Johnny D. Symon
October 11, 2007
Liberty, property, and no stamps
By Johnny D. Symon

While leaving aside for the present a possibility that Christopher Columbus was not the first to discover America, we at least know for sure that few went before him, and, after all, he's to be praised as one of the earliest to believe that the earth was not flat but round. The purpose for his journey was not to discover something new, but to rediscover something old from a different direction. Nonetheless, his discovery of a vast unknown continent, (well, unknown to old-worlders though not a mystery to its tribal inhabitants,) leads me to believe that if anyone should receive the honor of that big discovery, it should be offered on a first refusal basis to its age-old totem pole toting inhabitants.

Nevertheless, the fact that America was discovered by a third party swept that wild and empty land mass from those who hunted buffalo to our present day system containing those who are little more than hunters and practitioners of the big old bluffalow ... and we have to foot their Bluffalow Bill!

As America celebrated the discovery of itself, Spain, under the present Banana Republic Loon Regime, head into tomorrow (Friday, October 12) and a celebration entitled "Día de Nuestra Señora del Pilar" and, more importantly for people like myself, "Día de la Hispanidad," ... Spanish Day. Though I myself see it as another annual opportunity to exercise my "hispanismo" side, and tomorrow will undoubtedly prove to be the most vital and important Día de la Hispanidad in the history of Spanish democracy.

You see, Zapatonto and his Banana Splits have proven over the years that they wish to remove all notion that Spain is a Nation. They're ashamed of their own flag, so ashamed that during their crazy and insane three and a half years in office it's been like searching for a needle in a haystack to view Spain's National Flag anywhere near their presence. Conservative leader, Mariano Rajoy, made a TV appearance yesterday exhorting all Spaniards to turn out in force come Friday with, and in support of, their flag of unity. Rajoy wishes to restore a sense of pride and belonging that has trickled away since the Banana Splits took control, and I reckon that this Spanish Friday will see a huge number of Nationals taking to the streets and showing their support. A recent newspaper poll revealed the magic figure of 85 percent of those questioned in agreement with Rajoy.

Through accidentally discovering America, Cristobal Cockapigeon, in a funny, obtuse and remote kinda way, had really uncovered an immense vehicle that would serve as the turning point for the downtrodden, wretched, and oppressed Europe dwellers, who, prior to the discovery, held no hope of achieving life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

"During what are called the Dark Ages of Europe,
history fell into the hands of that part of the
population which alone was conversant with letters
— the priestly class; and the annals they have left
to us have none of the value which belongs to the
productions of classical antiquity. They were again
mere records; or they were mystical or fanciful tales
of saints and heroes, composed or distorted for the
glorification of the church, and the strengthening of
the influence of the priests over the people. But
these also, in after times, took on a value which
they had not originally possessed, and become to
the later student a precious chapter of the
history of mankind."

— The History of The United States from 1492 to 1910
By Julian Hawthorne

Pretty soon the early pioneers began to risk life and limb traversing the mighty Atlantic Ocean in pursuit of a new and quite possible dream. Their mighty quest for freedom overcame the might of their fears, for unlike Christopher Columbus, who was satisfied from having already made the journey that the world was indeed round, they, on the other hand, would travel on the assurances of another. Furthermore, back in those days everyone was convinced that the oceans contained monsters and demons that would waste no time in dragging them down into Davy Jones's locker.

Yes indeed, the first freedom seeking pioneers who headed West were the bravest of all, but then again, when one senses that all hope has gone, fear ceases to be the tie that binds, and hope, therefore, takes its rightful place. And that's what I believe to be most significant for tomorrow, October 12, in Spain. America celebrated Monday, October 8th, in remembrance of itself while tomorrow over in Spain, the anarchists, headed by their very own people at the top, shall attempt to persuade the Spanish people to forget their own Nation and its history, and to forget themselves also.

