Constitutions, Laws, Statutes and Hope
INVOLUNTARY SERVITUDE - PEONISM
THE CONCEPT OF PEONISM PRACTICED IN THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
PROBLEM STATEMENT:
What action is necessary to prevent:
- The New Mexico State Government from ‘subjugating’ citizens against their free wills to a system of involuntary servitude – peonism - without recourse to a lawful court of law, either state or federal, while denying the power of the Thirteenth Amendment, and while defying the authority of the federal laws giving that specific power effect;
- ‘Holding’ such citizens under a system of such servitude by legal coercion; and,
- ‘Returning’ them to such servitude by unlawful court action?
- The solution must involve the Government of the United States first, then the United States of America.
- The system of involuntary servitude imposed on New Mexicans, absent conviction of a crime in a court of law, is criminal and must be eliminated.
- All persons who once served as a public official within the State of New Mexico and subsequently the United States from Year 1963 to the present must be denied positions as public officials with public appropriations in any American Government.
- All constitutional powers, statutory authorities giving those powers effect, and court citations cited herein shall be included in an appendix attached hereto and combined to be an integral part of this document.
- The solution to the problem statement cannot require any action which furthers the current criminal activities and any other felonious conduct in furtherance of criminal activity.
- Constitutions of the United States of America, and the State of New Mexico, and the applicable state and federal statutes shall apply to the solution.
DEFINITIONS:
- Involuntary servitude can be defined as denying the power of the Thirteenth Amendment and defying the authorities of the laws that give that specific power effect by any arrangement which forces a citizen to perform unlawfully a service or to satisfy an obligation for an arranger’s advantage but at the citizen’s disadvantage without the citizen having a viable free choice to decide if they will comply. See Thirteenth Amendment, 42 U.S.C. § 1994, and 18 U.S.C. §§ 1581 et seq.
- One condition of involuntary servitude is a condition where a citizen’s rights and liberties under a contract arrangement could be put up for sale and sold to the highest bidder without the citizen’s knowledge, consent, or participation. U.S. Peonage Cases, 123 F. 671 at 679.
- A ‘system of peonage’, a ‘system of peonism’, and a ‘system of involuntary servitude’ are terms sometimes used synonymously for denying free citizens a power of the Thirteenth Amendment and for defying, to those citizens, the authorities of those certain laws which give that specific constitutional power effect.
- Involuntary means 'done contrary to or without choice' 'compulsory'—'not subject to control of the will.' U.S. v. Kozminski, 487 U.S. 931 at 936, 108 S.Ct. 2751, 101 L. Ed. 2d 788
- Servitude means '[a] condition in which a person lacks liberty especially to determine one's course of action or way of life'—'slavery'—'the state of being subject to a master.' Ibid.
- Subjugating means being incapable of making a rational choice. U.S. v. Mussry, 726 F.2d 1448 at 1452.
- Escape means to flee from a condition of compelled servitude, when there is no power below to redress and no incentive above to relieve an unwholesome condition. Ibid. at 2451.
- A clear distinction exists between peonage and the voluntary performance of labor in compliance with a contract; in the latter case, the oblige of a contract, though subject to an action for a breach, can elect at any time to break it, and no law or force compels performance; a peon, however, is compelled by coercive force to perform. Clyatt v. U.S., 197 U.S. 207 at 215, 25 S.Ct. 429, 49 L. Ed. 726.
- Holding consists of continuing, by any means, a condition previously existing. Ibid. at 219.
- Returning means to be put back, by any means, into a previous condition. Ibid. at 219.
- Criminal conspiracy consists of at least two persons or entities joining in some act common to the commission of a substantive offence. Pinkerton v. U.S., 328 U.S. 640 at 643.
- There are three separate classes of a crime each of which is individually punishable: (1) completed substantive offense - the commission of an unlawful act; (2) aiding, abetting, or counseling another to commit a crime - plotting to commit a substantive offense; and (3) conspiracy to commit a crime – a partnership. Ibid. at 649.
- A substantive offence is one that denies a constitutional or deliberately defies any of the ancillary laws which give that power effect.
