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"What are you talking about?" I asked. |
"This particular Colony happens to be in a rural area, and the folks are trying to get to a point where they can be self-sustaining and not have to rely on others. They're a long way from reaching that goal, so they adjust as needed. Still, they're able to live our religion and maintain our values. They don't have any booze or drugs but they do plenty of hard work and have lots of babies. Every child is a child of God and is worth many prayers. They don't bother anyone and they expect the same from others. Those in the community with the most children get the most respect. |
"Anyway, I'll tell you more about the Colony some other time. I've got other things to tell you about right now. Take a look at this picture." Jack held out a crumpled up photo from a newspaper." "See, they call this the Whirlpool galaxy, but they could call it the swastika galaxy and be more accurate. In fact, all galaxies can be called swastika galaxies, because that's what they're like at some point in their evolution. |
"You see, we're part of all of this. Everything is part of it. We're all circling and spinning and we're all evolving, but we're not all evolving in the same way. We're being sorted out whether we want to be or not, and because we know about it in our religion we're directing our own sorting out as we see fit. I figure that God selected us, but he selected everything else too. I mean, he threw everything in a pot of muck and waited to see which ones crawled out to a higher level. And, those that struggled to where we are now have a choice, they can fall back down or they can go higher. That's where our so-called free will comes in. That's what separation and isolation and the Colony are about. We choose to be separate and we choose to struggle to go higher. It's a melding of all that is in existence into a unified whole. I think we're the only religion that sees things as clearly as this, man. And, the reason we see them so clearly is because God wills it and God revealed it. |
"Some other religions are out there talking about the brotherhood of man. That's a crock, man. That's not from God. That's from small minded, neurotic humans who are afraid of the Struggle. That's the way to fall back into the muck. There is no brotherhood of man. All things have sprung from the same chemicals and forces, but that doesn't mean all things are the same, and they're not. A lower level of consciousness makes you think this brotherhood of man stuff. Then, when you rise above that level you see that everything is connected, but it is the differences, even though they may be small, that are important. Everything must struggle to be more. There is no rest for those who have this higher consciousness, and the Struggle gives comfort once one understands it. We're our own brotherhood. We are joined with all other people of our kind by blood, but, in addition, we Armen are also joined to each other by belief and by actions. So, we have three glue points instead of one. Much stronger bond that way, man. Much stronger. We don't need others. We're complete all by ourselves. We're not enriched by others. We do not benefit from others. We are a people apart, because we struggled to be so. We crawled out of the muck and we don't want to fall back in or be dragged back down. In fact, falling back in would the easiest thing in the world. Then we could traipse around with moist eyes saying that God is love and other meaningless and false things. That's not us, man. We're on our way up. And, God willing, we will continue to move up. |
"Jack, you're making my head spin with all of this," I said, thinking I might be able to get him to talk in a linear fashion instead of jumping all around. "That's the point man, the spinning. Look, the way I'm telling you this stuff, the way I always tell you this stuff, is the way it has to be presented. The form is part of the spinning itself. Get it? It's not just the words, but the way they're presented. It's like the order of DNA. |
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THREE BOOKS BY HARD TO PIGEONHOLE H. MILLARD All three books are now listed on Amazon.com. The lefties at the OC WEEKLY said Millard is one of OC's most frightening people. "Millard is an important writer" New Nation
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![]() ![]() messages of ennui and meaning in post-american america by H. Millard In Ourselves Alone and Homeless Jack's Religion, H. Millard, the hard to pigeonhole author of The Outsider and Roaming the Wastelands, has put together some of his category bending commentaries on post-American America. The commentaries deal with politics, philosophy, free speech, genocide, religion and other topics in Millard's edgy style and lead up to Homeless Jack's Religion, in which Homeless Jack lays out revelations he found in a dumpster on skid row. Browse Before You Buy ISBN: 0-595-32646-3 |
![]() - (ISBN: 0-595-22811-9) H. Millards latest sacred cow toppling book, is now available at Amazon.com by clicking on this link or by calling 1-877-823-9235. A funand soberingthing to read - Alamance Independent |
![]() THE OUTSIDER - (ISBN: 0-595-19424-9) |
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