Year 2225: The Legacy

Future Texas remembers truth! Unity Alliance honors democracy at Dallas stadium. Explore descendants’ legacy. What is your legacy?

Our Descendants Memorialize the Truth

Unity Alliance Stadium’s Democracy Hologram Night, Dallas, Texas, 2225

In the slums of the megacity stretching from Dallas through Fort Worth to Plano sits the Trump Memorial Landfill, where vicious ICE, AI-enhanced guard dogs protect recyclables from human pilfering. Nearby, humanoid AI units recharge alongside the landfill’s few remaining human workers at the “Java & Jolt Café.”

Tonight, The Unity Alliance hosts “Democracy Hologram Night,” honoring those who freed America from abusive leaders who sold immigrants for profit, invaded nations for oil, and ordered the shooting of U.S. citizens armed only with whistles.

Tonight as well, The Covenant of Shared Sovereignty gathers to celebrate its founding belief: a cooperative order linking nations, citizens, and AI as equal partners, grounded in reciprocal obligation rather than coercive power, where none is permitted to dominate the other.

To Be Continued …

What is Your Legacy?

JPB

Up Next The Fog of War … Between the Ears

Danger: Town Halls Ahead!

Recommend music “Born to be Wild” by Steppenwolf.

"Free expression is the muscle car on the road to freedom." 
- Pastor Jim

“This is an alert from the Democracy notification system. This is not a test.”

Don’t Stop for Hitchhikers on Road to Freedom!”

Today, though I am an Independent and not associated with a political party, I saw a Republican Town Hall meeting scheduled on Facebook. I responded, “I have never felt ashamed of the United States until now. That dates back before Vietnam.” A short while later I saw the Town Hall was cancelled due to “conflicts in schedule.”

I responded, “I have never felt ashamed of the United States until now. That dates back before Vietnam.” A short while later I saw the Town Hall was cancelled due to “conflicts in schedule.”

Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr’s quote from Amos applies today:

According to the King Center, the civil rights leader went to jail 29 times. He was arrested for acts of civil disobedience and on trumped-up charges, such as when he was jailed in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1956 for driving 30 miles per hour in a 25-mile-per-hour zone.

Last month I put my hands on the cold steel bars of the jail cell at the Civil Rights Memorial Center, Montgomery, Alabama, that recreated the jail that held Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Birmingham. What struck me was the small slot that a meal on a tin plate might be shoved through and the stark cement that could not imprison his bright light.

Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.

– From Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr’s “Letter from the Birmingham Jail”

Unpaid Rider … On Freedom Road,

Pastor Jim

Up Next … “Not Who But What is Running U.S.”