In my 54 cycles around the sun, I’ve learned something profound.
I learned something I never thought I would say out loud . . . especially to my children . . .
Rules are meant to be broken.
Outside of the Big 10 Commandments given to Moses on Mt. Sinai, and brought down the hill on stone tablets . . .
And those commandments given directly to the prophets . . .
All other rules have been put together by mere mortals who have their own agenda.
Seriously.
Rules are created as tools for the agenda.
For example, years ago, people at that fancy Ivy League school, Harvard, sat a in a room and
decided “Who do we want here, and who do we not want here, and how do we rig it
so we get what we want?”
Another example of this agenda creation occurred during “the virus.”
Ideas became rules, rules became laws, despite almost every iota of these rules having now
been debunked.
The social distancing rule, which initially started with distancing 12 feet apart from your neighbor.
Then, out of the clear blue it became six feet apart from everybody for no legitimate scientific
reason, except that lines were long and problematic.
So, the rules changed to six feet . . . everywhere you went.
Little stickers are still on the ground in many places reminding you where you were supposed to stand . . .
and how blatantly stupid and lemming like many of us can be about “rules.”
When you take the time to trace the concept of “distancing” back to the plagues of the
1300’s and 1400’s, you’ll find that “distancing“ was actually made
up by some random politician in 1377 in Croatia [1].
This rule was broken only on “pain of death” and imposed by armed guards [2].
Hmm . . . sound familiar?
Then, rigid separation between the “healthy” and the “infected” was accomplished through
makeshift camps [2].
Pretty sure that happened in a number of places around the world like China & Australia.
Why Rules?
Because rules are created to make people feel like something is being done for their protection.
The pattern, despite it’s unscientific and flawed outcomes, gives people a false sense of security . . .
Why not use it this pattern again?
Well, that’s exactly what Fauci did . . . when asked what to do?
“Here’s a rule,” he said.
“Social distance.”
“Wear your mask.”
“Take this shot.”
“Here’s your booster.”
Should You Follow the Rules?
Which rule are you already breaking?
Lavrentiy Beria, the most ruthless and longest-serving secret police chief in Joseph Stalin’s
reign of terror in Russia and Eastern Europe, bragged that he could prove criminal conduct
|on anyone, even the innocent. “Show me the man, and I’ll show you the crime,”
was Beria’s infamous boast.
He served as deputy premier from 1941 until Stalin’s death in 1953, supervising the
expansion of the gulags and other secret detention facilities for political prisoners.
He became part of a post-Stalin, short-lived ruling troika until he was executed for treason
after Nikita Khrushchev’s coup d’etat in 1953.
You and I live in a dictatorial socialistic society today full of so many rules,
it’s hard not to be unknowingly breaking some rule.
Consider for a moment an important fact about each of these esteemed and revered
Old and New Testament prophets . . .
Abraham was forced to flee his country as a rule breaker and a criminal.
Moses left Egypt as a rule breaker and criminal.
Daniel was imprisoned in Lion’s Den because he would not follow Nebuchadnezzar’s rules.
Joseph was imprisoned in Egypt as a criminal.
John the Baptist was beheaded for rebuking King Herod over divorcing his wife and
marrying his niece.
Jesus Christ was convicted and crucified as a rule breaker and a criminal.
Are you seeing a pattern?
Now, don’t get me wrong. I’m not trying to encourage you to go out and
break the law and become a criminal.
It’s just very important that you and I look closely at the vast
number of rules that now control our actions.
When you do, you’ll realize that most rules are in place to fit someone’s agenda . . .
Usually, it’s the agenda of the people on the regulatory board to prevent competition.
Rules, if not made and firmly established by God, Himself, were made to be broken.
There was a time in the U.S. history when lawyers and doctors could not advertise.
They couldn’t run TV ads.
They could be on billboards.
None of it.
Why? Because the regulatory board said so . . .
It wasn’t the law.
It was the American Bar Association and the American Medical Association “rules.”
Eventually, this became law, until a lawyer by the name of Van O’Steen, who
graduated from Arizona State UniversityCollege of Law, asked the question,
“Where did this stupid law come from? And, who says it is lawful?”
When he looked closely at it, he realized, “Wait a minute, this is unconstitutional.”
We have this thing called a First Amendment.
Gee, lawyers with any brains ought to already know this, and so John Bates and Van O’Steen
sued the Bar Association of Arizona in 1977 [3].
Yes. Two lawyers that actually sued the Bar Association . . . Bates and O’Steen
had some big cajónes.
The case went all the way up to the Supreme Court.
And today, we have lawyers advertising everywhere.
Despite this, fifty years later, the AMA still looks down on advertising as “unethical” because
people have trouble understanding big words, medical terms and might get confused, or misled [4].
I guess all that vegetarianism and veganism promoted in the Journal of the American Medical
association (JAMA) and the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) has dramatically and
collectively shrunken the cullions of those in the AMA and their minions.
The AMA, much like Dr. Fauci, doesn’t think you are smart enough to understand an advertisement or big medical words . . .
Most doctors were trained as rule followers, and still are rule followers . . . as you can see from
the last three years of COVID.
The point of this email is to make you think . . .
What is that “rule” really for? Where did it come from and who is it actually benefiting?
To Your Health & Longevity,
Adam Nally, DO
References:
1. Grmek MD. Buchet C, editors. The beginnings of maritime quarantine [in French].
Man, health and the sea. Paris: Honoré Champion; 1997;39–60.
2. Ziegler P, Platt C. The Black Death. 2nd ed. London: Penguin; 1998.
3. Bates vs State Bar of Arizona, 433 U.S. 350 (1977)
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