Saturday, December 29, 2018

The Advocate re-published my comments from a year ago


Phil Beaver seeks to collaborate on the-objective-truth, which can only be discovered. The comment box below invites readers to write.
"Civic" refers to citizens who collaborate for individual happiness with civic integrity more than for the city, state, nation, or society.

Consider writing a personal paraphrase of the preamble, which offers fellow citizens mutual equality:  For discussion, I convert the preamble’s predicate phrases to nouns and paraphrase it for my proposal as follows: “We willing citizens of the United States collaborate for civic, civil, and legal self-discipline to provide integrity, justice, goodwill, defense, prosperity, liberty, for ourselves and for the nation’s grandchildren and beyond and by this amendable constitution authorize and limit the U.S.’s service to the people in their states.” I want to collaborate with the other citizens on this paraphrase and theirs. I would preserve the original, 1787, text, unless it is amended by the people.
It seems no one has challenged whether or not the preamble is a legal statement. The fact that it changed this independent country from a confederation of states to a union of states deliberately managed by disciplined fellow citizens convinces me the preamble is legal. Equality in opportunity and outcome is shared by the people who collaborate for human justice.
Every citizen has equal opportunity to either trust-in and collaborate-on the goals stated in the preamble or be dissident to the agreement. I think 2/3 of citizens try somewhat to use the preamble but many do not articulate commitment to the goals. However, it seems less than 2/3 understand that “posterity” implies grandchildren. “Freedom of religion,” which fellow citizens have no means to discipline, oppresses freedom to develop integrity.

Selected theme from this week
The Advocate republished my comments from last year. The Advocate personnel seems to be recycling some of my comments from last year preserving my Facebook opportunity to edit and update them. Perhaps it is like a debate---a civic, civil, and legal collaboration for a civic integrity. Just as my person is not the same as last year, my opinions improve with collaboration. But I cannot access The Advocate opinion from a year ago; the public URL did not change.

Our Views (The Advocate, local press in Baton Rouge, LA)

Another view from last year posted by The Advocate and updated by PRB (https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/our_views/article_28b32ca2-047f-11e9-83ff-d3bc7d721d00.html)

Those Advocate personnel who are responsible for “Our Views,” relish irresponsibility and hubris in their case for “Kennedy gets it wrong . . .” Were I among them, my appreciation for the fact that I do not know what I do not know would drive me to edit my caption to “Kennedy seems to get it wrong . . .”

More importantly, after being the infamous April Fool’s 2018 champion to undo Louisiana’s impartial 10:2 unanimous verdicts with 12:0 absolutism in felony trials, how can The Advocate editors publish the mendacity, “Should the perfect be the enemy of the good?” That's as foolish as "Is God responsible for evil?"

Should jury absolutism pre-empt impartiality? Same answer: no.

Not only that, the U.S. Constitution, in Amendment VI, makes it clear that U.S. impartiality pre-empted British tradition---both absolute unanimity and stipulation of “peers.” The Advocate, the LSBA, and the Louisiana Legislature acted U.S. unconstitutionally in imposing on Louisiana citizens British colonial absolutism. French-influenced Louisiana had the sole U.S. brilliance to establish both impartiality and favor toward jury members who seek equal justice under statutory law.

I hope to see an injunction to prevent enactment of Amendment 2 from November 6, 2018. The scheme that eventually created a popular referendum to overturn Louisiana’s provisions of impartial jury verdicts and replace them with absolutism was unconstitutional based on the 1787 U.S. Constitution, Amendment VI (1791), Amendment XIV.1. (1868), and Johnson v Louisiana (1972).

The tyranny against the people was based on mendacities The Advocate personnel championed, including citing Jim Crow quotations, suggesting people view themselves as the accused rather than the victim, quoting John Adams, etc.

Placing before the people the opportunity to enact emotional democracy in order to overthrow statutory law may be likened to terminating the U.S. Constitution because it was framed during slavery!

This tyranny was imposed under the “watch” of Gov. John Bel Edwards. I hope AG Jeff Landry will stop it and the tyranny becomes one of the defining issues in removing Edwards from office.

I am glad Kennedy will continue in the office I helped elect him to. I don’t know enough about Ralph Abraham, but I’d like both of those gentlemen to take advantage of 230 years’ experience and help establish the civic, civil, and legal agreement that is offered in the U.S. preamble as an aid to civic integrity, committing to mature adulthood the practice of religion, whether theism, spiritualism, philosophy, or metaphysics is involved or not. Based on the chaos Judeo-Christianity has achieved in the succession from 1789 factional-American Protestantism, the time for civic integrity has come.

Is it possible for The Advocate personnel to back-pedal their published hypocrisy? No. May the employees individually reform so that most of the whole reforms? Yes. Should we the people of the United States (the actors in the agreement that is offered in the U.S. preamble) amend the first amendment to provide for freedom of a responsible press? Yes. Freedom to pursue civic integrity? Yes. Do I want my hometown newspaper to lead these reforms? Yes!
To Matt Trekkie:  Every fellow citizen who wants individual happiness with civic integrity will persevere for equal justice under statutory law. Each person has the individual power, the individual energy, and the individual authority (IPEA) to pursue either crime or statutory justice. The U.S. preamble offers each citizen the freedom-to choose either infidelity or civic integrity.

Another view from last year posted by The Advocate and updated by PRB (Dec 26) (https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/our_views/article_679faa10-e759-11e7-a074-930e0ac94614.html)
Our library meetings to promote the actual use of the preamble to the constitution for the USA rather than to lamely claim “we, the people” seems to separate my opinion more and more from the opinions The Advocate promotes. The USA is unique in the world.

In the first place, on July 4, 1776, thirteen English colonizes formally changed their style to states, and declared that the existing war with England was for independence. Only 40% of the people wanted independence, 40% were satisfied to remain in the English commonwealth, and 20% were loyal with the potential to individually return to England.

The longstanding competition for eastern seaboard civic integrity between each indigenous peoples, France, England, and the colonists reached a climax at Yorktown in 1781. Colonies beyond the eastern seaboard, Spanish, French, Russian and others were not directly involved. France’s strategy and military dominance aided the former colonists (proclaimed statesmen) to defeat England. The statesmen ratified the 1783 Treaty of Paris that recognized thirteen free and independent states, naming each of them. They remained free and independent for four years.

However, on June 21, 1788, nine of the states ratified the 1787 U.S. Constitution, hoping the four remaining free and independent states would join. Dissidence, in about 1/3 proportion, seems to be a feature of the USA heretofore. Potential for authority had passed from England to the states to the willing people in their states. People of only two states joined the 1788 USA. The first Congress, seated on March 4, 1789, represented only eleven states. People of the other two states were, for their reasons, dissidents to the USA.

I assert that the above brief history represents both a civic people of the United States (meaning those who either explicitly or tacitly collaborate to achieve the goals stated in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution) as well as dissidents (those who for reasons they may or may not understand oppose the civic, civil, and legal agreement stated by the preamble). “Civic” refers to people collaborating for statutory justice whether the municipality or dominant culture is just or not.

