently resist government attempts to oppress you |
There can be no other option. |
Of course, on a practical level openly resisting the gang called "government" is usually very hazardous to one's health. |
But there is a big difference between obeying for the sake of self-preservation which is often necessary and rational and feeling a moral obligation to go along with whatever the ruling class wants to do to you which is pathetic and insane. |
Most of the incomprehensible atrocities that have occurred throughout history were due in large part to the fact that most people answer |
"never" to the question of |
"When should you shoot a cop?" |
The correct answer is: |
When evil is legal, become a criminal. |
When oppression is enacted as "law," become a law-breaker. |
When those violently victimizing the innocent have badges become a cop-killer. so the next time you hear of a police officer being killed in the line of duty take a moment to consider the very real possibility that maybe in that case the law enforcer was the bad guy and the cop killer was the good guy. |
As it happens, that has been the case more often than not throughout human history. |
Stephen: |
Come with me in the airplane and you are |
looking at the instrument panel and you are flying in the clouds. |
You can't see a thing. |
Imagine. |
Now you are born deaf, profoundly deaf. |
If you have never heard anything in your life, how is it that you can fly airplanes? |
How is it that you can hear people teach you how to talk? |
I am that person. |
Announcer: |
"The guy just blew me away." "One of the best speeches I have ever heard." |
"He's funny, poignant and he's lived it." |
That's what people are saying about Stephen Hopson. |
A passionate and entertaining speaker. |
His message about overcoming adversity comes from his heart and his own experience. |
Deaf since birth, Stephen never let his disability become an obstacle to achieving his dreams and reaching his goals. |
In February of 2006, Stephen became the world's first instrument rated deaf pilot. |
A dream which began in childhood. |
Stephen: |
When I was 4 years old, I begged my mother to take me to the airport so I could watch planes take off and land. |
Did you ever do that? |
OK, so you know what I am talking about. |
Remember, I am 4 years old! |
My mother would park her car by the fence and I would be so eager because I wanted to be a pilot. |
I would hop out of the car and I would run up to the fence and I would put my fingers on the wires of the fence and I would wait for a plane to come out. |
The minute a plane came out, I would put my head on the hood of her car, like this... and then I would wait for an airplane to take off. |
And as soon as that plane took off, the car would vibrate. |
If you have ever put your head on a washing machine, that's how it felt. |
That's how I heard the airplane. |
It's a dream come true for me. |
I wanted to be instrument rated for a long time and now I can fly blind and deaf! |
(laughter) |
I'm up in the clouds and it is freedom. |
That's what it is. |
It's all about freedom. |
Announcer: |
With his high energy, warm hearted style; Stephen Hopson, a gifted story teller, unpacks the steps to overcoming adversity, which he calls the "HEAR PRlNClPLE." |
Have a passion. |
Entertain the possibilities. |
Act on your intuition. |
Remember the people who helped you. |
Stephen: |
Without passion, you can't go anywhere. |
You are stuck where you are. |
But with passion, you will be amazed at how doors of opportunity will open up for you. |
Announcer: |
Along the way to becoming a pilot, Stephen's passion opened up another door of opportunity, which led him to become a successful broker on Wall Street with Merril Lynch. |
But there were obstacles along that path as well. |
Stephen: |
In order to overcome adversity, you need to be able to trust your instincts. |
I saw an advertisement in the paper for stock brokers and I thought what a good career change that might be. |
So I called up the guy for the interview. |
I had an interview with the vice-president. |
I walked into his office, I was really nervous. |
I was intimidated. |
The office reeked of wealth. |
I met with him for twenty minutes. |
He said, "OK, you are meeting with twelve people on my floor." |
"Each and every one of them said you're not going to make it. |
Subsets and Splits