Next Page | Contents | Previous Page
With its messenger, the liberal media, big government convinced young black minds, for instance, of a life doomed to victimization. That belief in victimization hardened as the innocent child grew into a young adult, and that belief eventually convinced him he was a victim of racism. The underprivileged not only had limited access to advantages, but limiting beliefs. Indeed, they were captors of their neighborhoods as well as their own brainwashed minds, as Malcolm X tried to tell them. Racism, real or perceived, went away when big government went away. Until then, the underprivileged class was really a slave class to big government.
Twentieth-century big government hoodwinked its people. You see, the political system worked through power in numbers, so politicians and their media friends acquired their necessary numbers through hoodwinking the people into voting for their many programs of "public good". Trapped under all those regulatory programs, the smallest of all minorities, the individual, the aggressive entrepreneur, that genius of society, minority of one, was ultimately left unprotected, which in the end trapped the geniuses of society and blocked a Neotech society.
But as big government shrank, its facade of "public good" ending, the system naturally changed from one of manipulating the masses to protecting the individual. Acts of government reduced to physical protection only. The refreshing shrinking of big government turned the system right-side-up -- from power in hoodwinked numbers to power in the individual. Individual protection at its unconditional, indivisible level of physically protecting the individual from force (see Individual Rights, page 261) became the overriding principle in case law, clearly and swiftly distinguishing real crimes from big-government, bureaucracy-building political-policy "crimes" against the "public good". Justice became swift and honest and finally protected the people and their businesses from big government. Freedom and prosperity reigned.
With no more big-government guises of "public good", which always translated to public regulation, left only with intense public protection at its unconditional, indivisible level of physical protection from force, insured the Neotech Era: all people, businesses, and technologies -- especially those geniuses leading the Technological Revolution -- became forever free to race ahead unimpeded as in the computer industry. The resulting millionaire prosperity for all ordinary people inspired the people to constitutionally guarantee individual protection. The public called for the Individual Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (see page 261) that made protection at the indivisible individual level part of our Constitution. The results of that Constitutional Amendment were unimpeded entrepreneurs and technologies, protected from big-government regulations, which quickly and permanently led to millionaire standards of living for everyone.
In the 20th century, the lucky few with lots of money had lots of other nice things too. We all wanted more money. But we did not necessarily want to work hard for it, because we knew that would never get us lots of money in that suppressed society. Wealth had to come a different way. We figured we would die without ever knowing what it was like to have lots of money, fun, and love.
The new era of get-rich government and resulting super technologies changed all that. Neotech was the only way ordinary people would someday be wealthy. However, our self-serving leaders resisted Neotech and retarded our leap into the Neotech Era. Only elected nonpoliticians superseded politics and focused on freeing the economy to lift us out of the old political structure and into the new.
Next Page | Contents | Previous Page
Disclaimer - Copyright - Contact
Online: buildfreedom.org - terrorcrat.com - mind-trek.com