This is not a British Commonwealth country. The USA is free from the traditional mixed constitution (classism), the Church of England’s role in Parliament, English common law, and lordly fox hunting. The colonists knew nothing of hunting, because the English commoners were not allowed to hunt on English lords’ estates. However, the indigenous peoples in this land taught the colonists how to hunt and fish for sustenance rather than to kill game merely to prepare for a night of reverie. Today, Americans, under District of Columbia v. Heller, 2008, may own guns for personal use such as hunting. Hunting for food is an American practice that English Boxing Day cannot imagine.

Attempting to dominate American life with Christianity is so common few people know how to object or would go to the trouble. Especially, when the President of the USA attempts to impose his religious views on the people, as President Trump seems to have done this year. Without objecting to Trump’s decisions, I point out that fellow-citizen and General George Washington’s farewell dated June 8, 1783 expressed civic commitment without interjecting personal theism. However, promoting Boxing Day seems anti-American. In my view, with such a frivolous Christian and business promotion, The Advocate expresses dissidence against the American republic.

I commend/request The Advocate to forget Boxing Day and promote June 21 as the date the USA was established, perhaps calling it “Individual Independence Day.” Celebrate each citizen’s opportunity to establish personal authority---the personal civic integrity to collaborate on the responsibility that is required for human freedom. In other words, promote the use of the agreement that is offered to fellow citizens by the preamble to the U.S. Constitution.

The Advocate has the advantage that these civic ideas came from five years of public meetings in EBRP libraries and can be traced to the participants. The candid civic collaboration originates in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and has the potential to establish an achievable, better future in the USA.
(Originally posted on 12/26/17. Updated 12/26/18 by Phil Beaver.)

Second post:
On December 26, 2017, I objected to Boxing Day (a commonwealth practice) as particularly un-American due to fox hunting not being for sustenance. The commoners who came to this country learned from the indigenous peoples hunting (and fishing) for food. Next day, I learned more about The Advocate’s St. Stephen promotion and assert that on that basis Boxing Day is even more un-American.

Further to my claim that America is independent of the British Commonwealth, America is independent of the Vatican and its fickle, factional, feudal system of saints. St. Stephen might be the patron of Serbia, a couple towns in Italy, a town in each Belgium and Germany, and Owensboro, Kentucky. See
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Stephen and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patron_saints_of_places.

The latter reference lists patrons of countries: St. George for England, St. Andrew for Scotland, St. Patrick for Ireland and, beyond Britain, for examples, St. Michael for France and the Virgin Mary for the USA. Again, we’d need to apply to the Vatican for modern listings. (I’ll never forget MWW’s comment in the late sixties: “Oh, no. Just when my personal religion is being considered the Pope disqualifies some familiar saints!”) The patron system is important to many Louisiana Parishes.

Folks in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana have an indigenous remembrance. “In 1810, President James Madison claimed West Florida as part of Louisiana and sent William C. C. Claiborne to claim the territory. Claiborne established the boundaries of the Florida Parishes. He created St. Tammany Parish and named it after the Delaware Indian Chief Tamanend (c.1628-1698), who made peace with William Penn and was generally renowned for his goodness. Among the nine Louisiana parishes (counties) named for "saints" (see "List of parishes in Louisiana"), St. Tammany is the only one whose eponym is not a saint of the Roman Catholic Church, the ecclesiastical parishes of which formed the basis for the state's civil parishes. In fact, Tamanend is not known to have been a Christian, and was certainly not a Roman Catholic. However, he became popularly revered as an "American patron saint" in the post-Revolutionary period (long after his death).” See
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Tammany_Parish,_Louisiana.

America can be great because of its unique past collaborations for goodness. By educating both the young and the immigrants about the neglected American promise, a better future may be made possible. The neglected American dream is stated in the civic agreement that is offered in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution. The preamble invites human collaboration for mutual, comprehensive safety and security for everyone, including dissidents. In other words, a culture of statutory justice. Dissidents either reform to the culture’s example and statutory law or suffer constraint if they cause actual harm.

Dissidents include those who want to change the American republic, for example, into a European model. Or a Christian-style democracy. The Advocate opines for themselves, but I consider many of their causes, including Boxing Day, un-American. The Advocate might respond that I am just not among the elite---a modern Tammany proponent rather than a Cincinnati patron. I argue that on the basis of trust and commitment to the agreement stated in the preamble, I represent the elite American fellow citizen.

Members of the British Commonwealth cannot possibly understand the promise that is offered Americans and the future greatness that can accrue to the world. Most Americans may encounter, consider, and accept the authority to personally take the responsibility for human freedom in both public and private human contacts each person needs or wants. Just as a person must work for food, a person must work for statutory justice.

We know that neither government nor theism seeks to deliver statutory justice: The authority to discover and establish statutory justice rests with willing individuals.
(Originally posted on 12/27/17. Updated 12/26/18 by Phil Beaver.)
Third post by Phil Beaver, 12/28/2018:  
To JT McQuitty:
JTM’s clarity is excellent and helped bring me back.

Realizing that the two posts of my comments from a year ago (below) distracted me from this “Our Views,” I returned to share my 2018 opinion on the 2018 version. I think readers may be interested in the subtle overtones in this year’s “Happy Boxing Day.” (I tried to use the URL in my blog, “cipbr,” to read the 2017 edition, but alas, it gave me the 2018 version.)
The Advocate personnel’s propriety struck me as a cross between French-influenced Mardi Gras and British classism. I use “propriety” to represent words and phrases they know and we can discover.
“Revel” to replace “merry” gave me the sense the proprietary opinion blends Christmas with Mardi-Gras, with its French and Catholic roots. A Google search gave me “The first American Mardi Gras took place on March 3, 1699, when French explorers Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville and Sieur de Bienville landed near present-day New Orleans, Louisiana.”
I leave it to others to discover whether or not Mardi Gras is a Christian celebration, a Catholic rite, or sheer debauchery. I would not want to start a path the history of priestly abuses of parishioners.
Nine states established the U.S. on June 21, 1788. There were 17 states when France sold the Louisiana territory to the U.S. Congress granted Louisiana statehood in 1812. (Recall that in 1880, Louisiana broke free from British colonialism by conforming to U.S. Amendment VI’s 1791 stipulation that states provide impartial juries. Louisiana adopted the impartial 9-3 unanimous majority verdict instead of 12:0 absolutism. The other states retained colonial British absolutism, even though England reformed in 1967. Now, Louisiana is in a position to restore the 9:3 rule for felony verdicts and initiate graduated rules for more serious crimes, such as 11:1 for aggravated murder.)
Liberty, equality and fraternity is a French idea that conflicts with both British classism and England’s constitutional Canterbury-lords-partnership in Parliament. And neither of those two long-standing cultures has recognized the promise of the civic, civil, and legal agreement that is offered in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution. In the U.S., fellow citizens are offered the opportunity to collaborate for equal justice under statutory law. Let me repeat that: a citizen’s responsibility to collaborate for equal justice has been known since Athenian Greece, 2400 years ago, and in the U.S., the agreement is offered in the U.S. preamble.
Meanwhile The Advocate personnel think opinions supporting Christmas revelry and Downton-Abbey classism will enhance their business plan! Readers may wonder if there are European combatants in unexpected places.
The alien-reform that is needed is to stop widely repressing the civic, civil, and legal power of the U.S. preamble. Fellow citizens may effect this reform, but leaders who promote it might put lasting warmth in their hearts. I think I will witness acceleration of the preamble’s agreement in my lifetime.