- The Thirteenth Amendment applies to all government actors, both state and federal, commercial and non-commercial entities, and private citizens; the Fourteenth Amendment, however, only applies to acts of a state. Ibid. Pinkerton at 216, and see Thirteenth Amendment, 42 U.S.C. § 1994, 18 U.S.C. § 1581 et seq., 14 Stat. 27 and 114 Stat. 1486; and Fourteenth Amendment and 17 Stat. 13.
- Trafficking in a system of peonage means profiting financially or in any material way, by any means in the venture, either knowingly or in reckless disregard of the associated legal facts.
FACTS, POINTS OF LAW, AND AUTHORITIES:
- The New Mexico State Government acts as though it owns New Mexicans; however, it does not own those citizens who are subject to its derived authority. See Article II, Section 2, Constitution of the State of New Mexico, to wit:
- All political power is vested in and derived from the people; all government of right originates with the people, is founded upon their will and is instituted solely for their good.
- No person, be they government official, commercial or private entity, or private citizen, has power, authority or immunity to subjugate and then to impose a condition of involuntary servitude on a free citizen by legal coercion by denying the power of the Thirteenth Amendment and by defying the authority of those federal statutes giving that specific power effect. See Thirteenth Amendment, 42 U.S.C. § 1994, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1581 et seq., 14 Stat. 27, and 114 Stat. 1486.
- Any action by a free citizen attempting to escape from a felonious condition of involuntary servitude, however manifested, constitutes exercising a constitutional power and its ancillary statutory authority. Ibid.
- Forcing a free citizen to satisfy an imposed obligation of service under conditions of unlawful involuntary servitude by legal coercion or otherwise constitutes ‘holding’ the citizen to the unlawful servitude and becomes a criminal act without a claim of immunity. Kozminski, 487 U.S. 931 at 938 citing U.S. v. Shackney, 333 F.2d 475 at 487, U.S. v. Harris, 701 F.2d 1095 at 1100, and 18 U.S.C. § 1595 for a civil remedies voiding immunity as addressed in Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. 409 at 429 (1976); to wit:
This Court has never suggested that the policy considerations which compel civil immunity for certain governmental officials also place them beyond the reach of the criminal law. Even judges cloaked with absolute civil immunity for centuries, could be punished criminally for the willful deprivation of constitutional rights on the strength of 18 U.S.C. § 242, the criminal analog of § 1983. O’Shea v. Littleton, 414 U.S. 488, 503, 94 S.Ct. 69, 679, 38 L.Ed.2d 674 (1974; cf. Gravel v. United States, 408 U.S. 606, 627, 92 S.Ct. 2614, 2628, 33 L.Ed.2d 583 (1972). The prosecutor would fare no better for his willful acts. Imbler.
- Taking action to forcibly return one to an unlawful condition of involuntary servitude by a court of law or political authority after one has attempted to escape and be free of such servitude constitutes ‘returning’ one to the unlawful condition of involuntary servitude and becomes a criminal act for which there exists no claim of immunity. Ibid. and 18 U.S.C. §1581.
- Those, meaning more than one entity jointly associated financially or materially, who subjugate, hold, or return free citizens to conditions of involuntary servitude using a court of law or a political authority by denying the power of the Thirteenth Amendment and by defying the authorities which give that specific power effect, whether commissioned officers of government, commercial or non-commercial private entities, or private citizens, are engaged in trafficking in a system of peonage. 18 U.S.C. §§ 1581 and 1593A.
- No person serving as state public officers from Year 1963 to the present has ever filed and recorded a fidelity, recognizance or stipulation bond in exchange for the public trust in order to lawfully enter the public office claimed among the Records maintained in the Office of the New Mexico Secretary of State which bound them to the promises made in their individual oath of office as persons elected or appointed to public office and as required by Article VI, Clause 3, Constitution of the United States of America. See Article VI, Clause 3, Constitution of the United States of America, Article XXII, Section 19, Constitution of the State of New Mexico, and Section 10-2-5, 6, 7, and 9 NMSA 1978, the latter being congressional acts which give those specific powers effect and prevents either revision or repeal by the state legislature.
- Federal civil officers commissioned as judicial officers who were nominated to positions on the federal bench and who failed to inform the president that they were not lawfully holding a state public office at time of their nomination falsified their financial disclosure statement required to be submitted by them within thirty days of the nomination. Upon subsequent confirmation by the United States Senate and appointment to federal office, each one submitting the falsified financial statement thereby defrauded the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371; each one of them contaminated the court where they claim to hold positions; if at least two of them served in judicial positions on the same court and drew public appropriations for felonious services rendered, then they were co-conspirators defrauding the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 286.
