Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Pastor Lindstedt 4 Newton County Sheriff

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Filling of Newton County posts appears more formality than contest

    Filling of Newton County posts appears more formality than contest

    By Susan Redden
    Globe Staff Writer
    October 28, 2012



    http://www.joplinglobe.com/local/x12...y-than-contest
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=7031#post7031


    NEOSHO, Mo. — After sorting through a large field of candidates in the Republican primary in August, Newton County residents will have but two final selections to make when they go to the polls Nov. 6.

    Two County Commission posts are up for election, with Republican nominees on the ballot with Libertarian candidates who had no primary competition and have not mounted active campaigns for the general election.

    For 1st District associate county commissioner, Republican Alan Cook will face Roxie Fausnaught, and for the 2nd District, Republican Jim Jackson will face Heather Bowers.

    The primary saw a larger-than-normal number of associate commission candidates seeking posts that had opened up with the retirement of Jerry Black and Jack Sanders. Cook was the winner in a three-way race for the GOP nomination for associate commissioner from the 1st District, and Jackson won over three other candidates for the 2nd District nomination.

    Cook, 50, is retired after 23 years with Leggett & Platt Inc. in the technology department and as a division vice president. He is a lifelong county resident and a graduate of Crowder College and Oklahoma Christian University, where he received a bachelor’s degree in math. This is his first run for public office.

    He has said he has no agenda but said his priorities, if elected, will be to make informed decisions and to be a careful steward of taxpayer money.

    Fausnaught, 56, Granby, is a housewife and a graduate of East Newton High School. She has lived in the county since 1970 and has never held elected office.

    Jackson, 58, Neosho, is retired after 32 years with KSNF-TV in Joplin, where he was a reporter and news anchor. He also was an instructor at Crowder College for 11 years. He said improving the county’s roads and other infrastructure, supporting strong law enforcement and being a good steward of tax dollars will be priorities if he is elected.

    He holds a bachelor’s degree in mass communications from Missouri Southern State University. He is a longtime area resident. This is his first run for public office.

    Bowers, 38, Neosho, works at the AT&T Call Center in Joplin. She is a lifelong Neosho resident and holds a bachelor’s degree in speech communication from Missouri Southern State University. She served previously on the Neosho City Council.


    All the shit unfit to print

    http://www.joplinglobe.com

    Comment


    • #17
      Neosho Daily News Candidate Form

      Neosho Daily News Candidate Form


      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=7032#post7032
      http://www.occidentaldissent.com/for...=6251#post6251
      http://stumbleinn.net/forum/showthre...773#post357773
      http://previousdissent.com/forums/sh...9671#post29671

      Please limit responses to 150 words or less. Why? It's not as if anyone other than Roxie and Heather Bowers is bothering to run against the Newton County Republicunts. This is merely some goofy wop twat trying to pretend that the Neosho Daily Douche's 'journalism' means something in an Internut age. Whether these presstitutes even want to bother anymore to pretend that their efforts mean anything or is worth reading is irrelevant to anyone that matters on our side or even the Newton County ZOG side.

      In order to print candidate responses prior to the November 6 [s]election, we ask that you please return your questionnaire by Thursday, November 1. Forms can be emailed to wsaporito@neoshodailynews.com or mailed to Neosho Daily News, Attn: Whitney Saporito, P.O. Box 848, Neosho, Mo. 64850. Please feel free to call the office with any questions, 451-1520.

      Actually, earlier this year I called this lying wop cunt up and told her why I had been kicked off the Newton County LibberToon ballot for Sheriff, i.e. because it was for a treasonous law cobbled together to restrict dissent from anyone that some Missouri Revenue Department burrocrat decided to exclude in order to remove people from the ballot. The lying cunt listened and got the e-mail, and of course refused to print a single word. Which is of course fine because when you cannot win an election you want to have a pretext for civil war and the extermination of the other side's partisans. A lot more piss-pul read my web page's slant than bother to read the Neosho Daily Douche's slant in this particular matter.

      However, I suppose I'll e-mail this response and have Roxie call into the Douche's wop douchebag's desk later today. Then if they wish to publish the response, then all very well and good or not.

      In Civil War politicks the entire point is to polarize sides so that things become a free-fire zone in which the losing Satannic regime-criminal side is exterminated and the surviving whiggers are enslaved.

      .


      1. Tell us about yourself, (education, hometown, family, career background)

      I am vice-chair of the Newton County Libertarian Party and ArchDeaconess of the Church of Jesus Christ Christian/Aryan Nations of Missouri, a registered Missouri corporation advocating Dual-Seedline Christian Identity, (DSCI) a racial religion only for Whites. DSCI holds that Whites are the Lost Sheep of the House of Israel, jews are the literal spawn of Satan through Satan's seduction of Eve and bearing Cain. That non-whites are the Sixth-Day Beasts of the Field and that the racially mixed are mamzer abominations. We also believe that the Great Tribulation is upon ZOG/Babylon the Third and Final which will destroy all but a couple million ex-whiggers and then Jesus Christ will return.

      On a personal note, I'm altogether Pastor Martin Lindstedt's bitch and do everything he tells me to do except for the heavy lifting and killing part.

      .

      2. What do you feel is the most important issue facing Newton County today, and how do you plan to address that issue if elected?

      In Newton County, as everywhere within the ZOG/Babylon-land there is in power an absolutely corrupt and idiotic power structure ruling under color of law over an increasingly degenerate and dependent population of whiggers and mamzers. There really is no solution other than to let Nature and the Great Tribulation run its course in which there are maybe 10 million ex-whiggers ruled over by Ten Thousand Warlords in a military theocratic Nazi dictatorship, which is what Pastor Lindstedt advocates.

      But to bring matters close to home, my four grandchildren were seized, bought and sold and Pastor Lindstedt was charged with a bogus child molestation charge. When he refused to accept a pub[l]ic pretender, he was illegally sent to a psychiatric prison, drugged and tortured there and had four teeth knocked out by a Newton County Sheriff's deputy in transit. By showing nothing but contempt for the system, eventually after three-and-a-half years he was allowed to make an affordable bail and be his own attorney. Thus when it came to the preliminary hearing my grandson refused to lie against his grandfather and the case had to be dismissed. But my grandchildren still are bought and sold and in foster care, notorious for state-run pedophile rings. We've not seen our grandchildren since.