The preamble proposes that fellow citizens discipline their lives so as to prevent local, state, and federal governments as well as religious institutions (perhaps including the press) from repressing the opportunity to pursue happiness with civic integrity during one human life. Happiness and integrity cannot be separated, and the victims of infidelity are the grandchildren and beyond: “our Posterity,” quoting the U.S. preamble.

More than any hometown newspaper in the world, The Advocate employees can take on this reform, because the ideas (far beyond these) are being generated in local libraries by equal fellow citizens.
I look forward to 2019, but revelry and subjugation to opinion are not on my list of interests.

conserving the worst traditions ( Dec 25) (https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/our_views/article_ebcbf0a4-de66-5e03-bbcc-da1bcc5098c2.html)
Nothing is more hilarious than a social democrat writing to preserve ruinous tradition. And that is what naïve personnel for The Advocate accomplish in this editorial. We the People of the United States who live in Louisiana need relief from The Advocate’s traditionally irresponsible freedom of expression.
I write to aid acceleration of the retreat from false teaching such as 1) humans must conflict, 2) love and charity are more valuable than appreciation and collaboration, 3) faith is religion, 4) and Christianity is free from hate. These false teachings arise from Christianity’s failure to accept civic, civil, and legal governance for living so that it may focus on salvation of believer’s reason-constructed souls.
Respecting readers’ reasons to refuse to consider points 1-4, I ask them to consider only John’s Christianity in John 15:18-23.
In my fifth decade, I realized that my Sunday school class tacitly believed that my Christian wife and children hated them and me. I decided that repeatedly defending their infant baptism and other differences of opinion was futile. Therefore, I dropped out of Sunday school, much to my pastor’s concern that the church was losing a thought provoker. Little did I realize that I had dropped out of religion so as to affirm my faith-in (trust-in and commitment-to) the-objective-truth. That phrase may be grammatically wrong, but it invites the reader to understand that “objective truth” is insufficient in the search for actual reality or civic integrity. Recently, in my eighth decade, I discovered John 15:18-23 with regret that the church never attempted to teach it. I reject the hate Christianity would impose on me.

The Advocate personnel published, “Human conflict is as old as humanity itself, and it remains a constant in every season, even one supposedly devoted to peace and joy.” And further, “Those teachings, which affirm the value of love and charity, continue to resonate with those of other faiths, and even with many of those who claim no faith at all.” And delivers the hypocrisy, “Today, we renew our hope for peace and good will, and we wish our readers a merry Christmas.” Where’s the humility to wish non-believers “happy holiday” or something?

My wish during this possible season of good will to all is that my hometown newspaper will reform from irresponsible freedom of the press. Also, that its focus will turn from a living constitution to an amendable U.S. constitution; from social democracy to civic integrity; from socialism to equal justice under statutory law; from church-state partnership to statutory justice; from faith in reason to commitment to the-objective-truth; from imposition of Christianity to humility toward actual reality, whether God is to be discovered or not.

Readers who do not understand my writing are invited to do the work to comprehend and refute rather than attempt to censor my work, which proposes to collaborate for peace at last. I think we can enjoy collaboration to end conflict during my life.
(Originally posted on 12/25/17. Updated 12/25/18 by Phil Beaver.)
Second post after checking on repost from 12/25/2017
I checked both my Facebook account and my Twitter account and see no tampering today, after killing a Facebook problem yesterday.
It’s a mystery to me that my 12/25/2017 post was re-posted today, a year later. I don’t object, except that I was not using the pic of MWW and me last year. The 12/25/17 text is available on one of my blogs---cipbr and in The Advocate records. However, when you click on the pic for the strange message it ought not take you to my Facebook URL yet does, and as readers may see, I can edit it.
I suspect the extraneous posting with my name “Phil Beaver” and odd pics of beaver-animal faces are attempts to silence me. Hopefully, they are unrelated to this incident.
However, drawing attention to me by re-posting a year old appeal to civic integrity rather than Christian bullying and hate seems strange. I called the police, but they cannot help because I have not been physically attacked. I tried to call The Advocate but understandably no one answered. I will continue to try to understand what is happening.

Third post after checking on repost from 12/25/2017
I checked with my computer guru whom I recommend, so check with me for the ID. The technician surmised that this incident is an artifact of The Advocate's software system. The use of my current pic is incidental with Facebook. That is, my post from last year would be automatically updated to my current  pic. I hope it's another case of all's well and people are behaving.

I like the re-posting of my last year's message and hope an achievable culture of civic integrity is on it's way.
To JT McQuitty:
Interpersonal trust within the U.S. steadily fell from 48% in 1984 to 31% in 2014; https://ourworldindata.org/trust. That's a 35% decline in the latter 13% of the nation's age!

A shift in focus from Judeo-Christianity morality to the national discipline of civic integrity (a practice) might reverse the trend.
Widespread collaboration using the purpose and goals for individual discipline that are offered in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution perhaps would reverse the march to anarchy.

If not, at least the nation would know that the agreement that is offered in the preamble is worthless rather than merely neglected.
JT McQuitty again:


Your comments on the data collection invite the disclosure that I found https://ourworldindata.org/trust searching with the phrase "religious affiliation."


Also, I prefer that your quote of me cover both paragraphs, which I condense, after correction, to "A shift in focus from Judeo-Christian morality to . . . widespread collaboration using the purpose and goals for individual discipline that are offered in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution perhaps would reverse the march to anarchy."


The U.S. preamble is neutral to gender, race, skin-color, religion, wealth, ancestry, ethnicity, and many other distinctions, whereas Judeo-Christian morals exclude people. Consider John's opinions in John 15:18-23. I reject John’s opinion because I reject hate as a civic practice.

The U.S. preamble also addresses your point that, for example, a population wherein the majority collaborate for equal justice under statutory law may enjoy more trust that a people who do not believe in justice.


The U.S. preamble is neutral to gender, race, skin-color, religion, wealth, ancestry, ethnicity, and many other distinctions, whereas Judeo-Christian morals exclude people. Consider John's opinions in John 15:18-23. I reject John’s opinion because I reject hate as a civic practice.

The U.S. preamble also addresses your point that, for example, a population wherein the majority collaborate for equal justice under statutory law may enjoy more trust that a people who do not believe in justice.


annual press irresponsibility regarding Santa (https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/our_views/article_11822cc8-c62d-11e6-a44c-abcc411b0614.html?mode=comments)
Parents who introduce their young children to "mysteries of faith" like the gift-giving Santa may eventually face challenges like, "My classmates teased me that Santa is not real: What’s the-objective-truth?"

One of my children asked, and I answered, "The person, Santa, is made-up, but the idea is true."

I continued, to protect my child from further concern or debate and assure our integrity, not expecting the follow-up questions, below.

I explained, "Santa is a personification--a myth to represent an idea. Santa represents the idea of responsible goodwill toward other people.