DISCUSSION:
1. What is Peonism?
Peonage is a common practice operating financially within the commercial and political systems throughout New Mexico and other parts of the United States; the practice is profitable; it is supported openly, and quite possibly deliberately throughout the legislative and judicial system, both state and federal, and the practice is enforced by both judicial and police powers at all levels. First, consider the commercial activities and practices of the home mortgage finance industry.
Home mortgages can be packaged by the lender and the package sold, at a financial discount, to an unknown bidder without the knowledge, participation, and consent of the individual borrower, and without their individual financial consideration in the subsequent third-party contract; yet the borrower remains bound by the original mortgage home loan contract, by a provision therein, as though no change had occurred. The ‘by a provision therein’ condition in the original home mortgage contract violates 42 U.S.C. § 1994, the Peonage Act, which states that any laws, customs or usages to establish or enforce the voluntary or involuntary, direct or indirect service or labor of any persons as peons, a status of involuntary servitude, in satisfaction of any obligation or debt is declared null and void. A peon is a person subjugated by the illicit contract condition of involuntary servitude, absent a criminal conviction, even if he/she tries to escape the illicit servitude; the peon can then be held by legal coercion under a third-party contract to satisfy an original invalid obligation of service or debt; and there is a better than even chance that some judicial or police power can be engaged by the said legal coercion to return the peon to satisfy his/her original invalid contract obligation.
Some third-party mortgage contract holders use a post office box to delay mortgage payments so that foreclosure procedures can be implemented to illicitly acquire the equity of one home to improve, for the profit motive, the rate of return on their investments; the judicial system can then be used to cover-up the deception; and the home owner loses his or her property interest when police power is exercised to enforce a writ of execution. Can you see how a condition of involuntary servitude can be imposed on a free citizen without recourse to a fair court of law?
2. How is peonism manifested?
Politically, a person in New Mexico can register to vote in local and general elections, and must simultaneously declare a party affiliation in order to vote in the primary elections. Seems fair except, a registered voter may elect not to affiliate with any political party and thereby not be allowed to vote in the primary election. Under such circumstance, the citizen is subjugated to a condition of servitude as a peon by his own choosing – both voluntary and directly – denying him or herself an opportunity to vote in a primary election and thereby participate in determining who among the candidates shall govern him/her in the future. That is not fair, and it violates 42 U.S.C. § 1994 which voids such election contracts under state law. In New Mexico, the number of those who do not choose to affiliate with any political party is growing to some sixteen to twenty percent of the electorate, a possible substantial voting bloc; however a voting bloc with a diluted vote. They can be denied the vote in primary elections by law; since, the legislators, who make such laws, are all members of the major parties due to the primary election system. They do not enact laws that weaken their power, the non-primary voting public be dammed. Those members of the electorate who choose not to affiliate with a given political party effectively attempt to escape from the existing political system by their own free choice and are punished by not being permitted the vote in a primary election for doing so. Should they try to vote in a primary election, they will be denied the opportunity to vote under existing law; in other words, they are held to their diluted voting servitude status. Should they take the matter to a court of law, the judge will enforce the existing invalid law enacted by party members for their future protection, and they will thereby be returned to their diluted voting servitude status.
3. What societal engine drives the system of peonism?
Both politically and commercially, the system of peonage in New Mexico is profitable. On the one hand, the illicit foreclosure procedure acquires what equity the home owner may have had in their real property. In the political sense, the major parties maintain their exclusivity under self-serving law.
Consider the judicial systems in New Mexico A person who chooses to represent him or herself is referred to by judges and practicing attorneys as pro se litigants which has become just short of a curse word; and while before the court of law, they are held to the same standards and compliance requirements as are those who are permitted to practice law for profit with special privileges by denying the power of Article IV, Section 26, Constitution of New Mexico and by defying the authority of Section 38-1-1. Maybe you can see how the New Mexico judicial system imposes a condition of involuntary servitude on private citizens, absent a criminal conviction in a court of law, without recourse; maybe not. Article IV, Section 26 states:
The legislature shall not grant to any corporation, or person, any rights, franchises, privileges, immunities, or exemptions, which shall not, under the same terms and under like conditions, inure equally to all persons or corporations; no exclusive right, franchise, privilege or immunity shall be granted by the legislature or any municipality in this state.
