CHAPTER TWELVE: ANGELINA


    Billy walked into the living room to spend time with Angelina. She was happy to see him. She told him, “Your efforts have been very successful in your land, Master. The legislatures of five States have repealed their drug control statutes. New Hampshire is one of them.”
    “Excellent! If ballots didn’t work, bullets will.” Billy replied.
    “The day is coming when you will need to return to your land to implore the Freedom Fighters to suspend their efforts.” Angelina said.
    Billy sat down and watched the New Hampshire news on television. It seems that New Hampshire supporters of liberty had formed local committees and a State committee, the Committee for Liberty in New Hampshire. Similar committees had formed in other States. The Committee for Liberty in New Hampshire was issuing a public statement. The spokeswoman faced the camera as she spoke.
    “At this time,” the spokeswoman said, “it appears that New Hampshire is in the process of claiming victory. The government has repealed its drug control statutes, and inmates who are prisoners of the War on Drugs are being identified and released as we speak. The release has not been complete, but it appears now that the efforts of the Freedom Fighters would not be put to best use within this State. Freedom Fighters, hear me out. Do not kill any more cops within the State of New Hampshire, that are not border guards, before the election results are announced; and do not kill any more cops in New Hampshire, that are not border guards, if the outcome of the election is a victory for liberty. There are plenty of cops in other States that still have not been killed yet.
    “Since we are calling for a discontinuation, let me explain that this appeal expires at the end of November, Greenwich Mean Time. Let the enemies of liberty remember that our demands have teeth. We demand the repeal of all zoning restrictions, the repeal of all unjust gambling restrictions, the repeal of taxes on humans, the elimination of government-run indoctrination centers, the repeal of all curfew ordinances, and the recission of all extradition demands promulgated in consequence of unjust laws. Furthermore, we demand the release of all innocent persons confined to mental institutions.” the spokeswoman declared. “In the past, our demands have been treated as a big, funny joke. With the slaughter of larger and larger numbers of cops, the enemy has finally stopped laughing and started complying. This is the beginning of the end of tyranny.” she said.    
    A spokesman faced the camera to continue the announcement. “Because alcohol is a drug, we have forced the New Hampshire Legislature to repeal all laws restricting the sale thereof. Alcoholic beverages are available at all hours, to persons of any age. However, we note that some producers are only willing to deliver their product to the holders of licenses. That is their right, because the product is their property. The legislature is addressing the issue of increased temptation to drink and drive, by increasing the penalties for that crime. When you undertake to drive a vehicle that you are too clumsy to handle properly, you create a random danger to the public, recklessly endangering innocent people. You still have a free will, whether to try to pass when there’s oncoming traffic, but you do not have a free will, whether to crash because of poor control, impaired reaction time, or impaired depth perception. It’s like throwing the dice, you have no control over what number comes up. This random, reckless endangerment, not the increased likelihood of a conscious decision to commit a secondary crime, is the violation of the rights of others, and to secure these rights, governments are instituted. Similar restrictions need to be in place concerning driving while under the influence of other drugs. The question will arise, how drunk is too drunk? How stoned is too stoned? How high is too high? Well, these are judgment calls, just like when rain falls during a baseball game. How much rain is too much? The important thing is that these judgments must not be made by the home team’s manager, while his team is ahead in the seventh inning, because he is clearly biased. The job of the umpires isn’t to please the crowd. Too many legislators thought their job was to please the crowd in the stands. The job of the legislators, however, is to determine, as best they can, what is fair in making judgment calls, in those cases that are not answered by applying principles.”
    Billy told Angelina, “I’m very proud of what these people did.”
    The newscaster faced the camera. “The sniper who shot four police officers in a surprise attack in Nashua yesterday, died this afternoon of gunshot wounds he received in the shoot-out. Three of the officers died in the attack, the fourth is in stable condition at St. Joseph Hospital in Nashua. The sniper said he chose to participate in Operation U.S.A. Freedom to make the government pay the price for what he called ‘its deliberate wrongdoing.’”
    Billy commented, “That Freedom Fighter made a very big sacrifice, but it will not have been in vain. Even if the enemy didn’t face defeat, at least he made them pay the price for their deliberate wrongdoing. As it turns out, he helped force the government of the State of New Hampshire to surrender in the War on Drugs and to release all the P.O.W.’s.”
    Angelina cuddled a little closer to Billy. He cuddled a little closer to her. They French-kissed for a few minutes.
    Billy said, “I’m delighted that liberty is winning. I am happy to see people fighting back and winning, for a change. The enemies of liberty created an environment in which anybody who disagreed with them would be considered, by a lot of people, to be crazy. They were very successful with their psychological warfare.”
    Angelina grinned as she cuddled with Billy. He took her by the hand and led her into the serve room. “Master, how may I serve you?” she asked.
    “Actually, I wish to serve you also. I enjoy your affection. Angelina, I want to please you.” Billy told her.