Most people naturally want to practice goodwill always but are imperfect and sometimes act unkindly. Some people don't want goodwill for reasons they may or may not understand. Most cultures have a traditional event to recall, renew, and encourage fidelity to goodwill throughout the community. In majority-Christian communities, that time of the year is Christmastime, during which some people celebrate the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem. In the story, three wise men carried gifts to the baby Jesus.

In Christian tradition, the patron saint of children is St. Nicholas. Some Christians, for givers’ anonymity, named St. Nicholas the gift giver, and the name evolved to ‘Santa.’

Santa is accepted beyond the Christian community, especially by stores, to promote sales. Thus, the tradition of gift-giving extends to adults as well."

My 8-year-old daughter responded, "So the gifts marked 'from Santa' are really from you and Mom like my classmates said? Mom put cookies out and you ate them?"

I answered, "Yes."

She softly said, "Thank you, Dad," and went to thank her mom for another wonderful yearly effort.

There was no "humbug" in my candid response. Gifts from our daughter have always been thoughtful and novel. Nearly 35 years have passed and at some point during Christmas eve dinners she happily shouts "Let's hurry! I want to see what Santa brought."

Santa means good will toward everyone if there are no objections.

Letters
Personally alienating IPEA (Joseph J. Vizzini) (https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/letters/article_845a0e54-055b-11e9-8544-9bda9e044e08.html)
Citizens who collaborate for statutory justice are not impressed with references to “society,” an obvious attempt to impose on the people the hopes and comforts of the writer’s special interest group. This use of the word “society” may be a product of social democracy, the not so innocent movement to distract the march toward statutory justice.
It has not been expressed this way in the past, but every human being has the individual power, the individual energy, and the individual authority (IPEA) to either develop infidelity or integrity. For example, a person may pursue either crime or statutory justice, the ultimate goal of statutory law and its enforcement. IPEA cannot be consigned, for example to the believer’s god or to a government.

In this country, the freedom to choose the extremes---infidelity or integrity, or any variation---is registered in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution. I know of no other sentence that admits to the human prerogative to both choose infidelity and face any consequences. Happy is the fellow citizen who recognizes the importance of the U.S. preamble and collaborates to achieve its purpose and goals.
These ideas are further explored in response to Vizzini’s Lopez reference on my Facebook page.
To Ricky Thompson: I agree and suggest that you are also a primary victim of the crime.


The first victim of crime is the civic fellow citizens who, because some fellow citizens think crime pays, choose to provide and maintain the justice system. By "maintain" I include continually improve.


When the crime is aggravated murder, the criminal has chosen crime, taken a life, and the civic fellow citizens have no recourse but to support statutory law and its enforcement.


Let 2019 be the year we fellow citizens of the U.S. break free from England. “The phrase hearhear seems to have come into existence as an abbreviation of the phrase hear him, hear him, which was well-established in Parliament in the late seventeenth century.” U.S. individuals may reject most British influence, past and current, so as to help establish statutory justice.

Seriousness aside, beyond “hear him,” there’s “consider his opinion,” discover whether or not it collaborates for either infidelity or for statutory justice, and publically share your position.

If infidelity, give actually real evidence to make your case. If constructive, either affirm the fidelity to statutory justice or add personal viewpoints that enhance his opinion so that he can consider them for improvement of his statements.

The Athenian Greeks informed humankind to take responsibility for equal justice under statutory law. Four hundred years later, Jesus died, and some people constructed theological competition with Judaism. In another 400 years, the Church had completed a book the Roman emperor could use to convert pagans to Christians. In another 1600 years, the Church is exploding over its secret protection of human abuses.

In the Church’s theory, as demonstrated by its performance, it can forestall civic, civil, and legal justice in this life for an eternity in their metaphysical world. However, a civic people are in charge of statutory justice for every human being’s lifetime, a brief 80 years of, so far, perhaps 8 trillion man-years of experience. The Church’s metaphysics is easy as long as there are some believers. However, the physics of murder is terminal for the victim and if aggravated may also be terminal for the murderer.

History shows there will always be dissidents to statutory justice. However, it is the only possible provision for individual happiness with civic integrity. The people are responsible for it, and the Church’s voice is like sand thrown into the wind.

I gave Mr. Vizzini each hear, consider, assess and rebuke.

Ms. Kooi, I have no idea what you heard. Do you know and can you present evidence?

Substituting “science” for discovery (Marion Friestadt) (Climate change . . . )(not yet online)
Scientist Freistadt illustrates how ignorant self-adulation can seem and how insensitive the press is to writers who beg shame.
So many fellow citizens don’t recognize that science is a study-practice that can focus on discovering the-objective-truth or diverge in pursuit of a mirage. People like Albert Einstein are discovers who use the scientific method in their work.
The atmospheric temperature has been cycling for 50 million years in a range that dwarfs scientific-model power. Furthermore, other than being more sensible about economic feasibility of further populating the earth, proposing human control of the cycling is like chasing a mirage in the desert.
For a “scientist” to refuse actual reality, whatever it is, is shameful. Friestadt would have done himself a favor to write his letter, look in the mirror, and admit: Friestadt doesn’t know the-objective-truth.
Columns
Theists pretend that God made man in his image and from there broke off woman as a rib. The authors of that ancient hoax did not expect humans, with their IPEA, to reason that God therefore had their skin color, mostly shades of brown, but with outliers like red and pure black. Maybe the-God has skin, but I doubt it. Regardless, the-God is not any of the spokespersons for the Catholic Church. Every person has the IPEA to claim that the Church fails statutory justice.

(I trust-in and commit-to the-objective-truth and will not again turn my back on the indisputable facts to pursue a god’s wisdom. Grammar rejects my expression for actual reality, but the hyphens prevent any but the arrogant reader from psychologically converting my expression to “objective truth” or “truth” or any of a multitude of words and phrases scholars use to establish that their opinion represents the-objective-truth.)
Many people, for example, Abraham Lincoln, have focused on humankind’s responsibilities. He faced a justice-dissident faction that claimed Lincoln led a “more erroneous religious opinion.” Lincoln responded “Why should there not be a patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the people? Is there any better or equal hope in the world?”
The Athenian Greeks, 400 years before perpetrators constructed Christianity and 800 years before the Church canonized the New Testament, argued for equal justice under statutory law.