      I also went to school with the Lamberts. Their entire bogus charges had to be dismissed because they hung tough, but they and others still lost their children and their families were destroyed.

      Likewise with the stepfather of Rowan Ford. For years he was imprisoned awaiting trial and was coerced into a false confession. Being a weak minded fool, he pled guilty to ]something and thus let the prosecution off the hook.

      Newton County has, like everywhere else, a judicial/prosecutorial/police conviction mill wherein the poor and weak and politically incorrect are charged with crimes, tortured into confessions, and then sent away to die while their families, lives, liberty and property are destroyed by a corrupt one-party regime.

      The solution: Extermination of these regime criminals and their families, and the enslavement of a degenerate population that allows this.


      3. What sets you apart from your opponent:
      .

      Normally, Pastor Martin Lindstedt goes up to Jefferson City to file to run for governor or US Senator and has me run for Sheriff or Presiding Commissioner. Then when he loses the Republican or LibberToon Primary, he bumps me off the ballot and runs in my placeholder position.

      However, in 2010, Lindstedt was not allowed to run for US Senate because the Democratic Secretary of State and the Missouri Republican and 'Libertarian' political parties refused to accept his filing fee on the grounds that he was a White Supremacist/Separatist/Nationalist. Lindstedt sued and the corrupt federal kort system agrees that overt White men who hold certain racial and political opinions are not to be allowed to run for state or federal office, depending on the whim of political parties with ballot access.

      This year, Pastor Lindstedt applied to run for Sheriff of Newton County, but a recent law passed by the Republican legislature was used to kick Lindstedt off the ballot because of a refusal to file Missouri income taxes. Pastor Lindstedt decided not to file a lawsuit because since this criminal regime at the federal, state or local will not allow free, fair, open elections in a representational form of government, that means that these so-called [s]elections are worthless.

      So therefore, since overt White men and women cannot run for elective representative office, and therefore since those who would wish to vote for such men are not to be allowed to be represented by them, then there is no moral -- or legal -- obligation to pay federal, state or local taxes or to obey federal, state, or local laws, rules or ordinances and government officials because you have no representation and thus give these criminal regimes no consent to their corrupt and idiotic rule.

      Therefore, the Newton County Libertarian Party is hereby boycotting the election. Pastor Lindstedt gives moral absolution to not pay any taxes or obey any laws or government officials and if you need help on how to stall retaliation in the regime korts, then Pastor Lindstedt will do his best to help you.

      As a secondary consideration, since we have no idea of how you voted, but can ascertain that you did vote, those who boycott this [s]election will be able to enslave those amoral degenerate imbeciles and their families who did vote and to seize their property. They deserve nothing more because they vote to enslave you and your family and seize your property under color of 'law.' Turnabout is only fair.

      Note: Since the Newton County Libertarian Party has a policy of not collecting filing fees to run on the County ballot, but rather have instructed the Newton County Clerk to return the mandated filing fees, Heather Bowers has neither the support or opposition of the Newton County Libertarian Party.

      Hail Victory!!!

      ArchDeaconess Roxie Fausnaught, Church of Jesus Christ Christian/Aryan Nations of Missouri
      Vice-Chair of the Newton County Libertarian Party
      Newton County Libertarian Party Candidate for First District Associate County Commissioner


      Last edited by PastorLindstedt; 11-01-2012, 04:40 AM.
      ===666===666===666===

      The Neosho Daily Douche

      All the ZOGling-Approved Shit That Sorta Fits We Print
      http://www.neoshodailynews.com/

      Comment


      • #18
        Voting is an instrument of the devil

        Voting is an instrument of the devil


        http://charltonteaching.blogspot.com...-of-devil.html
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=7039#post7039


        The whole idea that voting could be a valid method of making any kind of decision at any level of practice is so bizarre, so stupid, so lacking in rationale, so frequently refuted by personal and public experience that I find it hard even to begin discussing the matter.

        Voting is an instrument of the devil - perhaps quite literally, and if so one of his most lethal inventions.

        *

        Where there is a vote, there there will be no good; since there will be no responsibility.

        Where there is a vote, there the decision-making process has become a matter of psychological manipulation; displacing virtue and truth, trampling beauty.

        *

        Casting lots, reading entrails - these are models of rationality compared with voting - since it is at least possible that a near-random procedure might be influenced by good spirits or organizing fields tending toward cohesion and harmony.

        But what beneficent influence could possibly penetrate the self-gratifying maelstrom of the human mind engaged in canvassing, debating, bribing, intimidating, and voting?

        *

        Once people have become used to relying on a procedure as utterly indefensible as voting to make their most important decisions, once they have been induced to regard voting as if it was not just ethically acceptable but in fact the pinnacle of goodness, the one-and-only ethical behaviour; then these people are embarked on a path of apostasy, inversion of values, and self-destruction.

        People who have given their allegiance to voting as the most valid, authoritative and moral decision-making procedure have been manipulated into a self-reinforcing psychosis in which a system of zero validity, zero authority and zero morality is treated with quasi-divine reverence.

        *

        This is a situation of enmeshed wickedness that cannot be disentangled and remedied one strand at a time, but only cast aside totally with overwhelming disgust - in sudden recognition of the revolting thing that is voting.

        *


        Posted by Bruce Charleton on THURSDAY, 1 NOVEMBER 2012

        Last edited by Librarian; 11-02-2012, 04:05 PM.
        ____________________________
        I am The Librarian
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
        http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

        Comment


        • #19
          Beans & Ballots: Blunt plugs Republican candidates at event

          Beans & Ballots: Blunt plugs Republican candidates at event

          Beans and ballots were on the table at Saturday's annual Newton County Republican bean feed, hosted at Neosho Middle School by the party's central committee.

          By Wes Franklin
          Neosho Daily News
          Nov. 4, 2012 12:30 a.m.



          http://www.neoshodailynews.com/artic...NEWS/121109593
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=7045#post7045


          Neosho High School FFA members serve up ham
          and beans and all the fixings Saturday
          at Neosho Middle School.

          .