    Angelina began unbuttoning Billy’s shirt and running her hands over him. “I love the way you hold me so affectionately, Master. Your gentleness speaks to me.” she told him.
    Billy held Angelina and she smiled, so he just kept holding her. “It makes me happy to have you to accept my affection.” Billy said. Then he removed two cold wine coolers from the refrigerator, opening one for her and one for himself.
    Angelina looked into Billy’s eyes. Billy looked into hers. Then he looked at his bottle of wine cooler and reminisced, “You know, I brought home a date once, and offered her a drink, but I was careful. First I told her that if she’s one of the people who really shouldn’t drink, I strongly encouraged her not to drink; and if she simply does not wish to drink, I promised not to be offended. Then I offered her rum and cola with ice. She was somewhat taken aback by my precautions at first, but then I explained how important it was, and later, she agreed with me.”
    “Well, Master,” Angelina said, “once again, you did the right thing.”
    After two hours in the serve room, Billy and Angelina took a shower. Billy dried Angelina off and she dried him off, and they got dressed in clean clothes. They sat down to watch more New Hampshire news.
    The reporter faced the camera, saying, “Meanwhile, the Massachusetts Legislature refuses to comply with the demands of the so-called Freedom Fighters. Massachusetts officials are furious that officials in New Hampshire hesitate to return a suspected drug dealer who allegedly shot and killed a Massachusetts state trooper on October 3, during a traffic on U.S. Highway 3 in Tyngsboro, and then fled north, into New Hampshire.  The Committee for Liberty in New Hampshire demands that the suspect be set free and given political asylum in New Hampshire. Article IV of the U.S. Constitution requires New Hampshire officials to deliver him up, to be extradited to Massachusetts, but a spokesperson for the Committee says, quote, ‘Our side does not accept any doctrine, instruction, ruling, order, regulation, ordinance, statute, treaty or constitution to the extent that the same is inconsistent with liberty and justice for all. We never did. We never will.’ Unquote.
    “Well, more Massachusetts police officers have been handing in their resignations over the past few days, often citing the increased danger. One former Lowell Police sergeant joins us now, to explain why. Sergeant, what led to your decision?”
    The screen showed the cop at a remote location. “The decision of Massachusetts lawmakers to continue using us cops as weapons of violence, to enforce laws that they know very well they have no right to impose, impelled me to resign. They have been put on notice that my fellow officers and I will be exterminated if lawmakers continue their deliberate wrongdoing, and their reply, essentially, is that this is perfectly okay with them that we go get ourselves killed. That’s how little they care about our lives. Well, I was willing to risk my life to protect the people in Lowell, but I’m not willing to get myself killed enforcing unjust laws.” the cop said.
    The reporter asked, “You knew when you signed up, that the Massachusetts General Court imposed these laws, so why did you sign up?”
    The sergeant answered, “Well, I felt that there was a need to enforce the necessary laws. At the time, I was willing to enforce unjust laws, because accepting that duty was the only way I could sign up to perform the necessary duty of enforcing necessary laws. That decision was wrong, but the increased armed resistance by the Freedom Fighters deterred me from continuing to do what was wrong.”
    The reporter asked, “Why do your fellow officers remain on duty?”
    The sergeant responded, “There’s a strong resistance among officers to avoid what they call getting ‘Stockholmed’ or persuaded by seemingly reasonable arguments, to defy the government and take the side of the gunmen, whom many cops still consider to be terrorists. They build a wall between themselves and the arguments and decide, no matter how sensible the arguments are, they’re not going to support that cause.”
    The reporter faced the camera. “Around the country, there are about half as many cops now, as there were before so-called Operation U.S.A. Freedom began.”
    Billy told Angelina, “Well, if the members of the Massachusetts General Court don’t want more cops to die, all they have to do is stop using the cops as weapons of violence against innocent drug dealers who are peacefully minding their own business.”
    The reporter faced the camera, saying “Quebec provincial authorities have closed Route 257, the only highway leading from the province into New Hampshire, saying they did not want to condone smuggling. Border inspections on the U.S. side in Pittsburg, New Hampshire have been made impossible because of the actions of the so-called Freedom Fighters.”
    Angelina put the palm of her right hand on Billy’s chest, saying, “I am so proud of you, Master. And this is only the beginning.” They hugged and French kissed. She changed the channel.
    The man on the screen said, “This is Freedom Television, the voice of the New York City Committee for Liberty, live twenty-four hours a day. This station is paid for by viewers like you, making voluntary contributions, and is available via the internet around the world.”
    A woman faced the camera. “We’re back now. We were talking about the future of Operation U.S.A. Freedom and its implications around the world. Jim, you had something to say.”
    The man spoke. “Well, let me say that if you were walking out to your car in the studio parking lot, and armed men were trying to grab you, and handcuff you, and force you into their car against your will, I have every right to rush in there and defend you, by any necessary means. There’s no numerical limit to the number of attackers I am entitled to kill to defend you. Likewise, you have every right to defend me if it happened the other way around.