Section 38-1-1, Rules of pleading, practice and procedure, states:
1. The supreme court of New Mexico shall, by rules promulgated by it from time to time, regulate pleading, practice and procedure in judicial proceedings in all courts of New Mexico for the purpose of simplifying and promoting the speedy determination of litigation upon its merits. Such rules shall not abridge, enlarge or modify the substantive rights of any litigant. [Emphasis added.]1.
2. The supreme court shall cause all rules to be printed and distributed to all members of the bar of the state and to all applicants, and no rule shall become effective until thirty days after it has been so printed and distributed.
History: Laws 1933, ch. 84, § 1; 1941 Comp., § 19-301; 1953 Comp., § 21-3-1; Laws 1966, ch. 28, § 31.
Note: bar members are entitled to personal copies of all court rules; pro se peons are not.
Understand that the courts of law, both state and federal, are created for the society by the electorate through their legislative representatives, both state and federal, for the purpose of settling disputes and for enforcing the laws; they are not created by or for judges or practicing attorneys; however, the latter process evolves under conditions of peonism. Because the practicing attorneys are generally the only ones allowed to become judges in courts of law, the judicial system is prejudiced against private citizen pro se litigant who choose to represent themselves in courts of law; however, the said system is not prejudiced against attorneys authorized to practice law when they represent themselves. A private citizen pro se litigant entering court is then subjugated to hundreds of pages of court rules, both locally made and those made with the approval of the legislature; should the pro se litigant violate the rules, or not be able to produce court cases that support his/her dispute, and their case will be dismissed, generally with prejudice. Next, the pro se litigant is bombarded with case law, cases previously heard and determined by other judges, which the pro se litigant has no way of knowing without having the permission to practice law for profit, and without the means to gain proficiency as are attorneys. A pro se litigant is thus handicapped; he/she is subjugated to a condition of servitude and then forced by legal coercion, either by judicial power or police power, to be held to the same standards and compliance requirements as are practicing attorneys. In time, the pro se litigant is returned by the court to the imposed condition of servitude by the legal coercion of case law and court rules used regularly by practicing attorneys with acquired legal prowess but foreign to the pro se litigant. Always remember peons, it's called the adversarial system of justice in New Mexico and it is designed to continue the practice of peonism.
4. Is the practice of involuntary servitude, absent a criminal conviction, ever justified?
Consider the possibility of an epidemic involving a contagious deadly disease. Should the government have the power to quarantine, from society, those known to have the disease by imposing conditions of involuntary servitude on the diseased to protect those of affected society not yet infected? The answer is yes, especially when the disease can spread rapidly and uncontrollably, and when the disease can cause unnecessary death, physical impairment, or excessive financial costs. Government has power under law to protect the health, safety, and welfare of affected society; however, such protection is not the result of a whim being imposed solely by arbitrary judicial or police power without benefit of the professional medical council. To permit such an abuse of power would border on an application of mass punishment.
5. How about when natural disasters occur?
How about an evacuation order forecast by professionals predicated upon a flood capable of corrupting the community water supply and the sewage system? How about a mandatory evacuation order to physically vacate an area because of a known gas leak in the community which might be exploded by a random electric spark; an order that might save both lives and property? Finally, consider an out of control community fire approaching and threatening a community. The answers would be yes if the health, safety, and welfare of the communities fall within a certifiable risk. There are numerous example where government must act with restraint or constrained by the facts to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the affected community; just as there are arbitrary abuses of authority predicated upon haste, immature reasoning, or unsupported suppositions. Some lawful system must be in place in a community and must be actionable by responsible government before a threat harmful to the health, safety, and welfare of the community materializes; however, under no circumstance does a system of peonism have to be in place for such purposes.
CONCLUSION:
The author believes that a system of peonage exists throughout the United States of America and the financial crises creating the current prolonged recession is but one symptom of the evils of peonism. Borrowers of loans to purchase a home find themselves bound by a contract provision that permits the lender to sell its interest to another without the borrowers’ knowledge, consent, or participation, a condition subjecting the borrowers to involuntary servitude. The defect in the contract is that the borrowers’ interest and the lender’s interest in the contract are inseparable, a condition which voids the contract; and neither the lender nor the borrowers may contract with a third party without the other party’s knowledge, consent or participation.. Nevertheless, the borrowers in the every state are being held by legal coercion to that unlawful provision; the courts will hold the borrower by a court order and the local police, based upon that court order, will return the borrowers by eviction procedures to the unlawful condition of involuntary servitude. Thus, the evil system of peonism is active throughout the United States.
