Why You Should Vote and Attend Jury Duty: The enemy wants you to sit down, shut up, and hide from all responsibility

Years ago, in a book I wrote called The Symposium of Justice, I had a detailed plot about a sinister global organization that used a kind of radio wave embedded in water towers to manipulate the pituitary gland of residents to control their minds in a commercial way.  It had attracted some attention from Hollywood, but by the time the Santa Monica Meat Grinders were done revising the story into the kind of movie they wanted to make of it, the story was completely changed, and I realized that it wasn’t science fiction, but fact.  This was before 5G technology and what we have since learned about the power that the NSA has.  However, the concept is the same: large, powerful, global organizations want to control people through technology.  And I thought of that as I have suddenly had a rash of people tell me they aren’t voting during this election because the system is so corrupt that it’s useless to them.  I’ve seen these patterns all my life, which is why I wrote the book I did.  I don’t think it’s an accident at all that some kinds of people are suddenly anti-voting. I have been in this business for a long time, and it has hardly ever come up.  Occasionally, you get a person here or there, but it’s not like this.  It’s as if some 5G broadcast was penetrating the minds of millions of people and discouraging them from participating in our republic.  Also, I have heard more than ever the word “democracy” instead of what we actually are, a “republic.”  Something is going on, and when I have seen this kind of thing in the past, I always look for some sinister organization that has figured out how to penetrate a brain with some radio wave that changes the decision-making of the recipients.  And with this voting thing, I think it’s just another form of election fraud, making people feel like their voice doesn’t matter, so they sit on the fence during a critical election, frustrating a participatory environment.

Several weeks ago, I reported for jury duty, and I showed up with the card they mailed me and joined about 100 other people in a big courtroom in Hamilton, Ohio.  I talked to a few people I knew there from different things and asked them immediately if they could get me out of the experience.  I told them I had work to do and couldn’t afford to spend so much time sitting in a courtroom.  The people I talked to recommended that I stick around and even volunteer to be the foreman.  They told me that I was precisely the kind of person who should be on a jury, with my love of law, order, justice, and all.  And that I would see why in a minute.  So from there, the judge overseeing this particular session of the grand jury selection asked out of all those 100 people for volunteers so that he would not have to compel anybody to be there.  After some hesitation, 15 hands went up.  He needed 9 for the grand jury and about five alternates.  So he had just a bit more than he needed for his grand jury.  And of course, I was one of the volunteers.  The judge put us all in the box and picked the alternates and once that was set, he let the rest of the people go, like fish caught and thrown back into the lake.  These people should have all been in the Olympics because they left at record speed to flee the courtroom and return back to their lives of normalcy, whatever that may have been.  They were gone much faster than they had come in. 

As I did my term as the foreman, I found the experience very rewarding.  I was selected for jury duty with the initial card because I voted so much.  I tend to vote for every election issue, so my name was in the hat for selection for that reason.   Many people in society don’t vote much, and they keep themselves out of processes like jury duty because they never have time.  And those who do get selected work to get out of it.  I could have gotten out of it.  But I have a life where I can manage everything.  I work 24 hours a day, so my life is not judged so much by a nine-to-five job or even an eight-to-four.  I certainly don’t work banker’s hours.  So I listened to what the people I knew at the courthouse told me, and I didn’t try to get out of jury duty, and I’m happy I had that experience.  Even though it was work and a lot of it was very unpleasant, I felt like much of it was something I could bring to the table that helped the community function better, and it was good to do.  But it was sad that our entire Republic depends on people participating in things like jury duty and voting to get your name in the hat.  We are not a democracy, as the communist losers from the left keep trying to call it.  We have a democratic process where majority votes select our government management systems.  But we are supposed to populate those roles with people committed to the task who represent us so we can do other things with our lives.  We don’t pick people to rule over us.

What was strange is that while I have been having this experience, I have heard from more and more people indicating that they weren’t going to vote, that Trump is part of the problem, and that they can’t bring themselves to participate.  And I wondered if there were nearby water towers with signals penetrating people’s brains run by the CIA, making them not want to vote so that the Deep State might get away with another stolen election.  I would advise everyone to fight through whatever is holding them back; their thoughts may not be their own.  But people who want to control your life may be trying to frustrate you by not participating so they can take it over.  That may sound like a science fiction consideration, but I have learned over the years that it’s more of a science fact than anything.  And I saw that same trait in that courtroom for jury duty.  People acted like they had something better to do than to be on a jury of their peers and shape society the way only good people can, with their direct input.  What were they rushing away to do, to watch a movie on Netflix?  Get milk at the store?  Complain about taxes?  I would advise everyone with those little doubts in the back of their mind to use that mind to overcome negative thoughts, especially about a participatory government.  Participate, go to jury duty, and make sure you vote.  Don’t sit on the sidelines because the bad guys are counting on you sitting out.  Into frustrating you from action and judgment.  They want our world to collapse from a lack of effort so they can rule over the remains, and they hope that a democracy of the mob will give them that power, not through force, but through laziness, apathy, and fear of relevancy.  These people wish to rule by making you think that none of it matters and that the way to conquer you is through a lack of participation.  It is not a frontal attack by an engaged community defending their republic one vote at a time.  And our form of government requires that good people show up, and participate.

Rich Hoffman

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