          Beans and ballots were on the table at Saturday's annual Newton County Republican bean feed, hosted at Neosho Middle School by the party's central committee.

          All of Missouri's state and federal Republican candidates, except for U.S. Senate hopeful Todd Akin, were present to dish out late-hour rallying speeches three days before election day. Also there to anchor the night's list of speakers was U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt, who is not up for reelection.

          Blunt plugged all of the state and federal GOP contenders on Tuesday's ballot, starting with incumbent U.S. Rep. Billy Long. Speaking as a citizen of Missouri's 7th House District, Blunt said he was proud to be represented by Long in Congress.

          “He's done a great job,” Blunt said.

          Long is being challenged in Tuesday’s election by Democratic opponent Jim Evans and Libertarian candidate Kevin Craig.

          Later, Blunt indicated he wasn’t worried about Long getting reelected, or about Republicans retaining control of the U.S. House in general. The Democrat-controlled U.S. Senate, however, is “very much up for grabs,” he noted. Missouri Republicans are putting up Todd Akin, a current U.S. Representative, against Democratic incumbent U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill. Also in that race is Libertarian Jonathan Dine.

          Blunt referenced a publicized Friday statement by Democrat Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid that Senate Democrats would not work with Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney if Romney is elected.

          “This seat could very well be about the majority in the Senate,” Blunt said of the Missouri U.S. Senate race. “There is no doubt in my mind that Governor Romney as President Romney will not be nearly as effective with Harry Reid as Majority Leader as he will with (current Republican Senate Minority Leader) Mitch McConnell as the Majority Leader.”

          He later said that Reid as Majority Leader “is unacceptable if we’re going to get the country turned around.”

          “Todd Akin is the one guy we get to vote for who can do something about that,” Blunt said.

          Blunt noted that the number one domestic goal of federal and state governments should be private sector job creation. He praised Missouri gubernatorial candidate David Spence, former owner of Alpha Packaging, who earlier in the night had stated he grew his business from 15 employees to 860 employees.

          “Dave Spence knows how to do this and it needs to be done,” Blunt said.
          Spence is challenging incumbent Democratic governor Jay Nixon, as well as Libertarian candidate Jim Higgins.

          Page 2 of 2 --

          Blunt noted he had been the first Republican elected as Missouri Secretary of State in 52 years (there was one appointment in between). The only other Republican elected to that post since was his son, Matt Blunt, later Missouri governor. He propped Republican Secretary of State candidate Shane Schoeller, who has called for creation of a citizen-led fair ballot language commission.

          “It makes a big difference when the person who is in charge of the elections is absolutely committed to you knowing whatever happened on election day is what really happened,” Blunt said, a jab at incumbent Democrat Secretary of State Robin Carnahan who Republicans have accused of writing misleading ballot language. “It’s tough enough sometimes to accept election results, but it’s really tough to accept them if you don’t believe what happened is what really happened.”

          After two terms, Carnahan is not seeking reelection. Running instead on the Democratic ticket is Jason Kander. Also in that race are Libertarian Cisse Spragins and Constitutionalist Justin Harter.

          Schoeller has also been a big proponent of voter identification.

          “Of course we should have voter ID — you have to have a photo ID to get a tattoo,” Blunt quipped.

          On the Missouri Lt. Governor’s race, Blunt said that “Missouri has never had a lieutenant governor that knows more about state government” than incumbent Republican Peter Kinder.

          Kinder, who is seeking a third four-year term, faces Democrat Susan Montee, Libertarian Matthew Copple and Constitutionalist Cynthia Davis.

          Regarding the hotly contested Missouri Attorney General’s race, Blunt gave high praise to Republican candidate Ed Martin.

          “If you want somebody who will keep an eye on things in Jefferson City and has the temerity to do it, it’s Ed Martin,” Blunt said.

          Martin is challenging Democratic incumbent Chris Koster, along with Libertarian contester Dave Browning.

          Blunt also plugged Missouri Treasurer candidate Cole McNary, who will face Democrat incumbent Clint Zweifel, and Libertarian Sean O’Toole.

          Shifting to the presidential campaign, Blunt called it a “critical moment” for the nation. He posed that this presidential race is the “biggest, greatest choice” since the Reagan versus Carter election of 1980 and perhaps even more so.

          “We’re going to decide who we’re going to be for a long time,” Blunt said. “And the choice is clear. It’s never been clearer.”

          Blunt accused Democratic President Barack Obama of wanting the United States “to become another version of Europe” and went down the list of economically troubled countries with socialist policies.

          He told a story of meeting a tree trimmer who told him his sons used to complain about always having to pick up every scrap of tree waste afterward, as nobody else did it that way.

          “He told me, ‘every time they said that, I looked them right in the eye and said if you do it like everybody else does it you’re just everybody else,’” Blunt related. “That’s what we have to decide. Are we going to be ‘everybody else’ or are we going to be the United States of America? Let’s be the United States of America.”


          Last edited by Librarian; 11-08-2012, 02:22 AM.
          ____________________________
          I am The Librarian
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
          http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

          Comment


          • #20
            Republican Party placing ‘challengers’ at local polls

            Republican Party placing ‘challengers’ at local polls

            Party chairman acknowledges goal to change law to require photo ID

            By Susan Redden
            Globe Staff Writer
            November 3, 2012



            http://www.joplinglobe.com/topstorie...at-local-polls
            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=7054#post7054


            JOPLIN, Mo. — Some voters will have extra observers watching over them Tuesday when they get to the polls.

            Laws in Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma allow political parties to send representatives to monitor the polls for turnout and to watch for any voting irregularities. The Republican Party will have monitors, called “challengers,” in place in Jasper and Newton counties. Monitors can notify county clerk offices of their plans up to Election Day in Kansas, and Crystal Gatewood, Cherokee County clerk, said she expects some will be present on Election Day. State law allows them, not only for political parties but also as representatives of candidates on the ballot, she said.

            “In Kansas they’re called poll agents. We had some here during the primary, but they didn’t see any problems,” she said.

            The deadline has passed for monitors in Oklahoma and none had registered in Ottawa County, according to Connie Payton, assistant secretary of the county election board.