Without crime, there would be no need for justice. Without crime there would be no victims. Criminals victimize first the people who collaborate for statutory justice and second the direct victim of crime.
When the crime is aggravated murder, the victim is dead. Enforcement of statutory justice is the people’s only recourse. The people’s system is continually improved, for example, with DNA evidence. The Church wants DNA evidence to exonerate the falsely-accused but not to convict the murderer.  If the people allow the Church, organized crime, or any other civic faction to overthrow statutory justice, ultimate justice will be left to the-God; in other words, left to chaos.
It has not been represented this way, but the preamble to the U.S. Constitution is the tacit civic, civil, and legal agreement by which fellow citizens either pursue crime or collaborate for statutory justice. Lincoln, in his Gettysburg address, seemed to perceive the power of the U.S. preamble but mislead the immediate future when he spoke of “governance” rather than civic discipline of, by, and for the people. No civic citizen wants to govern fellow citizens, but all people perceive that discipline lessens personal misery and loss. This message can help terminate Lincoln’s fallacy.
Governance under statutory law and law enforcement with the U.S. preamble’s goal of statutory justice according to the-objective-truth is under attack by social democrats---the proponents for anarchy rather than “ultimate justice of the people.” Both England and France, America’s 1787 opponent and 1781 ally, respectively, are in chaos today because of social democracy. American’s can find relief by trusting-in and committing-to the civic, civil, and legal agreement that is offered willing citizens in the U.S. preamble. The revolution against British colonialism in America has barely begun, because past regimes have suppressed the power of the U.S. preamble.
The 2000-year history shows the Church is so ignorant about life it is powerless to offer living citizens anything but continual abuse! Both believers and non-believers can end the misery and loss.
Sacrificing the US Constitution for social justice (Stephanie Grace) (https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/stephanie_grace/article_1214cbfe-0547-11e9-a924-4f1605b69a12.html?mode=comments)
Louisiana’s impartial 10:2 unanimous-majority verdicts is a brilliant development from this country’s 1774 rebellion against the British Empire. French-settled Louisiana was then ruled by Spain, neither of which favored British tradition. The Louisiana law was unconstitutionally attacked.

The goal of the U.S. Constitution is statutory justice rather than social democracy. Fellow citizens are offered an agreement, the U.S. preamble, which is the basis for developing statutory justice. By trusting-in and committing-to the preamble’s agreement fellow citizens may know that they deserve equal justice under statutory law. When a crime occurs, the justice system is in place to protect current and future victims without convicting a falsely accused fellow citizen.
But some citizens use their individual power, energy, and authority to commit a crime. The entire statutory justice system is needed only because some fellow citizens think crime pays. Criminals organize.

The 1774 British colonists suffered abuses and declared they were statesmen rather than loyal colonists. Virginia still has in their bill of rights requirements that criminal trials provide the accused “the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of his vicinage, without whose unanimous consent he cannot be found guilty. He shall not be deprived of life or liberty, except by the law of the land or the judgment of his peers . . . “ But Virginia's conflicting provisions did not hold in the USA formation: the US dropped "unanimous" and "peers" leaving them to the states.

The US Constitution drops “unanimous” and “peers,” in favor of “impartial.” Starting in 1880, French-influenced Louisiana brilliantly favored impartiality and peers by creating the 9:3 unanimous-majority verdict rather than the erroneous 12:0 absolutism in the other 38 states. By 1967, England had reformed to 10:2 verdicts to lessen organized crime’s influence of juries. Most former British colonies have adopted unanimous-majority verdicts rather than absolutism.

One other point:  The Advocate’s statistical social politics hurt black fellow citizens 700% disproportionately to whites. FBI data show that with only 13% of the population, blacks account for about half of crimes, and 90% of black crimes are black on black. Perpetrators dropped the original “Jim Crow” racial appeal and convinced innocent voters to imagine themselves the accused rather than the victim.

I think by creating a referendum to end Louisiana impartial 10:2 verdicts the Louisiana Legislature broke its commitments to both the Louisiana Constitution and the U.S. Constitutional according to U.S. Article II, Section 2 (1788), Amendments V and VI (1791), Amendment XIV.1 (1868), the Civil Rights Act against discrimination (1964), and Johnson v Louisiana (1972).

National special interest groups have always fought Louisiana’s impartial criminal verdicts, but the Legislature’s unconstitutional action was instigated by the Louisiana State Bar Association (LSBA) and The Advocate personnel with their erroneous social statistics. Every lawyer in the state must below to LSBA, but they also swear to uphold the U.S. Constitution and the Louisiana Constitution.

Finally, the U.S. is founded on a 2,400-year-old Greek principle, equal justice under statutory law. Civic citizens collaborate for law and social democrats conflict against statutory justice. Grace pushes for “basic fairness,” claiming to know “the founders’ original intent,” and that the words of the U.S. Constitution count for nothing. She expresses freedom of the irresponsible press.
On my facebook page the next day, 12/24:
Yesterday, I tried to comment on Stephanie Grace's column about the recent U.S. unconstitutional referendum on 12:0 criminal jury absolutism to replace Louisiana's impartial 10:2 unanimous-majority verdicts. In the process, I saw the flag for reader comments disappear.


Later, I clicked on the Facebook flag and was taken to my page. My comments on the Grace column may be viewed below at 12/23/2018, 9:35 AM.


Perhaps The Advocate personnel decided they no longer want a community forum on their opinions. In other words, The Advocate personnel withdrew into a shell. Maybe they decided freedom of expression restricts freedom of the press.


If so, I'm reminded of an old saying: If you can't stand the-objective-truth don't attempt collaboration for discovery.


Other fora
https://www.quora.com/Why-is-democracy-regarded-as-a-modern-form-of-government?
“Democracy” according to Merriam-Webster online, in my paraphrase, is first, either direct popular rule or popular selection of representatives in government, fourth the “common” people and fifth, the absence of classism within the people.

There are several modern movements under the word “democracy.” First, there’s the perhaps misguided ambition for every government to provide either inhabitants or citizens one vote each on elections and referenda. Governance almost never conforms to the vote. Second, there is a movement for political chaos, whereby whatever the majority wants now they get right away. The U.S. Constitution spoils that hope yet is losing to activist judges who operate outside the constitution. Third, there’s the sincere desire to hear every voice, yet collaborate for civic integrity. I work to establish the later use of democracy in the U.S. representative republic.

The 1787 U.S. Constitution offers a representative republic, wherein many laws and institutions ruin democracy. Yet the U.S. preamble offers willing people a purpose and goals that express self-discipline by fellow citizens in their states so as to manage the governments---local, state, and national, respectively---in increasing fidelity to the constitution.
The 1789 Congress, only nine months after nine states, on June 21, 1788, established the U.S., bemused the preamble’s goals by mimicking the constitutionally required Canterbury-Lords-partnership in Parliament. Congress hired factional-Protestant congressional chaplains. They gave Congress a “divine” status. Thereby, Congress created the British-like Bill of Rights, 1791.
These Congressional actions were unconstitutional according to the U.S. preamble, which is neutral to religion---in integrity leaves metaphysics a matter of personal interest or not. However, Congress could get away with it because only 5% of free inhabitants were citizens who could vote and 99% of them were American-factional Protestants. Today, 99% may vote and only 14% are traditional-American Protestants.
The Bill of Rights comprise 10 amendments, and since 1791, only 17 amendments have been added. That’s 13.4 years per amendment. Louisiana, from 1974 to 2017, amended the state constitution 300 times, or 7 years per amendment. During that time, the church-state-partnership has morphed from factional-American Protestantism to Judeo-Catholicism as represented by the nine-member U.S. Supreme Court.

The Warren Court (1953-1969) accelerated a “living constitution” philosophy attributed to Oliver Wendell Holmes and Woodrow Wilson. That movement erroneously expresses human rights without responsibilities or the chaos of direct democracy. It is important to note the decline in American freedom-from oppression since the Warren Court, and perhaps that will surface after the 50Th anniversary of 1968, a pivotal year in American chaos of the last half century.
 
