Ideas that make you go “hmmm!”
- Your body is yours to exclusively control.
- The opposite of this is partial or full slavery.
- You are free to be yourself.
- Can you envision a civilized society that doesn’t legally permit people to aggress against each other? Try it. Do we really need to hit each other over the head to have a civilized society?
- **Tax is coercion; legalized aggression.**
- If you think tax is voluntary, consider what happens if you choose not to pay. Do you defend a social contract that you did not agree to and cannot decline?
- This is a longstanding aggression that must be resolved as carefully, reasonably, and fairly as possible. It will take time and great effort to devolve the current system of taxation while also meeting all societal needs and obligations.
- **Victimless crimes create no victims, so why are they crimes?**
- **Environmental protection is too important to be a political football.**
- Does the government protect the environment? If so, is it doing a good job?
- Governments decide what is pollution based on political expediency. In contrast, the Legal Principle actually defends against pollution.
- The correct Law makes the difference between heaven and hell on Earth, as well as survival or destruction.
- The Legal Principle defends indigenous communities.
- Eminent domain, often used by governments to appropriate indigenous land, is not justified. It is aggression.
- At the same time, we cannot reverse the appropriations of history. All our ancestors were all aggressed against. Human history is replete with aggressions of all sorts. We cannot fix the past. We can only commit not to aggress from now onwards. Albeit we can engage in reparations if the victim, culprit, and value can be clearly identified with legitimate evidence presented in court.
- Instead of the impossible task of rectifying all historic aggressions, can we find win-win voluntary solutions that bring reconciliation and peace to the societal wounds from previous generations?
- Re-ignite your creativity
- With freedom and responsibility, we are empowered to re-engage a part of our brain that, for many of us, has been dormant since childhood: creativity, innovative problem solving, free expression.