            All polling places in Newton County are to have the challengers, according to Nick Myers, chairman of the Newton County Republican Central Committee. In Jasper County, challengers will be in place at 24 of the county’s busiest voting stations, according to John Putnam, Jasper County party chairman.

            Training for the workers was completed earlier in the week. In Newton County, that included a viewing of the video “Obama 2016,” Myers said. Those in Jasper County also were directed to online training by “True the Vote,” an organization that backers say targets voter fraud and that critics charge encourages voter suppression.

            GOP challengers have worked presidential elections in the two counties for at least the last 10 years, the party chairs said.

            Putnam said he did not believe Jasper County has problems with what he described as “malicious voter fraud,” but said the potential for fraud exists, making extra eyes at the polls more important.

            “We don’t expect to catch a lot of voter fraud, but we also believe citizens need to get involved to make sure we have fair elections,” he said. “This is like people slowing down after they see the police car at the side of the road.”

            Putnam said he attended a national summit meeting sponsored by True the Vote. He said he disagrees with suggestions the group tries to suppress voters, targeting elderly, young and minority voters.

            Putnam pointed out that Artur Davis, a former congressman from Alabama who is black, is a spokesman for the group. Davis, who delivered one of the nominating speeches for President Barack Obama four years ago, changed political parties and spoke on behalf of GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney at the Republican National Convention.

            Bonnie Earl, Jasper County clerk, said if challengers see something they want to question at a polling place, they are to raise the issue with an election judge, not the voter. Polling places are staffed by election judges representing both political parties.

            “They are not to talk to voters about anything related to voting; those questions are to go to the (election) judges, and if they have questions beyond that, they’re to call me,” she said.

            Putnam said challengers will be on the lookout for any voters who are not properly registered, and he acknowledged a goal of the group is a change in the law to require photo identification cards for voters in Missouri.

            Myers, who supervised training for Newton County challengers, said voter turnout also will be a goal in both counties. Challengers will have voter registration lists and will check off the names of voters as they get to the polls. He said likely GOP voters who haven’t shown up by a certain time will get calls by GOP volunteers.

            “We want every Newton County voter to turn out, because about six of every 10 are Republicans,” he said. “But we’re not there to quiz the voters. We’ve got good (election) judges, Republicans and Democrats in all the precincts, and we work with all of them. And we work with Kay (Baum, Newton County clerk),” he said.

            State GOP officials said they did not know if other county parties were using training by the group.

            Democrats also will be watching, according to Brittany Burke, party communications coordinator.

            “We have a statewide voter protection team in place, to make sure every eligible voter can vote and that all eligible votes are counted,” she said.

            Stacie Temple, communications director for Robin Carnahan, Missouri secretary of state, pointed out state law allows the challengers but also restricts their activities. For example, challenges can only be directed to an election judge, not the voter. Challengers are not allowed to interfere with the voting process, which is a violation of the law, and any interference should be reported to an election judge.

            In addition to the presidential election, races for state and county offices also are on the ballot in Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma. Voters in Missouri will decide a variety of state questions such as the selection of appeals court and Supreme Court judges, proposed restrictions on state-based health insurance exchanges, a tobacco tax increase and control of the St. Louis police department. Kansas voters will determine a question on watercraft taxes, and Oklahoma voters will decide issues dealing with property taxes, affirmative action, parole for nonviolent offenses and the dissolution of several state departments.

            The number of statewide questions in Missouri and Oklahoma have prompted election officials to urge voters to familiarize themselves with the issues before they go to vote.

            In addition to national and state issues, a variety of county and local questions will face voters, such as a proposal involving the planning commission in McDonald County, liquor by the drink in Cherokee County, a wastewater bond in Sarcoxie, a school bond in Lamar and a City Council recall in Baxter Springs.

            Voting hours

            In Missouri, polls will be open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday. In Kansas and Oklahoma, hours are 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.


            All the shit unfit to print

            http://www.joplinglobe.com

            Comment


            • #21
              What does it mean to say I am 'against voting' as a system?

              What does it mean to say I am 'against voting' as a system?


              http://charltonteaching.blogspot.com...m-against.html
              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=7067#post7067


              My recent post on voting:

              http://charltonteaching.blogspot.co....-of-devil.html

              produced a lot of interesting comments - but I spent an inordinate time trying to re-explain what I was saying - and something similar happened on a thread at Orthosphere.

              But the problem was typical of much of my commentary and critique over the past couple of decades, and the reason seems to be that I think in a different way from many people.

              *

              I tend to think in terms of abstract principles or systems; and often I want to discuss these, but in fact it seems hardly anybody else wants to discuss principles or systems, or can stop at principles and refrain from jumping back to motivations or jump ahead ahead to implications.

              The trouble is that going from principles to motivations make it subjective, while jumping to implications entails a further step, which may or may not be clear - at any rate the move from principles to practice is seldom clear and uncontroversial.

              *

              When I spoke about not voting, many commenters assumed (often, it seems automatically) that what I really meant was that I personally disapproved of those who voted; and they rushed to defend the motives (or results) those who vote.

              I find this again and again in the response to my writings; that most people look at what is being said, and then jump behind it to make assumptions about the motivations of the person who said it.

              Everything is assumed to be about motivations, and what people actually say is assumed to be a 'rhetorical' tool for influencing the behaviour of others.

              *

              So that for me to criticize the system of voting as a way of making decisions, is assumed really to be merely a product of my motivation; an expression of negative emotion (disdain, dislike etc) towards the people who vote.

              Then people line-up and either support the fact that I attack (supposedly) voters because they too dislike voters; or attack me for having (supposedly) attacked them.

              *

              I experienced this at an international media scale a few years ago when I wrote about the effect of social class difference of intelligence on college admissions - specifically the mathematical certainty that the more selective is a college, the bigger the social class difference in admissions.

              But this factual observation was - on the Left , and up to the level of the British government, either regarded as me personally claiming that there were social class differences in intelligence (which is an un-refuted finding more than 100 years old, as well as being common experience); or else an expression of hatred for the working class and the poor.

              This misinterpretation went up to very high levels, and I got it even from world famous academics in qunatitative science.

              I think we are dealing with human nature here - near enough.