In U.S. Peonage Cases, the judge had this to say about the evils:
The evils of the system not only degraded those who were subjected to the system, but exercised a baleful influence upon all other classes, which in innumerable ways fought against the industrial prosperity and moral advancement of the people among whom the “system” was enforced. It was also wholly out of keeping with the spirit of the [Thirteenth] amendment to the Constitution, which forbids involuntary servitude, except upon due conviction of crime.
Involuntary servitude, absent a criminal conviction in a court of law, involves situations requiring one to comply with a furtive obligation imposed by some circumstance in which one is left with no viable choice but to comply. Such servitude may be justified where the imposed circumstance is supported both constitutionally and by a lawful act; absent one or the other, however, voids the circumstance, and the remaining situation becomes a substantive crime constituting the first class of crime addressed by Pinkerton..
Congressional action is in place to suppress the various forms of illicit slavery. However, some presidential action is required to execute the laws giving effect to the Thirteenth Amendment power in place for suppression of peonism. The system of peonism is and has been profitable within the State of New Mexico for many years which thereby provides the engine for its continued support and perpetuation; those profiting from the practice directly provide that support; and presidential judicial nominations for federal commissions generally choose felonious candidates from New Mexico who, upon appointment and commissioning, subsequently extends support for the practice from the federal bench for the said engine of profit. The Department of Justice and the federal judiciary has been formally notified of the felonious nominations and the information provided has been ignored. Thus more than one government governmental entity, both state and federal, have actively conspired for the substantive crime to persist over a period of time, a conspiracy to commit a substantive crime which constitutes the second class of a crime addressed by Pinkerton.
Finally, two of the three branches of the New Mexico Government and the United States Government were formally notified of the substantive crime; both branches of government had sufficient power to cure the defect had the assigned public officers therein been bound by their oath of office; and thereby, no action was ever taken by either government to cure the defect. Thus, all three classes of a substantive crime, as addressed in Pinkerton, have been satisfied successfully for years without any fear of interference or hindrance from any government source.
Still further, if a citizen becomes a valid candidate for public office against other candidates who fraudulently and feloniously file their candidacy for the same office, the felonious candidate with a majority vote is certified as the winner by another person unlawfully holding public office who thereafter authenticates the certification to the federal government. This tactic is another source of profit for the existing efficacious system of peonism, and efficiently returns the true winner to the system of peonism from which they attempted to escape.
Still further, if a citizen becomes a valid candidate for public office against other candidates who fraudulently and feloniously file their candidacy for the same office, the felonious candidate with a majority vote is certified as the winner by another person unlawfully holding public office who thereafter authenticates the certification to the federal government. This tactic is another source of profit for the existing efficacious system of peonism, and efficiently returns the true winner to the system of peonism from which they attempted to escape.
The system of peonism describe above in this conclusion has been operative since Year 1963, the year that fidelity bonds were discontinued. Such bonds, which would bind persons lawfully elected or appointed to state public office to their individual oaths of office, as their contract consideration, is given publicly in exchange for the public’s trust for their subsequent entry into public office to perform the duties of the office entered. No fidelity bond, no entry to the office claimed. Always remember, a contract must have mutuality – that is, some consideration is given by the parties to assure its mutuality, it must bind in all its parts and bind all parties, or it binds none.
POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS:
Possible Judicial Solution
There is no lawful court of law, either state or federal, available to the pro se litigant as a solution. Attempts have been made to cure the defect in the First and Eleventh Judicial Districts without success. Further, a case filed in the New Mexico Supreme Court seeking to cure the defect and the substantive issue presented was changed by the court to avoid addressing the crime. Finally, the Chief Justice was hand-delivered a document explaining the substantive crime and the content of the document was ignored. The federal district court for the District of New Mexico and the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit were also formally notified; however, the notification fell on deaf ears. Thus, a judicial solution for pro se litigants is not available under the system of peonism.