But since I've invoked the name of Spanish Anarchy, you might all find its origins of hefty interest. In the late 19th Century the term Anarchist was rarely used in Spain, those monsters called themselves "Internationalists." But irrespective of which name was used, both offered the same result. This false religion was introduced into mainland Spain by an Italian named Giuseppi Fanelli. Initially Fanelli entered the Spanish fray in Barcelona in October, 1868, though as for the day I know not, but I would not be surprised to discover that it was on the 12th. Fanelli did not know a word of Spanish, and equally his audience did not know a word of Italian, therefore, according to an account given in Gerald Brenan's "The Spanish Labyrinth"

"He spoke in French and in Italian, but we could
understand his expressive mimicry and follow his speech.
For except for Gonzalez Morago, who knew a little French,
not one of those present understood a word of any
foreign language and it had not occurred to them
to bring an interpreter. Yet twenty years later Lorenzo
could recall the very accent with which Fanelli had said,
rolling his black eyes above his black beard,
'Cosa Orribile! Spaventosa!'"

The ignorance and stupidity of Internationalists has gassed up and on to the present day, and is currently controlling the Spanish nation.

One man's view of a United Europe differs radically to another's, except when politicians are involved. The European Commission's idea of a United Europe presents a European continent far larger than it really is. To them, a United Europe includes Russia and it's satellites, Africa, and everywhere else the rest of us call Planet Earth, and the European tax payer pays the tab. To corrupt Internationalist politicos there are no boundaries, no borders, just plain old power and control, with One Flag reigning supreme; Europe's Circle of Stars. For me this flag is likened to the moments in cartoons like Tom and Jerry, when someone gets hit with a rock or a club and stars begin to spin around their head. Possibly this analogy represents the EU Flag best of all because I've never encountered an EU politico who ain't dull, stupid, and a fair representation of a stupormarionette, and there's a reason for this;

All EU politicos are dullards and morons because, one way or another, they're representing the wrong side. They collectively represent a love for the world, a devotion to the physical, and a rejection of That which formed and made it. They believe that "the world can live as one," a situation and mindset shared by those in antiquity who came together to build a tower, and found themselves unable to understand a word of those around them, which is exactly what occurred in Spain back in 1868 when Internationalists listened to Mr Fanelli.

I often marvel at the shallowness and stupidity of those who attended the meetings, and subsequently embarked on a fool's errand they had no understanding of. Conversely, I view the early American settlers in a far better light. They sought freedom, not collective slavery. They wished to think and act for themselves, whereas the Internationalists want Big Brother to do their thinking and acting for them. American settlers wanted to be individuals, to serve God and man with the abilities He had provided them, while Liberals, Socialists, Anarchists, Internationalists, all being one and the same, strive to serve the collective whole. All of them seem oblivious to the fact that they've consented to become slaves for Big Brother. They love and serve the world, while we love God and serve our fellow man.

The confounding of Babel workers represented a dividing up into nations a once collective peoples, who formerly spoke only one language. As nations formed they became individual representations of mankind's destiny. Babel was God's way of saying that no good and no progress shall come solely from the hands of mankind. Our quest is to build a nation in God's image, as He fashioned the world likewise must we fashion our respective nations, and those nations fashioned in that manner discover that a sense of pride and belonging take the place of fear and foreboding. We gaze at our flag and see it as representing an ordered link between God and man ... A United Nation in the true sense.

"Meanwhile, emerging august from the shadows of antiquity,
we have that great body of literature of which our own Bible
is the highest type, which purports to present the story
of the dealings of the Creator with His creatures.
These wonderful books appear to have been composed
in a style, and on a principle, the secret of which has
been lost. The facts which they relate, often seemingly
trivial and disconnected, are really but a material veil,
or symbol, concealing a spiritual body of truth, which is
neither trivial nor disconnected, but an organized, orderly
and catholic revelation of the nature of man, of the processes
of his spiritual regeneration, of his final reconciliation
with the Divine. The time will perhaps come when some
inspired man or men will be enabled to handle our modern
history with the same esoteric insight which informed
the Hebrew scribes, when they used the annals of the
obscure tribe to which they belonged as a cover under which
to present the relations of God with all the human race,
past and to come."

— (ibid) Julian Hawthorne

This week's the time to seize the moment, remember the past, and head for the future ... let's all discover it together. Johnny D

© Johnny D. Symon

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