Thankfully, President Trump has nominated to the U.S. Supreme Court two justices who may help restore the march to civic integrity that was tacitly intended in the non-theistic 1787 U.S. Constitution.
Theism seems antagonistic toward the nanny-state social democracy that seems noisy and popular just now. However, by divesting the imposition of metaphysics into the appeal to collaboration with social democrats, the value of civic integrity for life can become clear, and the slowness of the U.S. representative republic can be seen as an advantage for mutual, comprehensive safety and security.
Democracy does not demand the responsibility that is required for statutory justice. Individual discipline, as invited in the U.S. preamble, the key to an achievable, better future, has never been established among a majority.

https://www.quora.com/Does-democracy-work-when-you-only-have-60-participation?
Democracy cannot work, because the human individual is too powerful to yield to opinion. No other existing species has the ability to establish a different opinion. But there may be relief.
Consider the civic, civil, and legal agreement that is offered in the U.S. preamble and the articles and amendments that follow it, some of which do not conform to the preamble’s purpose and goals.
The grammatical subject and political actor in the U.S. preamble is “We the People of the United States.” However, the rest of the sentence is a civic, civil, and legal agreement to individually collaborate for equal justice under statutory law. Remarkably, fellow citizens are free to either adopt the agreement or be dissidents to it. Thus, there is no intention to force totalitarianism, yet a collective pursuit of civic integrity may develop.
Those who adopt the agreement may behave according to personal preference: know and obey the law whether there’s statutory justice or not; notify an official if an injustice is discovered; also offer a well-grounded remedy; or publically act to effect reform of injustice.
Dissidents may range from fellow citizens who sometime learn the law when their behavior causes harm to ones who think crime pays until they are arrested.
Discovery and correction of unjust laws is a continual necessity because the physics of actual reality evolves. Any individual, at any time in his or her life, is subject to his or her understanding of statutory law in addition to any reforms toward statutory justice.
The individual who chooses development of civic integrity suffers the vagary of humankind’s diverse marches toward statutory justice. For example, just this morning, I wrote about my hometown newspaper expressing both French and British influences when they could promote the U.S. preamble. So far, humankind failed to establish a standard of civic integrity. Most nations use various constructs, such as a religious morality, a philosophy, or military force to control citizens. The consequence is that the world is in political chaos, even though wars perhaps diminished.
Scholars compare the wisdom of reason vs nature, and many of them favor reason. However, physics, the object of scientific study rather than the study, is the source of everything that can be affirmed by evidence. In the best terms I know, everything emerges from E=mC-squared, which in 2016, with discovery of gravitational waves became Einstein’s law of general relativity.

No one would argue that reason cannot be used to stop a tsunami. Reason may be used to explore the physics of the tsunami, but cannot directly prevent one. Likewise, ethics cannot limit integrity; in fact, the discovery of integrity may be used to journal the status of ethics. Finally, Einstein’s only example that integrity is based on physics is the statement that humans avoid lying so as to lessen misery and loss. The use of physics and its progeny such as biology to dispel deceit is illustrated in Rudyard Kipling’s short story, “The Man Who Would Be King.” The men of the village elected the king to be God, but the women cut his skin to disclose the blood evidence that he was only a man.
Thus, discounting all the scholarship that elevates reason above “nature” as a surrogate for physics, the object of scientific study, can rid humankind of the binds of metaphysics and establish a standard for developing statutory justice. I label principles that may be established and maintained through scientific discovery of physics as part of the-objective-truth. The hyphens are used to prevent the reader from ignoring the article. That is “objective truth” can deviate from the-objective-truth.
Under the sparse acceptance of the agreement to pursue equal justice under statutory law, opinion in the U.S. often gravitates toward a 2/3 majority (67%). For example, almost 60% believe a woman should be able to decide whether to remain pregnant or not. Of the 12/13 state delegates to the 1787 constitutional development, only 71% of the framers signed the U.S. preamble and the articles that followed. It required ratification by 9/13 states.

The U.S. is a representative republic, with many offices elected by means other than popular vote. Some people among California’s 40 million think it is unfair that Wyoming’s 0.6 million also has two senators. The system is so slow that statutory justice has time to influence written law. Thus, America is designed to spoil democracy. The fact that citizens, empowered by the U.S. preamble, may collaborate for civic, civil, and legal justice is made clear by the optional status of the contract.
It seems the 1787 framers of the U.S. Constitution recognized that even mature populations such as the people of England’s 3500 year old culture could not pursue statutory justice by popular vote. Out of the 1787 deliberations, the committee of forms created the U.S. preamble, and some framers chose not to sign it. We may be grateful to the 39/55 of delegates from 12/13 states or 66% of representatives who signed the U.S. preamble and the rest of the 1787 Constitution.

An achievable better future is possible because of the people who trust-in and commit-to the agreement offered by the U.S. preamble.
Perhaps this explanation of U.S. fellow citizens’ powers to divide based on individual intent to either establish statutory justice or not will accelerate possible recovery from 230-years’ neglect of the opportunity to collaborate for individual happiness with civic integrity.

I appreciate your post and copied it to a word file so as to study its details. Thank you.
Your writing has corollaries to my work to unlock the yoke of past scholarship’s word usage. For example, “A right is first of all a moral principle. Not in the religious sense, but in the natural sense,” becomes more direct with this new, specific usage of old words: Rights derive from physics more than from psychology.
Here, “physics” represents something like if not e=mC squared from which everything derives including fiction, lies, and spiritualism.
My work is tedious in that much effort must be invested in the word usages. But once they are mastered, the Babel of the world may be reduced. For example, once an audience understands that religion is empowered by physics’ unknowns, that is, what exists but has not been discovered, it is not difficult to accept that someone’s plausible god ought not be belittled yet may be doubted without objection. That is, when the-objective-truth about someone’s god has not been discovered, it makes no sense for other people to belittle the responsible believer’s beliefs. Responsible believers practice civic integrity, discussed below.

 Further, your claim, “Objectivist for 50 years,” inspires me to learn more about objectivists. Maybe I am an objectivist with a novel slant.
I have long been turned off to Ayn Rand because of the flood of specific knowledge it would take to understand her work. Alas, when I searched for “objectivists” at my favorite philosophy resource I got https://plato.stanford.edu/entri..., for which I am grateful. There I found, “In her own words, her philosophy, ‘. . . in essence, is the concept of man as a heroic being, with his own happiness as the moral purpose of his life, with productive achievement as his noblest activity, and reason as his only absolute.’ (Rand 1957 [1992]: Afterword)”
It inspired me to mimic her to express my “philosophy”: a human being cannot consign his or her IPEA and will use it to develop either infidelity or integrity; the meaning of life is to discover and use IPEA to develop individual happiness with civic integrity; the development is mature when the individual is aware of the product of his or her contributions to humankind; and he or she strives to conform to the-objective-truth, which exists and does not respond to reason.
IPEA is individual power, individual energy, and individual authority.
Integrity is a practice not unlike the “scientific process” but covering both physics and its progeny, psychology. For example, fellow humans do not lie to each so as to lessen misery and loss. An illustration was expressed by Rudyard Kipling in “The Man Who Would be King.” The men of the village elevated the king to a God and intended to marry him to the elite villager. However, the women suspected the king and bled him to prove he was not a God.
Civic integrity is the recognition that other humans also may apply IPEA to develop integrity but some to not, and therefore a system of statutory justice must be established and maintained.
In the Kipling story, the village men used reason to elect the king as a God, but the women used physics and its progeny, biology, to disprove the God. [On the other hand, maybe they proved that Gods are constructed in human images and thus bleed. There may be a God, but I doubt it and accept that my doubt does not matter.]
The-objective-truth exists and may be discovered but cannot be constructed. Scholars cite “truth” and “the truth” to, in one way or another, elevate their opinions. However, “the-objective-truth” empowers the writer to admit that it is alright to admit not knowing what the writer does not know. That explanation seems condescending to some listeners, and some deflect it for themselves with responses about “objective truth,” “ultimate truth,” “absolute truth,” or “Almighty truth,” falling back on obsolete scholarship. I write to collaborate for a replacement for “the-objective-truth,” and have been doing so for about a decade.

