DR Just noticed that. Guess the thought police must have grabbed it. What I said was, Mental health requires that you accept the fact that when dealing with the government (especially the IRS) you are dealing with a criminal organization. Once you have that mindset, everything else falls into place. And Harry Brown's rules are good tactics to use. JS ---------- Original Message ---------- From: "D.J.J. Ring, Jr." <n1ea@xxxxxxxx> To: sparkscoffee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [sparkscoffee] Re: 3 Essential Rules for Dealing With the Governme nt Date: Tue, 24 Feb 2015 06:37:17 -0500 I missed your comments. Nothing new was sent. DR On Feb 24, 2015 6:34 AM, "schalestock@xxxxxxxx" <schalestock@xxxxxxxx> wrote: ---------- Original Message ---------- From: "D.J.J. Ring, Jr." <n1ea@xxxxxxxx> To: sparkscoffee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [sparkscoffee] Re: 3 Essential Rules for Dealing With the Government Date: Sun, 22 Feb 2015 21:53:25 -0500 Some laws like Violence Agsinst Woman Act give large sums of money to police, courts, programs, luring police to support women's false accusations, encouraging police to commit fraud to collect money. David On Feb 22, 2015 12:22 PM, "Ron Ristad" <ristad@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: 3 rules that will make your life easier. -RR From an essay written by Harry Browne, the author of "How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World" The first rule in dealing with government is: Don’t be awed by it. What little the government achieves is almost always due to the voluntary participation of its citizens. Those who don’t want to help the government can go their own ways without running into much trouble. The second rule is: Don’t confront the government. A sure way to make your life miserable is to attack the government head on. Its resources are limited, and it can’t waste them tracking down every possible violator of every law but it will certainly aim its power at anyone who publicly defies it. So keep to yourself, do what you have to do. The third rule in dealing with government is: Don’t organize. Don’t get a large group of people together to defy tax laws, promote ways of circumventing the government, or openly violate regulations. By joining protests, you might wind up in jail and you won’t have much freedom there. And mass campaigns are easy targets. That’s where the government is likely to devote its limited resources. When many people are doing the same thing, it’s easy to stop them by passing laws or by applying existing laws against them. When you act alone, however, you’re usually not worth the trouble. No cumbersome, bureaucratic government can move as fast as an individual who’s determined to stay ahead of it. ____________________________________________________________ Old School Yearbook Pics View Class Yearbooks Online Free. Search by School & Year. Look Now! classmates.com ____________________________________________________________ Man, 63, Avoids Wrinkles 63 Yr Old Man Shares Simple DIY Skin Tightening Method He Uses At Home http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL3131/54ec637fde535637f1b34st02vuc