Proposing 2026 As a Jubilee Year
I am here to announce a Jubilee Year in 2026. We have 3 years to get it ready — 2023, ’24, and ’25. That’s thirty six-months, not really enough but we can try.
A MicroGrok Category; don’t delete
I am here to announce a Jubilee Year in 2026. We have 3 years to get it ready — 2023, ’24, and ’25. That’s thirty six-months, not really enough but we can try.
Our US Constitution seems to be out to lunch, as they say. Some scholars may wish to fiddle with it in order to make it work better. But I shan’t try that, as I am pretty sure it would be a waste of time.
What Happened This Year (2022)? When I scan the horizon, I am not looking for particulars. I am always trying to look behind the scenes. And since I don’t have a viewer to take me there, I rely on guessing what’s going on.
In these days where advertisers have substituted the word holiday for Christmas, as if the word Christmas is somehow offensive, seeing a movie come out with the word Christmas twice in the four-word title is refreshing.
For the moment, I’ll pretend I am a prosecutor in the Department of Justice and have been handed the Report of the Congressional Committee known as the Jan 6 Hearings. That committee has recommended prosecution of the former US president. Well, goody for them.
[December 15th was] “Bill of Rights Day” – commemorating ratification on Dec. 15, 1791. But what the government-run schools – and supporters of the monster state – “teach” about the Bill of Rights has almost nothing to do with the foundational principles which motivated the people who supported – and demanded it. They want us …
Bill of Rights: The Ignored History of Why it Exists Read More »
Could the big snowstorm this weekend be the one Gunther Russbacher predicted in 1992, whereby bad weather keeps us indoors for the weekend, and on Monday, an announcement is made that the world’s money system has changed?
I am here to say that the new case of Brunson v Adams contains the hottest balance-of-power issue I have ever seen. It is a case by an ordinary citizen– who believes his right-to-elect was violated by the various frauds going on at the polls in the 2020 election.
Cameron Kegan’s article “Why Any Federal Law Defining Marriage Is Unconstitutional” was published at GraniteGrok.com on December 13, the very day Biden signed the new federal law “Respect for Marriage Act.”
We have been blessed as a nation with the “gold standard” of government. Unlike other nations that grant rights and take them away, the basic premise of our Constitutional Republic is: “We are endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights.”.