    “If the attackers happen to be cops, that only makes a difference if they have legitimate authority to detain you. They do not have legitimate authority to detain whomever they please. They need a legitimate excuse, and unjust laws, and especially statutes that conflict with constitutional rights, statutes that are not even laws because they are void, are not a legitimate excuse. People have just as much right to shoot cops who are trying to enforce a curfew ordinance as they have a right to kill any other armed attackers trying to force somebody into a car. The fact that enemy-appointed judges in enemy-run courts uphold the statutes makes absolutely no difference if the statutes are actually unconstitutional; and even if they are not unconstitutional, we will not accept them if the government lacks authority to impose them. Slavery was not unconstitutional in many States in the South, for decades, but slavery was clearly unjust.
    “Now, the right to rescue a person being kidnapped, whether by the cops or by any other violent criminals, does not end halfway across Main Street. People have a right to run across Main Street to rescue a person being kidnapped, whether by cops or any other violent criminals. Likewise, this right does not end at the double yellow line on State Line Avenue. If the Texarkana, Arkansas cops are trying to kidnap somebody, it makes no difference that the rescuers are residents of the Texas side, running across State Line Avenue to make the rescue.
    “Likewise, this right does not end at Canusa Avenue in Beebe Plain, where one side of the street is in Quebec and the other side is in Vermont. If the Sûrete du Québec is trying to kidnap somebody, Vermonters have just as much right to rescue the victim as if the kidnappers were any other violent criminals who happen to be in Beebe Plain, Quebec. People have a right to travel. The Government of Canada has no right to impose immigration restrictions and Vermonters have every right to violate those restrictions and to kill any cops that try to stop them. Vermonters, of course, have every right to cross the line into Quebec to stop the Quebec cops from enforcing any other laws the province or the Canadian government have no right to impose. So Operation U.S.A. Freedom is only the first phase of Operation Global Freedom. If members of the Canadian Parliament did not want Vermonters to exterminate Canadian border guards at the ports of entry, then members of the Canadian Parliament should have thought of that before they voted wrong. Naturally, we fully support the right of Canadians to rescue innocent people when they are being kidnapped in the United States.
    “This international aspect of the right to defend against aggressive acts of government will become more relevant when armed resistance here in the United States becomes less necessary. Right now, a few State committees for liberty have urged Freedom Fighters not to exterminate any more cops within their jurisdictions, and in one shoot-out this morning in Boston, Massachusetts, it appears that three of the Freedom Fighters were from New Hampshire. They had an effective strategy, where one Freedom Fighter takes out one enemy officer directing traffic, the enemy dispatcher sends the Freedom Fighter more targets, the Freedom Fighter is holed up and surrounded, but the enemy did not know that two more Freedom Fighters were lurking in nearby buildings, with high-powered rifles. The exciting part was when one local resident joined the fight by confiscating a wounded cop’s gun as a prize of war, and using it on cops. She was only able to kill one cop before being killed in action, but it was encouraging to see this spontaneous work. What’s more, by joining the battle, she created a diversion, and while cops were shooting her, one Freedom Fighter was able to kill one cop and wound another. Of course, as soon as the members of the Massachusetts General Court decide they don’t not want any more cops to get exterminated, they know what demands to comply with.”
    The other commentator said, “I believe this is not the first time men from New Hampshire have gone to Boston to fight tyranny. Remember, on 17 June 1775, when the British won a victory on Bunker Hill, a lot of men from New Hampshire were fighting on the side of the Patriots. Jim?”
    Jim replied, “Well, first of all, that battle, the so-called Battle of Bunker Hill, was not won on Bunker Hill, it was won on Breed’s Hill, in Charlestown, Massachusetts, not Boston.”
    The other commentator defended his statement, “Actually, Charlestown is a section of the City of Boston.”
    Jim replied, “It’s part of Boston now, but it was the Town of Charlestown until 1847, when it became a city, and it remained the City of Charlestown until it was annexed into Boston in 1874.”
    The other commentator backed down, “Okay, so it’s not the first time men from New Hampshire have gone to Suffolk County….”
    Jim shook his head. “It was Middlesex County until the annexation in 1874. The Battle of Bunker Hill was fought on Breed’s Hill in the Town of Charlestown, Middlesex County, Province of Massachusetts Bay. Remember Longfellow’s poem about how Paul Revere would be waiting on the opposite shore, in Charlestown, that is, and, quote, ‘sound the alarm through every Middlesex village and farm?’ unquote. Charlestown and the entire route to Concord were part of Middlesex County, and Revere, contrary to the poem, got captured along the way.”
    Angelina cuddled with Billy. “You know, Master, Crystal is asleep now. If you want, you can apply sleep gas to her and rape her while she sleeps. You can either have her awaken to discover that she is being raped, or let her sleep through it.”
    “That sounds fun,” Billy said, “but it’s more enjoyable to cuddle with you. It is exciting to see successful rebellion against tyranny, and it is exciting to receive your affection.”
   
 Copyright 2004 Tom Alciere



CHAPTER THIRTEEN

TABLE OF CONTENTS

GLOSSARY


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