Phil Beaver does not “know.” He trusts in and is committed to the-objective-truth which can only be discovered. Conventional wisdom has truth founded on reason, but it obviously does not work.
Phil is agent for A Civic People of the United States, a Louisiana, education non-profit corporation. See online at promotethepreamble.blogspot.com, and consider essays from the latest and going back as far as you like.

Saturday, December 22, 2018

Passion attack on statutory law

Phil Beaver seeks to collaborate on the-objective-truth, which can only be discovered. The comment box below invites readers to write.
"Civic" refers to citizens who collaborate for individual happiness with civic integrity more than for the city, state, nation, or society.

Consider writing a personal paraphrase of the preamble, which offers fellow citizens mutual equality:  For discussion, I convert the preamble’s predicate phrases to nouns and paraphrase it for my proposal as follows: “We willing citizens of the United States collaborate for civic, civil, and legal self-discipline to provide integrity, justice, goodwill, defense, prosperity, liberty, for ourselves and for the nation’s grandchildren and beyond and by this amendable constitution authorize and limit the U.S.’s service to the people in their states.” I want to collaborate with the other citizens on this paraphrase and theirs. I would preserve the original, 1787, text, unless it is amended by the people.
It seems no one has challenged whether or not the preamble is a legal statement. The fact that it changed this independent country from a confederation of states to a union of states deliberately managed by disciplined fellow citizens convinces me the preamble is legal. Equality in opportunity and outcome is shared by the people who collaborate for human justice.
Every citizen has equal opportunity to either trust-in and collaborate-on the goals stated in the preamble or be dissident to the agreement. I think 2/3 of citizens try somewhat to use the preamble but many do not articulate commitment to the goals. However, it seems less than 2/3 understand that “posterity” implies grandchildren. “Freedom of religion,” which fellow citizens have no means to discipline, oppresses freedom to develop integrity.

Selected theme from this week
Passion attack on statutory law: President Trump could change his slogan to "Make American Great At Last."

Columns

Competitive political phrases (Stephanie Grace) (https://www.theadvocate.com/new_orleans/opinion/dan_fagan/)

I work to express civic issues such that fellow citizens may relate them to the civic, civil, and legal agreement that is offered in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution (U.S. preamble).

One of the worst enemies of We the People of the United States, the willing citizens who are represented in the U.S. preamble’s agreement, is the press and other media. Media personnel are either ignorant of the agreement or consider that their aspiration to be journalists places them above fellow citizens. Maybe The Advocate personnel will create a series on why they think writers for the press are above fellow citizens. Every human being has the opportunity to express either infidelity or civic integrity.

At the core of this country’s survival is the competition between phrases like Gov. Edwards’ infamous “the right thing to do,” and each AG Landry’s and Senator Kennedy’s "the legal thing to do."

For the past half century, the AMO-special-interest groups in this country have violently (Alinsky) demonstrated for social democracy (Marxist) rather than the individual civic discipline the U.S. preamble proposes. The U.S. preamble tacitly seeks individual happiness with civic integrity. “Civic integrity” is a collaborative pursuit of the-objective-truth. (People use “truth” to mysteriously compete for dominant opinion.)

As long as most fellow citizens neglect the discipline that is proposed in the U.S. preamble, the nation will continue its rapid decline into anarchy’s right-thing-to-do at the expense of statutory justice.

"Happy season of civic goodwill" is not popular this year.

Other fora
https://www.quora.com/Democracy-is-not-perfect-but-what-would-be-better-than-that?

A culture of individual happiness with civic integrity is better than democracy.

Integrity is widespread collaboration to discover and practice statutory justice based on the-objective-truth rather than conflict for dominant opinion.

Many scholars press their opinion by citing truth or even “The Truth,” but their basis is reason, which some scholars elevate above “nature.” The reason vs nature debate has existed for centuries.
However, “the-objective-truth” exists and can only be discovered. That is, human beings cannot construct the-objective-truth no matter what doctrine they assume: reason, revelation, belief, doctrine, coercion, and force. Imagine using reason to stop a category 5 hurricane.
Everything that exists is controlled by physics, the object of study rather than the study. I understand the source of everything is E=mC squared. The fiction humankind contends with obtains from what has not been discovered. For example, most explorers thought the earth was flat and did not understand gravity and therefore were reluctant to sail into the horizon for fear they would fall off the earth.

Albert Einstein spoke in 1941 about integrity being based on physics and his only illustration was the civic people do not lie so as to reduce human misery and loss. A good illustration is in Rudyard Kipling’s short story “The Man Who Would be King.” The men of the village decide the man is God and prepare to marry him to the prize woman of the tribe. The women rebel and cut the man’s arm to show that he bleeds. The men murder him.

Individual happiness may be discovered over a human lifetime (some 80 years) of making choices that comport to physics rather than pursuing beliefs. This way of living promises a better future, and that claim cannot be refuted, because no culture has ever proposed to develop individual happiness with civic integrity.

I think the USA could establish a civic culture very fast, but it would take 2/3 of the people trusting-in and committed to both 1) using the civic, civil, and legal agreement that is offered in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution and 2) collaborating to discover statutory justice using the-objective-truth.
Perhaps another country could move faster.


The short response is that U.S. regimes have tried to unconstitutionally preserve British constitutional Canterbury partnership with Parliament using a U.S. mimic, presently Judeo-Christianity with Congress, the Administration, and the Supreme Court. Statutory justice is possible under the separation of church from state, an expression of an American dream: individual happiness with civic integrity.

