Tuesday, May 14, 2013

No time for doubt

I decided to let go,
to dive into the flow,
to follow my heart,
for a fresh, new start.

O how i admire
those without desire
for a specific form
which fits into the norm.


Now I'm drifting,
need some uplifting.
It's freedom I won,
yet certainty is gone.

So I embrace the present
as a gift, with no resent. 




Monday, May 13, 2013

Free

The best things in life are free - why are people so eager to spend most of their days 'making money'? Most likely, out of habit and lack of information. More and more people increase their happiness by sharing, instead of ripping each other off. Even science catches up, claiming that our brains produce much more happy hormones (serotonine) when sharing then when spending money on oneself.


About half a year ago, the Friday Free Shop opened its non-existing doors to the public, and has become a predictable part of Melbourne's city scape, at City Square, the tiny patch of land dedicated to the public in Melbourne. There's a Melbourne chapter of Food not Bombs, a global initiative that cooks up free vegetarian meals for hungry souls.

Of course, most people don't mind sharing with their friends for free - unfortunately, most people would not consider strangers as friends they haven't met yet. The Free Shop helps to win hearts and minds for this cause, like other opportunities to get something for nothing.

The 'Free' section in most commercial advertising papers is usually quite sparse, but here's some starting points to get on a hunt for free stuff:


There's also the opportunity to find free things on the nature strip, at least where the local council doesn't consider hard rubbish a safety issue. Indeed, nature strips could be converted into community gardens, but that's also something councils might not like. But then, councils are no longer legal, and the humans still harbouring this delusion might get the point that growing food poses no harm for the community, no matter what some silly by-laws might dictate.




Sunday, May 12, 2013

In the mood

"Bugger off!" snarled the security guard of the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), as I just finished my chalking. "I'm done. I don't think you have the authority to tell me to leave, but I comply."

I came back after a minute, as I didn't have a shot yet.

At that point, a second security guard stood also outside the door. I tried to convince them that I didn't commit an act of vandalism, that their employer was legally foreclosed, with only little success. "Don't do this again! You're on camera, and it goes straight to the Federal Police." I was still not impressed, but happy that the tone of conversation was relatively friendly. "You have done this before, don't you?" 

I realised that persistence works out fine, though attracts attention. From a publicity point of view, tonight was a failure - not many people pass through this area in the late evening. It seems though that at least some people within the foreclosed organisation take notice, and that they don't like being reminded at the legal status quo.

"At least you didn't use paint." I mentioned that it might rain very soon, which would make cleaning the pavement obsolete, yet the strategy seems to be to remove 'dangerous messages' straight away.

"I have to clean this up", he complained, pointed to his comrade, "he makes me do it." I excused myself for causing a stir in their routine. "I have to do work because of you. I didn't come to work to do work." 


Tuesday, May 07, 2013

Public information

Unbeknownst to the wider public, all governments, banks and corporations have lost their legal foundation on December 25th 2012. They have been officially and legally foreclosed. The pictures below show a public information campaign that happened today in Melbourne's CBD.

ANZ, Collins Street

Reserve Bank of Australia, Collins Street

Westpac, Collins Street

Commonwealth Bank, Swanston Street

NAB, Swanston Street

HSBC, Swanston Street

Town Hall, Swanston Street

Parliament House
PS: The reactions today to basically the same information campaign were quite interesting. In front of Westpac, an employee asked me what I was doing, and probably took care that street sweepers removed this outrageous bit of truth in front of their ATMs quite fast. At HSBC, a couple of police asked me what I was doing, and I replied friendly: "Spreading some good news." I explained shortly that all banks have been foreclosed last christmas. When the police man asked why the government hadn't done anything about it, I replied that governments were foreclosed as well.

I mentioned that I regrettably had no printed info for them, yet he did most likely consider me a loony at this time already. He asked me to be careful while chalking, not being a hazard for passer-bys, and walked off with his comrade. When I cruised along Collins Street again, most of the information was already wiped out again. I wish I still had a printer available to hand out the foreclosure flyer to those interested when seeing me chalking, it's still massive fun to do.

Sunday, May 05, 2013

The world of today


Imagine a world where the social structure has been replaced by a commercial rule set separating humanity into few slave-owners and many slaves. Imagine a world where individual responsibility has been replaced by blind trust into the chain of commands. Imagine a world that sacrifices Mother Earth for the sake of playing a game of power. Imagine a world where ubiquitous distractions create  the delusion of justice, fairness and reason.

