Thursday, March 3, 2011

Still Up and At 'Em

I'm still here, this blog hasn't died--merely taken a break. I'm still working hard and keeping up and caring about this world around me. I will be working on a few projects for awhile, but never distracted from the work of liberty, grace, and a world free of pharmaceutical nicotine replacement and quit smoking drugs, which harm countless individuals and families daily, as well as destroy economic health and send money overseas to dishonest corporations as well as via way of increased blackmarket purchases which increases crimes against women and children and funds terror. I will always fight for the right to use tobacco as a way to protect non-smokers and their families. By protecting tobacco rights I protect jobs, health, and peace.

A society that treats people as less human for choosing tobacco is retro 1930s and will suffer dearly. Tax money will decrease as businesses are shut down as a result of bans. Money spent on coal-tar derived pharmaceutical nicotine goes overseas where it is kept in a foreign bank account.

Many will die as a result of increased poverty due to the tobacco bans.

Many will die as a result of using nicotine replacement candies, gums, patches and inhalers. These products increase risk of oral and stomach cancers, cause skin problems and hair loss. The patch increases the likelihood of heart attack dramatically. The quit smoking drugs lead to diabetes, insanity, and broken lives as a result of the cascading health problems brought on by these drugs, as well as due to the increased violence against ones self and others caused by these drugs. The cost to society as a result of these drugs is too high.

I will fight against tobacco bans to protect my community and country from blackmarket crime and the cost of added law enforcement. A woman, a child can escape from 2nd hand smoke, but not from crime.

I will fight against tobacco bans because I care about minorities and the poor. It is these groups who will suffer most due to lost employment, recruitment into crime syndicates, and in our prisons when they are arrested while the big guy at the top goes free.

I will fight against tobacco bans because I am an American citizen and I love my people and am not afraid to love people who are not perfect or are deemed genetically impure by the modern religion of science.

I do not believe it is love to over tax certain distinct groups of people based upon sex, skin color, religion, or lifestyle choice. I do not believe one group's freedom hinges upon another group being deemed less human, a burden, or immoral.

I am an American citizen and as such have the Declaration of Independence and Bill of Rights written upon my heart. It does not matter if these documents fade, burn, or are stolen, because I AM THE Constitution of the United States of America. It does not matter who else ignores or corrupts these documents, they will not rewrite what is written in my heart, blood, and life. It does not matter if my neighbor does not live by the Bill of Rights, or is afraid to. What matters is what I do. I am an American and would rather die rightly, than live wrongly.

I am an American and understand that the 1st Amendment to the Constitution permits those who do not agree with me and my lifestyle choices to freely do so. Because not everyone lives as I does not mean they are infringing upon my freedom (unless I allow them), nor does it mean they should be taxed more than I, or that I should ban them.

I am an American and have the right not to testify against myself. This means that my blood, my DNA, my papers, my property, my breath shall not be taken from me and used to testify against me. My body, my blood, shall not be taken from me without my consent--even if a law ignoring the Constitution says otherwise. Why do I say this? Because, increasingly genetics is back in style as a way to identify the "impure," those carrying the sinful tobacco gene. Go to hell! These genes are my inheritance and not cause to ban me or drug me or kill me. And I'll be damn proud to spread my ancient alleles around to the the next generation.

I am an American, I am the Constitution.