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Showing posts from January, 2025

Exchange with State Representative Chris Richardson

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On January 28, 2025, Zachary Moore reached out to Representative Chris Richardson of Colorado’s District 56 regarding what he described as the Federal Reserve’s fraudulent activities. His initial message was direct: The Federal Reserve is Defrauding the People of Colorado I Have Notified the SEC of this Fraud and I Am Asking You To Do Something This Fraud is Undermining The Rule of Law in Colorado After outlining these arguments, Moore received a response from Representative Richardson on January 31: Zach, I do appreciate you reaching out to me on this important issue. I do agree with many of your points and thank you for providing me with this information. However, since currency is under the purview and control of the federal government, I urge you to contact our Senators and Congresswoman with these concerns. -In Liberty, Representative Chris Richardson Colorado House District 56 Moore’s response was swift and cutting: Chris, Thank you for responding to me and expressing solidarity ...

Blame it on Diversity: The Cognitive Trap of Simplistic Thinking

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Blame it on Diversity:  The Cognitive Trap of Simplistic Thinking A World on Fire In the face of the LA wildfires, the tragic airplane crash, and the resurgence of exclusionary immigration policies, one question looms large: how do we keep falling into the same patterns of ignorance, division, and exploitation? These catastrophes are not merely physical or political events but manifestations of a deeper cognitive failure—our unwillingness or inability to grasp complexity. Without logic and the ability to process vast amounts of information, people become vulnerable to cognitive errors and, consequently, exploitation. This is not just a historical reality but a persistent phenomenon. From African slaves deprived of education and forced to accept racist propaganda to American citizens who failed to see the fraud behind irredeemable Federal Reserve notes, history is rife with examples of how ignorance serves as the most effective tool of oppression. The process of developing cognitive...

Would you follow that order?

  Would You Follow That Order? You are ordered to fine an old woman for eating a sandwich on a park bench even though she has nowhere else to go. Would you follow that order? You are ordered to force a father and his child to leave the park because someone reported “unrest” even though they are just sitting quietly, feeding the ducks. Would you follow that order? You are ordered to direct a mother with a stroller to cross at a less safe intersection even though the proper crosswalk is just a few steps away. Would you follow that order? You are ordered to arrest a teenager for loitering even though he is just waiting for his ride. Would you follow that order? You are ordered to knock down a family’s door in the middle of the night even though they have done nothing violent and their children will wake up screaming. Would you follow that order? You are ordered to stop a man and demand his ID again even though he has done nothing wrong and you only ask because he “fits the profile.” W...

Principal Discovery Questionnaire For Lawmen

Principle Detection Questionnaire: Discovering Your Moral Compass This questionnaire is designed to help you explore your ethical boundaries when it comes to following orders, particularly in scenarios where no direct or obvious harm to others is immediately visible. The goal is to help you recognize when compliance with authority goes against your own moral compass, and when obedience is driven by fear or convenience rather than principle. Each question helps you reflect on your responses and encourages you to articulate your thoughts clearly, so you can evaluate whether your actions align with your own ethical standards or if you are simply following orders out of habit, pressure, or fear of consequences. 1. Introduction: The Core Question What, if anything, would cause you not to follow a clear and direct order? Reflect:  Think deeply about this question. Are there any circumstances where you would defy an order because you believe it is morally wrong? Or would you always follow...

With friends like these…

 To The Elbert County Sheriff’s Office (and all presumed officers of the law) The following 6 kinds of people are very very bad. They are nearly universally denounced and considered a plague to society.  Nazis Officers and Soldiers Men and women who are "just doing their jobs," enforcing laws without questioning their morality or the system they serve. Mafia Members Men and women who use force and intimidation to protect the interests of the powerful, ensuring the status quo is maintained. Cartel Members Men and women involved in corrupt, unlawful, or covert operations, executing violence or coercion to serve criminal enterprises or corrupt authorities. Gang Members Aggressive, street-level men and women who use violence and intimidation to control neighborhoods, mirroring gang enforcers or hired guns. Slavers and Slave Owners Men and women who maintain control through excessive punishment and brutality, similar to overseers or disciplinarians on plantations during slavery. R...

The Cancer of Tyranny and Anarchy in Our Financial System

The Cancer of Tyranny and Anarchy in Our Financial System: A Warning to the Youth and a Call for Restoration Our nation is facing a profound moral and economic crisis, one that traces its roots back to the early 20th century and has spread like a cancer throughout the body of American society. This crisis began in 1913 with the creation of the Federal Reserve—a system that introduced legalized plunder, where a small elite, through banking, taxation, and later military power, extracted wealth from the many for their own benefit. Over time, this extraction has only intensified, with the political and financially connected class exploiting the system to consolidate their power. The result is a society where power, not justice, is the only legitimate force. The Birth of Legalized Plunder The Federal Reserve, along with an unjust tax system, created a perpetual cycle of wealth extraction that continues to plague us today. Through inflationary currency practices and burdensome taxation, the ...

Stage 4 Cancer- A Letter to Peggy Noonan

  Dear Peggy Noonan, Our nation is facing a profound moral and economic crisis that traces its roots back to the early 20th century. This crisis began with the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913, which introduced a system of legalized plunder—where a small elite, through banking, taxation, and later military power, extracted wealth from the many for their own benefit. This extraction has only intensified over time, with the political and financially connected class exploiting the system to consolidate their power. The result is a system where power, not justice, is the only legitimate force. The Federal Reserve, combined with an unjust tax system, has created a perpetual cycle of wealth extraction, where the government inflates currency to seize the wealth of the productive and redistribute it to the powerful. This is no longer about wealth creation, but exploitation, and it has corrupted the moral character of society. Rather than encouraging productive work, the system ...

The Paradox of Power

  The Tyrant’s Fear and the Paradox of Power The tyrant, despite his outward appearance of strength and control, is ultimately driven by fear—a fear of losing control, a fear of self-doubt, and a fear of confronting the very nature of his actions. While the tyrant may project an image of power and certainty, deep down, his grip on that power is fragile. Power, when exercised, inevitably exposes the tyranny beneath the mask of order. For the tyrant to act with force, to impose their will upon others directly, is to reveal the unsustainable nature of their position—to admit that the very power they wield is not legitimate, but is, in fact, a form of coercion, a manipulation of others' freedom. The Paradox of Power The tyrant wishes to intimidate rather than directly control. Their goal is not to exercise power overtly, but to manipulate their subjects into voluntary submission, to make them fearful enough that they surrender thei...

The Nature of Tyranny and the Perils of Misidentification

Tyranny, at its core, is not simply about   force ,   violence , or   oppression —it is about the   misidentification of the nature of things , whether that’s the nature of the human individual, society, or the very laws that govern us. Throughout history, the most dangerous tyrants have thrived not because they possessed superior power, but because they were able to   distort or obscure the truth   of what a   human being   truly is, or what   justice   ought to look like in society. The greatest tyranny is often an ignorance of the natural order—the rightful relationships between individuals, the recognition of their inherent rights, and the understanding that freedom is the natural state of human beings. Just as a sailor who lacks knowledge of navigation is doomed to sail aimlessly, or a person without shelter-building skills may be overwhelmed by a storm, so too is a society doomed when it fails to recog...