The brilliant debates that 1787 framers of the U.S. constitution conducted divided the Philadelphia delegates into 39 signers and 16 dissidents. Adding Rhode Island’s 4 statistical dissent brings the total dissidents to 20. Thus, the 13 eastern seaboard states divided 2/3 for and 1/3 against forming the world’s first nation based on civic discipline by the people. That claim is tacitly stated in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution, hereafter “U.S. preamble.” Factional American Protestantism falsely labeled the agreement proposed in the U.S. preamble “secular.” However, the proposal is neutral to religion, gender, race, skin color, ethnicity, wealth, heritage, integrity, and other human characteristics.
In 1787, the majority of the country was governed by indigenous tribes, Spain, France, Mexico, Russia, Hawaiians, and other powers. Some of those governments were enemies of the British Empire. Within the thirteen states, 20% of inhabitants were African slaves, and only 5% of free citizens could vote.
Former British colonists, the free inhabitants under the U.S. preamble, nevertheless were accustomed to Blackstone common law and the factional Protestant surrogate for Canterbury. According the Chapter XI Machiavellianism, the church-state-partnership is particularly advantageous for controlling the people, and that was obvious to some of the leaders, I suspect James Madison and John Adams.
Since about 400 years BCE, or 2400 years ago, humankind had been informed by the Athenian Greeks that responsibility involves equal justice under statutory law; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal_justice_under_law. The U.S. preamble proposes that the fellow citizens develop statutory justice using a constitution that can be amended when injustice is discovered. The tacit, ultimate goal is individual justice with civic morality.
Fellow citizens, free men, who were elected to the First Congress were, respecting the revolutionary civic, civil, and legal agreement that is offered in the U.S. preamble like adolescent procreators who know no better parenting than “doing what Mom and Dad did.” Adolescents are too immature to admit that there are four parenting opinions involved in that concept. Ignorant-of or resistant-to the U.S. preamble’s powers, the First Congress did all they could to impose constitutional British church-state-partnership on We the People of the United States. That erroneous imposition, starting with the hiring of Congressional chaplains in April and May 1789 has been unraveling ever since.
The religion clauses in the 1791 First Amendment may be revised to protect collaboration for civic integrity, a citizen’s duty, rather than religion, an institutional business. In casual terms, civic integrity offers individuals the opportunity to responsibly live and let live.

In 2019, fellow citizens may begin to admit that neither popular government nor their personal god can provide statutory justice. Each human being has the individual power, the individual energy, and the individual authority to develop either infidelity or civic integrity. Civic integrity is based on the-objective-truth rather than popular opinion and is the objective of statutory justice.

Failure to separate church from state has brought the U.S. to the 2018 woe. Only willing fellow citizens can collaborate for the discipline to restore a path to civic integrity.

To Cleve Wright: The problem is that some believers perceive they must impose their god on everyone else, not admitting that God whatever that is (I think it's physics the object of discovery rather than the study) may not agree with the believer who takes that approach for assuring their spiritual salvation. In other words, the person who claims his or her god is God may be defying God whatever that is.

In life, we may observe every day that keeping spiritual pursuits separate from civic integrity is essential to statutory justice.

My experience is that you, Cleve, are not among the imposing believers but rather practice responsible live-and-let-live with "don't tread on me." That’s the same as Agathon's statement 2400 years ago (speech in Plato’s “Symposium”), in my paraphrase: neither initiate nor tolerate coercion/force to or from any person or other entity.

https://www.quora.com/What-response-expresses-civic-integrity-when-a-child-asks-Is-Santa-real

depends on the age of the child and on how integrated in the local society the parents want to be themselves and their child. i have the same problem but i obey what my son tells me to tell or not tell his little boy when i am with him. i tried to make him doubt about santa but my son…his wife actually, forbid me to. i hope that my rational influence at the little one will help him become rational when he grows up. it may not be good for his mum but i am sure it is better for him to live less integrated with the local society but in reality, than good with society and its lies. lie is never good.

Joyce Fetteroll, radically unschooling parent since the age of the dinosaurs
“What do you think?” Followed by, “That’s interesting. Tell me more.”
Niki Kapetanou’s response reflected some of the issues. However, my question is quite specific, and I think you appropriately ask for more definition.
First, the person who would share a response might consider the meaning of “civic integrity.” I mean responsibly living and letting live more than upholding a civilization or other norm.
Second, “expresses” implies both the personal integrity of the speaker and encouraging the child to develop integrity and self-confidence more than pride.
With those clarifications, I look forward to suggestions as to how to respond.
I don’t see it as a question that has an impact beyond the child.
You don’t specify whether it’s a child asking their parent or a child asking a non-parent adult.
If it’s a child asking a non-parent, I’d turn the question around as I wrote in my answer. It’s not up to me to support or dash a child’s ideas about Santa.
If it’s a child asking their parent, it all depends on what the child believes and what the parent has said in the past. I like how Neil deGrasse Tyson handled the Easter Bunny. It was presented as a puzzle for the child to work out, without actually saying it’s a puzzle.

Buddy Thornton, Owner-BCT Mediations PLUS-Mediator-Parenting Coach at Brav Ambassador (2012-present)
Just like any other imaginary play person, Santa is real if you make him real in your mind and heart.
Margaret Weiss, just breathe..
If a child is asking that, they are seeking reassurance rather than a real answer.
Same goes for Easter bunny, unicorns, and other mythical creatures.
If you are absolutely sure that the child is ready for the truth (aka their caregivers lying to them for years about the magical things), you should proceed with caution.
To Margaret Weiss: When I faced the question, my child was preparing for the next day’s debate with her good friend at elementary school. My response would impact my child, her friend, their connection for life, and my civic integrity.
Moreover, it would either strengthen or lessen my daughter’s trust in me to give her my best.
I needed to position my child to respond with civic integrity, even though I could have honestly left it to her own creative thoughts. (Recalling some bad advice from high places. Ruined human connections are difficult to patch.)
I chose an alternative and would like to learn other options.
I told MWW that Santa is a metaphor for appreciation and goodwill among people. I admitted that her mom oversaw the selection of presents and I put the cookies and milk out.
She smiled her appreciation for civic integrity, even though we did not discuss it with that phrase. Maybe we should have.

https://www.quora.com/Which-is-the-greater-thing-that-a-society-can-bestow-upon-its-people-justice-freedom-or-wealth?
Fellow citizens may collaborate for mutual, individual freedom to develop civic integrity.

The question:  What disappoints you most about today’s society?
Second, I do not like the term “society.”
Society means “a part of the community that sets itself apart as a leisure class and that regards itself as the arbiter of fashion and manners.” Wait! That’s ridiculous! It means, “a community, nation, or broad grouping of people having common traditions, institutions, and collective activities and interests.” Good grief! It means, “a voluntary association of individuals for common ends.” Alas, it means, “companionship or association with one's fellows.” I retreat:  What did you mean by “society?”
First, I was born in the U.S. and in my eighth decade realize that most people have no desire for equal justice under statutory law. Most fellow citizens could not care less about the agreement to develop statutory justice that is offered in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution. The last of the stated goals, “to our Posterity,” promises a better future for grandchildren and beyond, and their debt to satisfy adults now approaches $22 trillion.
It seems that we, the people, will never establish We the People of the United States. Yet I work to promote the U.S. preamble’s agreement.
Phil Beaver does not “know.” He trusts in and is committed to the-objective-truth which can only be discovered. Conventional wisdom has truth founded on reason, but it obviously does not work.

Phil is agent for A Civic People of the United States, a Louisiana, education non-profit corporation. See online at promotethepreamble.blogspot.com, and consider essays from the latest and going back as far as you like.