              *

              Human nature cannot discuss principles and systems (except perhaps in very exceptional situations, and probably the focus is tenuous even then).

              So when principles and systems are on the agenda, as they must be from time to time - for example when a club or a country needs to decide the procedure by which a leader is chosen - the actual discussion will not be about them.

              *
              *

              So, with the stuff about voting, my major point was that the idea of getting a group together and having a vote is an utterly bizarre notion of how to make a decision, and it is hard to understand why anyone might ever imagine that it would be a good way to proceed.

              On top of this, there is the problem that a vote destroys individual responsibility for decisions, which makes the decision non-moral, which means it is in fact a-moral (wicked, evil).

              So the principle of voting, as a way of making decisions, seems to be utterly without any basis either in expediency or in pragmatism or in metaphysics, or in anything.

              It is just what we have.

              *

              Of course, once voting had already-become established as the default method of decision making and had also become regarded as the only basis for a just and equitable decision and so on, then this generates its own expedience and even a kind of rationality.

              If people are used to voting and have been inculcated with the idea that it is good; then they will usually accept the results of a vote.

              But there was no coherent basis for privileging voting in the first place.

              *

              Having noticed this fact (it seems like a fact) I find that I draw the conclusion that I personally shouldn't participate in votes - but that inferential jump form system analysis to personal behaviour is not logically entailed.

              It is, however, made easier for me by my religious belief that ethical behaviour has beneficial effects even when the causality is non-obvious - even when such behavior seems invisible and powerless.

              So that, although a worldly and expedient and linear-causal analysis may suggest that not voting is just to abandon responsibility, to disappear-oneself from decision-making, or to allow evil to happen, or to fail to take simple steps to prevent harm; I have an imprecise but confident belief that (if my decision is real and properly motivated) then not voting will have a good effect, in some way, but by means which I (almost certainly) will never know about (at least, not in this life, in this world).

              *

              To put it another way, for a Christian it is hard to imagine any act which does not have some (permanent) effect towards either good or evil - Surely that is what life is.

              Nothing is trivial (or rather, we can never know that any particular thing is trivial) - hence we must treat everything as important; even when we had hardly even imagine how it could become important.

              No man is an island, and all humans are in it together ('it' being life in relation to salvation).

              So I am not much swayed by arguments based on expediency, when I am pretty sure that what is being asked of me is participation in a system which I understand is irrational and necessarily immoral.

              *

              Does participation in a system of which we disapprove make any difference? Well, yes, it must (or we must assume that it may).

              How might this work?

              Thinking about such matters using a 'morphic resonance' analysis - it would seem that participating in a process strengthens it, while refusing participation does not strengthen it; and perhaps by participating in something other than the voting process tends to strengthen some other rival process.

              http://charltonteaching.blogspot.co....and-forms.html

              On this basis, whenever we go along with something we believe is bad, when we ourselves comply with a bad process; then we actually fuel that process (by invisible patterning mechanisms): we make that process more powerful and increase its range and scope.

              That would fit in with the fact that evil always wants compliance; in fact evil is usually satisfied with compliance (and does not require assent).

              In some way (morphic resonance is only one way of conceptualizing the process), simply going-along with evil, just going-through-the-motions prescribed by evil, actually strengthens evil.

              But that makes another assumption to go with my first one.

              *

              The first assumption (to recap) was that it is valid to discuss the abstract process of voting in terms of its rationale (or rather, lack of rationale).

              We live by processes, even if the processes are - in practice - conflated with assumed-motivations or presumed-outcomes of processes: in fact we often do not know enough to assume or infer these things. The processes and systems should be able to stand on their own two feet . . .

              *

              By which I mean, processes should be valid when understood from a traditional Christian metaphysic - they should make sense in exactly the way that voting does not.

              Many people seemingly can't or won't do this; or maybe I am not actually doing it, although I think I am? - at any rate this topic doesn't seem to get very far with most people.

              However, it seems that, in practice, most public discourse, and probably all effective public discourse is very simple and prescriptive, and conflates principles with practice, effectiveness with morality and many other things - it coalesces around basic dichotomies - and all attempts to make it anything else are apparently doomed to fail.

              *

              Which is why evil works by processes.

              Once evil has imposed a process - like voting - then that process becomes de facto ineradicable qua process.

              If voting is indeed evil, then we are apparently stuck with it until it is swept away by some other change; because the subject matter of voting-as-a-process is one which cannot ever occupy a public agenda.

              As things stand, the only way to get rid of voting would be to vote on it...


              Posted by bgc at Sunday, November 04, 2012

              ____________________________
              I am The Librarian
              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
              http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

              Comment


              • #22
                BALLOT: Newton County

                BALLOT: Newton County


                http://www.joplinglobe.com/election2...-Newton-County
                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=7081#post7081

                With 23 of 23 precincts reporting, complete but unofficial returns from Tuesday’s balloting are as follows:



                PRESIDENT, VICE PRESIDENT

                Obama-Biden (D) 6,425

                Romney-Ryan (R) 18,179

                Johnson-Gray (L) 397

                Goode-Clymer (C) 79



                U.S. SENATE

                Claire McCaskill (D) 8,933

                Todd Akin (R) 14,572

                Jonathan Dine (L) 1,373



                GOVERNOR

                Jay Nixon (D) 9,879

                Dave Spence (R) 14,481

                Jim Higgins (L) 561



                LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR

                Susan Montee (D) 6,015

                Peter Kinder (R) 17,358

                Matthew Copple (L) 746

                Cynthia Davis (C) 491



                SECRETARY OF STATE

                Jason Kander (D) 6,515

                Shane Schoeller (R) 16,832

                Cisse Spragins, (L) 745

                Justin Harter (C) 249



                STATE TREASURER

                Clint Zweifel (D) 6,313

                Cole McNary (R) 16,896

                Sean O’Toole (L) 1,067



                ATTORNEY GENERAL

                Chris Koster (D) 8,783

                Ed Martin (R) 14,604

                Dave Browning (L) 1,101

                U.S. HOUSE

                7th District


                Jim Evans (D) 6,174

                Billy Long (R) 17,496

                Kevin Craig (L) 924

                COUNTY COMMISSION

                1st District


                Alan Cook (R) 10,237

                Roxie Fausnaught (L) 1,659

                2nd District

                Jim Jackson (R) 10,272

                Heather Bowers (L) 1,451

                STATE QUESTIONS



                Amendment No. 3

                Selection of Supreme Court and Court of Appeals judges.