You're there? Welcome to planet Earth in the second decade of the 21st century. The Law Society has created a legal global slave camp. It has casted a spell over humanity in order to dominate it. Yet another spell disconnects most humans from the source, so that they spend most of their time in their minds, susceptible for external manipulation.

Once we get lost in our minds, it's easy to convince us that ideas are 'real'. Governments, corporations, money are mere memes, nothing else. Memes often lead a life of their own, unless enough people realise that they created these memes, and can change or drop them.

Humanity condemned the idea of slavery repeatedly, and advocacy for slavery most likely doesn't resonate with the majority of the population. The magic trick to hide slavery lies in the invention of the legal fiction, a person which is incorporated (under commerce) and has the same name as you.

The birth certificate seals the deal to make a new member of society a piece of property of some corporation. Under the UCC, there's no difference between governmental agency, corporation or person, the law itself represents the rule set for the power game currently happening on this planet.

As 'normal' citizens, we occupy the lowest rank in this legal game of slavery chess. Slavery is defined as making someone do an action without their consent. This happens often under threat of violence or by hypnotic tricks. Register your baby with us, or else. Pay your taxes, or else. Register your house with us, or else. Register your car with us, or else. Bail out the banks, or else.

We learn in young age that punishment (the or else part) follows any crime, and needn't be told the threat explicitly. Instead, we learn that simply 'following orders' and rules makes us a good citizen. In other words, for the mere absence of punishment we comply to rules which systematically punish us by restricting the freedoms we were born with.

So most people simply accept that part of their own life energy, invested as labour and transformed into 'money' gets taken away by some corporation calling itself government. In return, there is infrastructure like roads, public transport, schools, hospitals and so on, right?

Technically, it's never the government that builds a road or a school. It's people. It's not the government's money that pays for the road or school, it's taxes, the people's money. Which means that infrastructure belongs to the people anyway, they build it and paid for it. However, our ancient legal system claims ownership for infrastructure and grants it to some corporation.

Toll roads and fees on public transport, fees for electricity or communication made the majority of people forget their custodianship of the commons, so they just pay to use what's already theirs. While the exponential increase in usable knowledge creates more actual wealth than ever before in known history, wealth is mainly used to suppress the majority of mankind, to farm them like livestock.

As long as we, as mankind, followed the idea of being custodians of our immediate environment, ie before 'civilisation', our existence didn't leave nasty scars. As soon as a part of humanity elevated themselves to 'own' parts of the environment, respect for Mother Earth diminished. As pinnacle of evolution nothing could restrain the hubris of those in power - using initially religion to obtain power, our 'leaders' felt and acted like god.

Written language became their first power tool. Words chiseled in stone became law, and moved the literati on top of society. For a long time in history, the combination of violence and control over the written law sufficed to convert communities into livestock. The irony of christian terminology becomes only apparent after you unplug from the matrix - until then, the idea of a priest as a shepherd of a flock of sheep just feeds the illusion of certainty and predictability.

While 'civilisation' became more dependent on technology, the 'dominators' (lawmakers) allowed technicians to become the shepherd dogs of the flock. Technicians were sufficiently privileged so that they could claim without lying that their circumstances were comfortable without being part of the leadership, so it can't be all that bad.

In exchange for being commanded around by the shepherds, the shepherd dogs were assured to be safe from culling, and provided with some amount of luxury. This makes it easy for them to claim that the situation ain't that bad, to create a buffer between the sheep and the shepherds, and direct the anger away from those running the show.

But that the powers that be turned into the powers that were, at least from a legal point of view. According to the OPPT , the legal spell that kept the majority of people from making use of their birth right of being and acting freely has been broken. The OPPT has filed all documents necessary under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) to reestablish human beings from flesh and blood as having only their creator as authority.

Besides enabling individuals to claim to be adjudicated via the UCC, some banks and governments have been foreclosed, using the UCC filing mechanism as well. Corporations (including governments) never existed as lawful entities, and with the foreclosure notices they cease to exist even as legal entities. Unfortunately, that doesn't close the doors of those entities, as long as people working for them, or dealing (contracting) with them still believe in their legality they will continue to act with impunity against the interest of the people.

Claiming legal authority for one self doesn't mean it comes as a freebie. It implies personal responsibility and liability for any harm caused by oneself, and at the current time, it sets up potential conflict with the Power That Were. It's a step further than engaging in the Freeman/Strawman game plan, which can unleash violence against individuals pursuing this path.

Let me repeat the good news: Corporations and governments have been officially foreclosed. It doesn't make any more legal sense to engage with these entities, instead you can start dealing with the individuals claiming to represent these entities. You are free, which makes the former slave holders quite grumpy.