Probability of Political Solution
Both the office of the President and the United States Department of Justice are aware of the denial of the Thirteenth Amendment power and the defiance of the ancillary statutory authorities giving those powers effect and both have ignored the defective New Mexico Government or have refused to do anything about it. Indeed, federal public fund appropriations are provided to the defective New Mexico Government with abandon.. Thus attempts for the Executive Department of the United States Government to take action have been futile and are therefore solutions from that department are improbable.
Depending upon the Congress of the United States Government to take action to cure the defect by a submitting a petition might provide the means for an investigation; however, that approach is unlikely in an election year. Besides, a petition was previously sent to the House Committee on the Judiciary and not even a letter acknowledging receipt was sent; the petition was ignored.
The United Nations, on the other hand, maintains that enslavement of any type in any government constitutes a Crime against Humanity which is defined thusly:
According to the Parry & Grant Encyclopedic Dictionary of International Law, Third Edition. Oxford 2009, crime(s) against humanity is defined as:
The first articulation as to what constitutes a crime against humanity appears in art. 6 of the Charter of the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal of 8 August 1945 (82 U.N.T.S. 279): ‘murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation, and any other inhumane acts committed against a civilian population . . . or persecutions on political, racial or religious grounds in execution of or in connection with any crime within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal . . .’. [Emphasis added.]
Thus defined, this category was intended to fill any gaps in the Tribunal’s jurisdiction for egregious acts not covered by the other limbs of art. 6, viz. crimes against peace and war crimes. Since the judgment of the Nuremberg I.M.T. (41 A.J.I.L. 172 (1947)), where crimes against humanity were essentially regarded as an egregious form of war crimes, and the adoption of the Nuremberg Principles by the International Law Commission on 2 August 1950 ([1950] I.L.C. Yearbook 374), crimes against humanity have become a recognized—and free standing—part of international criminal law, being within the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the International Tribunal for Rwanda. The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court of 17 July 1998 (2187 U.N.T.S. 3) defines a crime against humanity, in art. 7(1), as ‘any of the following acts when committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack, directed against any civilian population, with knowledge of the attack: (a) Murder; (b) Extermination; (c) Enslavement; (d) Deportation or forcible transfer of population; (e) Imprisonment or other severe deprivation of physical liberty in violation of fundamental rules of international law; (f) Torture; (g) Rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution, forced pregnancy, enforced sterilization, or any other form of sexual violence of comparable gravity; (h) Persecution against any identifiable group or collectivity on political, racial, national, ethnic, cultural, religious, gender . . ., or other grounds that are universally recognized as impermissible under international law, in connection with any act referred to in this paragraph or any crime within the jurisdiction of the Court; (i) Enforced disappearance of persons; (j) The crime of apartheid; (k) Other inhumane acts of a similar character intentionally causing great suffering, or serious injury to body or to mental or physical healthy’. See Eichmann Incident Case (1961) 36 I.L.R. 5. See Bassiouni, Crimes against Humanity: A Normative Account (2004).
In view of the foregoing and the fact that presidential elections are forthcoming, action before the Human Rights Commission of the United Nations may be possible as a solution. It would be appropriate to inform the Office of the President and the Department of Justice that the United Nation Commission on Human Rights would be notified of the enslavement of a significant population within the United States of America was active and might not be limited to the citizens of New Mexico.
Probability of Citizen Protest
This study will be available by email to any person desiring a copy for protest purposes. Sufficient information is contained within the document to render it separable from the appendix without loss of meaning. Those who desire the references mentioned in the document without access to the appendix are free to seek their own sources for review. Accordingly, should Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube communications be exercised to generate massive protest during the presidential campaign, the possibility that some action will be taken not to count the New Mexico vote either by the ballot box or the electoral college might just do the trick. It remains a possible solution.
SOLUTION:
In view of the foregoing, no simple solution is possible. Either the citizen must universally engage in a nationwide protest against the evils of peonism, whether affected by it or not, or some influential international actor must take an interest and act on behalf of the American citizen to bring about a change to end the conditions of peonism imposed upon them. No branch of the United States Government will do it voluntarily or be convinced to do so.
Respectfully submitted to the Citizens of the United States of America,
__________________________
Winfred Paul Adams
MAJOR, USAF, Retired
2347 Forest Avenue
Durango, Colorado 81301
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