                Yes 6,505

                No 16,949



                Proposition A

                Police force control


                Yes 16,158

                No 7,109



                Proposition B

                Tobacco tax hike


                Yes 8,666

                No 15,875



                Proposition E

                Prohibition of health insurance exhanges.


                Yes 16,185

                No 7,239



                JUDICIAL RETENTION

                State Supreme Court

                George W. Draper III


                Yes 15,055

                No 6,424



                State Court of Appeals

                Southern District

                William Francis

                Yes 15,294

                No 6,174

                UNOPPOSED CANDIDATES

                The following candidates are unopposed and virtually assured of election.

                Republicans

                State House — 159th District, Bill Lant; 160th District, Bill Reiboldt; 161st District, Bill White; 162nd District, Charlie Davis.

                Circuit judge — Tim Perigo.

                County treasurer — Gina Rodriguez.

                Sheriff — Ken Copeland.

                Coroner — Mark Bridges.

                Assessor — Gloria Gourley.

                Public administrator — JeAnna McGarrah.

                Surveyor — James Loncarich.


                All the shit unfit to print

                http://www.joplinglobe.com

                Comment


                • #23
                  Controversy over gun-permit information still smoldering in Jefferson City

                  Controversy over gun-permit information still smoldering in Jefferson City

                  By Eli Yokley
                  news@joplinglobe.com
                  April 13, 2013



                  http://www.joplinglobe.com/topstorie...Jefferson-City
                  http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...=8276#post8276

                  JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Missouri lawmakers learned last week that the federal government had been sent a list of names of Missourians who have permits to carry concealed guns, adding new fuel for conservative critics of the state Department of Revenue’s licensing procedures.

                  The firestorm was sparked in February, when Stoddard County resident Eric Griffin, 52, filed suit against the local fee office after it attempted to scan personal documents when he tried to file for a concealed-carry endorsement. After a fee office employee, contracted by the Department of Revenue, attempted to scan some of his documents, Griffin stopped her, and the fee office would not allow him to obtain his license.

                  Griffin’s lawsuit caught the interest of various state lawmakers, including Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder and House Speaker Tim Jones, in part because the firm the Department of Revenue had hired to produce the licenses, Georgia-based Morpho Trust USA, has ties to the federal government. What’s more, critics contend, is that many of the measures the Department of Revenue is implementing for its new driver licenses and weapon permits are similar to those required by the federal REAL ID Act of 2005, including a central out-of-state printing location and cameras that can measure biometric data. The General Assembly passed legislation in 2009 that banned implementation of the federal law.

                  For the past few weeks, the investigation, led by Sen. Kurt Schaefer, R-Columbia, as he continued work as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, has gone relatively under the radar, in part because it was simply not finding answers to its questions. But late last week after receiving a rare subpoena from Schaefer, the Department of Revenue delivered boxes full of hundreds of documents relating to the department’s new procedures.

                  The committee demanded to know whether the state had sent the documents to some central database within the federal government. Representatives of the department said no, but on Wednesday, Missouri State Highway Patrol Col. Ron Replogle said that in 2011, the patrol turned over encrypted disks of data to the Social Security Administration’s Office of the Inspector General.

                  Replogle, as well as Andrea Spillars, director of the Missouri Department of Public Safety, said the state was well within the law in doing so.

                  “There is no federal database,” Spillars said at a hearing on Thursday. “It was distributed to a law enforcement agency for law enforcement uses.”

                  Still, the admission by Replogle seemed to spark new outrage by Republicans. Jones, joined by several members of the House Republican caucus, marched across the street to the Missouri Supreme Court, where Attorney General Chris Koster’s office is located. There, Jones delivered a letter calling on Koster’s office to appoint a special investigative committee to look into whether anyone has broken any laws pertaining to information sharing.

                  “Under current Missouri law,” Jones said, “those names on concealed-carry permits are confidential.”

                  Koster’s office may be in an awkward situation. On one hand, part of his job description includes defending state agencies like the Department of Revenue when it is being sued. On the other hand, Koster, a Democrat who was endorsed by the National Rifle Association last year and announced this week his interest in running for governor in 2016, could also find some political gain in launching an investigation, much like then-Attorney General Jay Nixon did at the height of the Blunt administration’s email deletion scandal.

                  Aside from the public posturing, the Stoddard County lawsuit also sparked legislative action. Legislation sponsored by state Rep. Todd Richardson, R-Poplar Bluff, passed the House that would prohibit the Department of Revenue from retaining copies of source documents used to obtain driver and nondriver licenses. The bill received bipartisan support from a mix of Democrats wary of REAL ID implementation, as well as from the entire Joplin delegation.

                  State Rep. Mike Kelley, R-Lamar, is one of those lawmakers. Kelley, a gun-rights advocate who made news in December when he proposed legislation that would allow educators to carry concealed weapons in Missouri schools, said the issue is about protecting the Second Amendment.

                  “During the last week my worst fears came true and facts were brought forward proving that not only Missouri law but, I feel, the fabric of the Constitution has been violated,” he said. “House Bill 787 is a simple bill that I feel will help protect the people of Missouri from the overreaching powers under the control of the executive branch and help restore some of the liberties that I feel have been crushed in recent weeks.”

                  News conference

                  On Monday, Jones and Schaefer are scheduled to be in Southwest Missouri to discuss the document controversy. The two have scheduled a joint news conference with Jasper County Sheriff Randy Kaiser in Carthage on Monday afternoon. Earlier in the day, the two lawmakers — both mulling potential statewide candidacies in 2016 — will participate in a similar event in Springfield.


