Breaking Big Brother
Strategies for
Regaining
By Ken
Adachi <Editor@eudcate-yourself.org>
http://educate-yourself.org/BBB/index.shtml
June
22, 2004
When I
was a kid, it was common to see a big decal on the windows of many offices and
stores in the downtown area with the letters "BBB" on it. The letters
stood for the "Better Business Bureau" and membership with that
organization was suppose to be an assurance that the management of that store
or company was interested in maintaining an ethical posture with the public. If
a customer was mistreated in some fashion by a shoddy businessman or a clerk,
you could always pick up the phone (or your pen) and log a complaint with the
Better Business Bureau. Over the phone, you were told that your complaint would
be properly addressed and that the owners of that company would be duly appraised of the foul deed and steps taken to assure that it
wouldn't happen again. It was the norm in those days for customers to remind an
abusive, surly, or non-cooperative clerk that they were prepared to make a
complaint with the Better Business Bureau if their concerns was not met, and
more often than not, it did seem to have the desired effect-at least with the clerk .
Of
course, we were young and naive then. We thought that all was right with the
world and that people meant what they said and said what they meant. Later on,
we were to learn that the "BBB" was essentially a public relations
gambit set up by local businessmen for the protection and welfare of their
members and they were never really an advocate for customer's interests. The
true purpose of the organization was to act as a shock absorber- absorbing the
offended customer's anger and frustration and thus allowing it to dissipate
into non-action. Without such a buffer in place, more than a few abused
customers may have taken their grievance into a courtroom and settled there
with monetary damages being awarded-and we couldn't have that now could
we? Or perhaps, those irritated customers may have organized into their own
customer rights advocacy groups and offered some real assertive action to the
bon mots of the BBB. And we certainly couldn't have that
either! So, for many decades, the BBB sham was played out in small and large
towns across
Eventually,
the BBB was pushed off to the side by the emergence of government consumer
protection agencies, but , unfortunately, those
agencies too have largely devolved into a self serving gambit and sham of their
own making, but on a more sophisticated level. The reality is that most
ordinary Americans today are up against a powerful amalgamation of big business
and big government in their everyday lives which strips them of every last
shred of privacy and self determination. This is the Age of Big Brother and we
are now being herded, month by month, into ever tighter constraints of conduct.
You are a number (or more accurately a group of numbers) with this octopus and
you better be prepared to fess up you numbers or you aren't getting
anything and you aren't going anywhere.
For
instance, it is nearly impossible today to walk into a dentist or a doctor's
office in
This
same sort of coercion takes place with parents when it comes to school-required
vaccinations, obtaining social security cards for infants in order to claim
them for an exemption on your income tax, etc. You get the idea. You are
treated like an indentured slave by a corporate feudal system, but because you
are free to drive about in your car (assuming you have your state-granted
"privilege" to drive, your driver's licence,
your registration, and your insurance), you are made to think you are free, but
you are not free. You are in bondage; you just can't see the chains. I just
heard on the radio yesterday, that the Supreme Court voted 5-4 in favor of a
law that says it is now a crime in
Solutions
It's a
waste of time appealing to the same political forces who
were responsible for bringing these restrictions into our lives, for relief.
The same goes for big business coercion. This is why I don't bother signing
petitions or similar outdated, ineffective methods for bringing about change.
The way you control political corruption is to throw the bums out of office,
which can be problematic today considering the fraud of electronic voting and
the fraudulence of the nine people who make up the Supreme Court, but
fortunately, big business is less problematic. The way you curb big business
abuse is to take away their business.
Numbers
There
is an 800 pound gorilla standing in the corner of the room and no one is taking
notice of him while we individually thrash about and ponder what to do to end
this Orwellian nightmare. It's the sheer number of disgruntled and vexed
Americans who are ready to be free of these coercive shackles that makes for a
most powerful vehicle for change, but change can only begin to seed locally and
expand regionally. Attempting to organize this effort on a national level is
doomed before it begins because there are too many reactionary forces in place
to shut it down. Locally, however, it can and will work. In fact, there are
already many such independence-minded groups living and working in small
communities around the world -free of the hassles, constrictions, and coercions
of Big Brother.
Regional Currency
One of
the reasons that the Illuminati decided to assassinate John F. Kennedy on
November 22, 1963 was because he was about to issue US government silver
certificates (Update 6/23/04: someone sent me an e-mail and said that it was to
be silver notes, not certificates, issued by the US Treasury
) for US currency and get out from under the inflatable, valueless paper
promissory notes issued by the private bank owned by the Rothchilds
(and others) known as The Federal Reserve System. To be sure, the silver
certificate plan was immediately scrapped following Kennedy's murder and no
other Illuminati stand-in puppet acting in the role of
Volunteers Needed
The
purpose of this new section on my web site is to solicit ideas from readers and
offer articles and networking links to web sites that offer real solutions to
Big Brother's corporate hegemony. We need doctors and dentists, for example,
who are willing to provide their services for patients who only want to provide
their name, a mailing address, and a telephone number where they can be reached
or a message can be left for them and NOTHING MORE in the way of personal
identity or documentation. While I realize that being paid in full for services
rendered is uppermost in the minds of most professionals, I'm convinced that
cooperative and secure payment methods can be worked out between patient groups
and doctors who understand the need to re-establish the rights of privacy and
freedom for Americans that has been taken away from us by this
corporate/government octopus. Of course, most doctors are paid by insurance
companies and insurance companies are at the heart of the problem, but new
collective groups can be formed of private citizens who wish to pool their
funding resources and payment arrangements can be made with willing physicians.
I also like the idea of allowing patients to take their records home with them
(and yes, I realize that some people will lose them or spill spaghetti
sauce on them, but we are talking about re-establishing freedoms here, including
that freedom). When the Homeland Gestapo or FBI pull one of their
infamous ninja style SWAT team raids on unarmed civilians at a doctor's office,
wouldn't it be nice if there were no patient records there to be seized?
Please
let me know if there are any doctors or dentists out there who are amenable to
this idea, because I believe there is a huge number of
patients out there looking for you.
Afterthought
It
would be delightful if the day ever came when I could start seeing those big
decals once again in the windows of stores and shops which read
"BBB", but this time it would refer to a member in good standing with
"Big Brother Breakers" or maybe "Big Brother Busters" would
be more hip. Now that would be a thrill.
Please send your ideas, articles, and suggestions to Editor@educate-yourself.org <mailto:Editor@educate-yourself.org>