                  All the shit unfit to print

                  http://www.joplinglobe.com

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Head Jailer of Ken Copeland's jewlag wants jewr vote for experienced lawless viciousness

                    Head Jailer of Ken Copeland's jewlag wants jewr vote for experienced lawless viciousness


                    http://www.leavensforsheriff.com/
                    http://christian-identity.netforum/s...4942#post14942
                    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4942#post14942


                    Pig-Dick's Made-Up Stump-Speech to get you tards to vote in the primary for the most vicious pig of the lot:

                    Richard Leavens offers strong support of Second Amendment rights, individual rights, responsible spending, and an open door policy at the Sheriff's Office. That and practical experience in torturing prisoners at the Newton County Jail second to none.

                    Richard has directly managed over 2/3 of the Sheriff's Office at one time, and is skilled in Personnel Management. The Newton County Jailers have a well-deserved reputation for brutality second to none of the adjoining counties and Pig-Dick Leavens isn't scared to grab the tasers out of the paws of jailers who don't want to abuse the prisoners in order to get them to confess to crimes they didn't do. He wrote the first formal Field Training Program for the Newton County Sheriff's Office (yes, he "wrote the book (How to Torture Prisoners & Influence the Conviction-Mill)"). As Commander of the jail, he has reduced staff turnover from 600% to just 15%. He sure lets them evil pigs run wild.

                    As Adjunct Criminal Justice Instructor at Crowder College, along with Corporal Oren Barnes, who advised Mike Lindstedt to murder his own mother if it would drive Pastor Lindstedt from Newton County Richard leads by teaching the next generation of Law Enforcement Officers in the following classes: Police Supervision and Management, Patrol Supervision, Torture-Ethics for Criminal Justice Professionals, Public Administration, Public Budgeting, Criminal Law, Testilying & Practical Perjury, Treasonous Barratry, Coverup & Kickbacks, Felon "Fight Club" and Introduction to Criminal Justice.

                    When disaster and major emergencies strike, he has an excellent reputation as the go-to man for assistance and problem solving in order to coerce a plea-"bargain". He is also known for solving problems as they arise within the department in a calm and professional manner, even when they are outside his comfort zone. Torturing prisoners, be it a white one in 2000 and the nigger Donald Overton on 25 July 2005 under the administrations of Ron Doerge and Ken Copeland are well inside this evil pig's "cum-cum-cum-comfort zone."

                    He was Point Man of the Special Entry Team (SRT) for ten years. Richard is now ready to lead the department through the training and skills it needs to deal with changing citizen expectations and a changing world of technology. Portable electro-torture devices -- tasers -- are the wave of Pig-Dick Leavens' approach to enhancing civil war, because when it cums time to exterminate all the dirty evil pigs, you don't want any of them to escape getting what they deserve cum the Revolution.

                    Contact Richard at richardleavens2016@gmail.com

                    or by phone, voice mail or text at 417-483-7193

                    Pig-Dick Richard Leavens if you positively want to wallow in evil.


                    Let Me Tell You About 'Capt'n' Richard Leavens . . .
                    Head Jailer of the Newton County Jail & Torture & Murder Center !!!



                    Tortures Prisoners, Enables Police Brutality

                    Comment


                    • #25




                      http://christian-identity.netforum/s...4963#post14963
                      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4963#post14963




                      Anglo-Mestizo ZOGbot 4 Shire-Reeve

                      Comment


                      • #26




                        http://christian-identity.netforum/s...4964#post14964
                        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4964#post14964




                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Sheriff hopefuls face off at Newton County forum -- jewplin Glob

                          Sheriff hopefuls face off at Newton County forum

                          Blunt, Long also speak

                          BY SUSAN REDDEN
                          sredden@joplinglobe.com
                          Page 1A, Wednesday July 27, 2016



                          http://www.joplinglobe.com/news/loca...a419d181a.html
                          http://christian-identity.netforum/s...4966#post14966
                          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4966#post14966


                          NEOSHO, Mo. — Four candidates for Newton County sheriff squared off Tuesday to make one last appeal to a gathering of voters before the primary election a week away.

                          Richard Leavens, Chris Jennings, Craig Davis and Mike Langland emphasized qualifications, education and plans for the department in brief speeches before a large crowd during a candidate forum held as part of the annual Newton County Republican watermelon feed.

                          U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt and U.S. Rep. Billy Long also spoke, along with most Republican candidates for statewide office and contenders for the six county offices to be filled in the primary. Candidates spoke to a packed house in the Lampo Building, after the event was moved to Big Spring Park because of the threat of rain.

                          The sheriff’s race attracted a field of four candidates because Ken Copeland, the current occupant, is retiring at the end of his third term.

                          Two of those seeking the post — Capt. Leavens and Chief Deputy Jennings — are sheriff’s department members, while Davis is a Jasper County deputy and Langland is a former Newton County deputy.

                          Leavens, a 27-year veteran with the sheriff’s office, is third in command and currently works as a corrections administrator and in sheriff’s administration. He said the job entails everything from administrative work to high-risk duties.

                          “I have the qualifications,

                          SEE FORUM, 8A

                          FROM 1A

                          with a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and I’ve run a private sector business,” he said. “I started as a reserve (deputy), and now I oversee a $3 million budget.”

                          He also has been endorsed by former sheriff Ron Doerge.

                          Jennings, who has been with the department for 24 years, noted he had the endorsement of the current sheriff. A 36year law enforcement veteran, he has been chief deputy for 20 years.

                          He cited leadership experience, saying he had direct responsibility for every major case in the county and that all but one of 30 homicides had been solved under his supervision. As chief deputy, he said, he is responsible for the entire department, adding, “I know what works.”

                          Davis, a sergeant and 25year veteran with the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office, said he would bring fresh ideas to the department. He said he would institute a community- oriented policing program for more emphasis on crime prevention.

                          The policing program is underway in Jasper County, he said, noting he has the endorsement of Jasper County Sheriff Randee Kaiser. He said he would form stronger ties with the police departments in the county and also had been endorsed by city officials in Fairview, Diamond and Granby.

                          Langland is a former Newton County deputy who also has worked in the State Department training police officers in Iraq and now works in security at Freeman Health Systems.

                          He said he has 22 years of experience in law enforcement, plus 20 years in private sector business, along with a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice.

                          He said little has changed in the sheriff’s department since he left after first running for sheriff 12 years ago and that he would work with the County Commission on increased funding to improve operations.

                          Davis is leading in the fundraising race among the candidates, with $24,920 in contributions as of eight days before the election. Jennings had donations totaling $16,564, and Leavens, $8,626. Langland has not filed documents reporting any campaign collections or spending.



                          All the shit unfit to print

                          http://www.joplinglobe.com

                          Comment


                          • #28




                            http://christian-identity.netforum/s...4968#post14968
                            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4968#post14968




                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Primary votes to seal most posts -- Newton County voters face several GOP races

                              Primary votes to seal most posts -- Newton County voters face several GOP races

                              BY ARIEL COOLEY, Page 4D
                              acooley@joplinglobe.com




                              http://christian-identity.netforum/s...4971#post14971
                              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4971#post14971



                              .


                              NEOSHO, Mo. — Newton County voters in Tuesday’s GOP primaries essentially will decide races for two county commission seats, sheriff, assessor, coroner and surveyor.

                              With no Democrats running for Newton County offices, the winners of the GOP primary are virtually assured of election in November.

                              Two incumbent county commissioners have attracted opposition. Kevin Pruitt is challenging District 1 incumbent Alan Cook, and Lucas Thogmartin is challenging District 2 incumbent Jim Jackson.

                              The incumbent surveyor, James Loncarich, has also attracted opposition from Jerry Wood.

                              Two races are for posts for which the incumbent did not seek re-election.

                              Richard Leavens, Chris Jennings, Craig Davis and Mike Langland are pursuing the county sheriff’s office, which has been held by Ken Copeland for 20 years.

                              Candidates for the assessor position are Cheryle Perkins and Tami Owens. The current assessor is Gloria Gourley.

                              Three men are vying for the county coroner post, previously held by Mark Bridges for multiple terms.

                              They are John Broom, John Worley and Dale Owen.

                              Newton County voters in Joplin will also decide whether the city of Joplin should continue collecting a local sales tax on the tilting of motor vehicles, trailers, boats and outboard motors that are purchased out of state.

                              COUNTY COMMISSIONER 1ST DISTRICT

                              • COOK, 54, of Granby, is a lifelong Newton County resident. He is retired after 23 years at Leggett & Platt Inc. where he served as the staff vice president of application development. He was elected to the County Commission in 2012. Cook is a Crowder College and Oklahoma Christian University graduate. He holds a bachelor’s degree in mathematics.

                              • PRUITT, 49, of Neosho, owns an insurance and financial solutions agency. He has lived in the area his entire life. Pruitt holds a bachelor’s degree in mass communications from Missouri Southern State University.

                              COUNTY COMMISSIONER 2ND DISTRICT

                              • JACKSON, 62, of Neosho, has lived in the area for more than 40 years. He retired after 32 years with KSNF-TV in Joplin as a reporter and news anchor. Jackson was elected as a Newton County commissioner in 2012 and holds a bachelor’s degree in mass communications from Missouri Southern State University.

                              • THOGMARTIN, 32, of Neosho, is a lifelong Newton County resident. He is a self-employed farmer and small-business owner. Thogmartin attended Neosho High School, Crowder College and Missouri State University where he obtained a bachelor’s degree in general agriculture.

                              SHERIFF

                              • LEAVENS, 55, of Neosho, has worked at the sheriff’s office for 27 years. He has lived in Newton County his whole life. Leavens received his bachelor’s degree in business administration from Missouri Southern State University.

                              • JENNINGS, 57, of Neosho, is a lifelong county resident. He has been with the sheriff’s office for 24 years and is currently the chief deputy. Jennings also served as a Marine for three years after graduating from Joplin High School.

                              • DAVIS, 48, of Neosho, has lived in Newton County for 15 years. He has worked for the Jasper County sheriff’s office for 26 years as a deputy. Davis attended Missouri Southern State University but left before graduating.

                              • LANGLAND, 63, of Neosho, is a security guard with Freeman Health System. He has lived in Newton County for 53 years. This is his fourth time running for sheriff. He attended high school in Neosho and holds a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice administration from Missouri Southern State University. Langland was also in the Army for three years.

                              ASSESSOR

                              • PERKINS, 53, of Neosho, has lived in Newton County for 18 years. Perkins has been a deputy assessor since 2003 and is certified in International Association of Assessing Officers Courses. She graduated from high school in Garden Grove, California.

                              • OWENS, 51, of Neosho, owns and operates Three Rivers Real Estate of Neosho and has been a licensed real estate agent for 14 years. She has lived in Newton County for 47 years. Owens also serves as the state director to the Missouri Association of Realtors and is a Neosho High School graduate.

                              CORONER

                              • BROOM, 62, of Neosho, has lived in Newton county for six years. He has been the college administrator and a history professor for the College of Graduate and Continuing Studies at Norwich University for 10 years. He received his bachelor’s degree in history from the University of Minnesota, his master’s in history from Norwich University and his doctorate in history from the Graduate School of the Union Institute.

                              • WORLEY, 62, of Seneca, is a retired police officer and currently works for the Wyandotte School District in Oklahoma. He has lived in the county for 15 years. Worley attended high school in Wyandotte.

                              • OWEN, 66, of Leawood Village, has been a Newton County resident for 28 years. He and wife own S& S Security Systems. Owen is a retired Joplin office officer, and is a funeral director with Parker Mortuary. He attended Missouri Southern State University and received his bachelor’s degree in criminal justice.

                              SURVEYOR

                              • WOOD could not be reached for biographical information.

                              • LONCARICH, 58, has lived in southern Newton County for 35 years. He is a licensed surveyor and has served as the Newton County surveyor for 18 years. Loncarich received his associate degree in land surveying from Crowder College and the University of Arkansas.


                              All the shit unfit to print

                              http://www.joplinglobe.com

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                I Tortured a whigger & a nigger in the Newton County Jail -- And All I got 4 It was Fourth Place in the Primary

                                I Tortured a whigger & a nigger in the Newton County Jail -- And All I got 4 It was Fourth Place in the Primary



                                http://christian-identity.netforum/s...4982#post14982
                                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4982#post14982




                                Let Me Tell You About 'Capt'n' Richard Leavens . . .
                                Head Jailer of the Newton County Jail & Torture & Murder Center !!!



                                Tortures Prisoners, Enables Police Brutality

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X