@rayder, running a PR/fundraising effort on the Net is neither a criminal offence nor does it make extraordinary or special a person who has committed some common crimes. And filing a blizzard of useless papers and cussing at judges etc. only makes him belligerent and stupid and a nuisance, not extraordinary or special. Your characterisation is nothing more than fanciful hyperbole, nothing more than inflated nonsense, and apart from you and the Freeman crowd, I doubt there are many people in this world who would ever consider Dean Clifford to be in any way special.
And how on Earth do you imagine I’ve ever “enabled” these people? I’m not god, you know.
LordEd wrote:The topic of the seminar was related to techniques that he was not able to successfully use for his own arrest and conviction. $150/head for useless information claimed to be 'the truth'
So what? It doesn’t follow that the people who attended the seminar were being scammed or duped.
LEd, you’re like an atheist scientist who can’t understand why an evangelical congregation doesn’t abandon their creationist preacher when you and your colleagues lay out irrefutable proof that their guru is full of shit. That’s because you don’t understand the congregation’s
mens rea (is that the correct legal term for a person’s state of mind when they’re doing something?) and because their idea of what should be the truth is completely at odds with your idea of what is the truth.
Those people were not paying for a reality check; they’re not there to learn how to obey the law. No, those people were paying to hear someone put into words what was already in their minds; they were paying to hear someone express the anger and the indignation and the frustration and the hatred they feel towards the system; they were paying to be part of the recusant Dream -- and Dean delivers. And for them, Dean getting arrested and prosecuted is only proof or confirmation that everything they believe about the wicked system is correct.
You see, they don’t think like you do when they’re in communion.
It’s only you who seems think they should be disappointed for what they received. If they were genuinely seeking legitimate legal information they would have gone to a seminar held by a qualified lawyer or accountant (or someone who they have reason to believe is qualified to give legitimate legal information) rather than attend a seminar by someone who doesn’t even pretend to be a legitimate lawyer or accountant. So why do you think they would feel disappointed that they didn’t in fact receive legitimate legal information? In fact, I’d say they’d be disappointed if they did receive legitimate legal information since they disdain that stuff and always wilfully dismiss it.
The people who attend those seminars and people like Cari-Lee get what they ask for. And I don’t say that in a mean-spirited way: They really do get what they ask for; they’re getting what they wanted.
Preaching pseudo-legal nonsense and profiting from it (i.e. being a Freeman guru) is only a scam in the sense that preaching and making an income from religious nonsense is a scam -- damned distasteful to some rational sensibilities, to be sure, but not illegal -- though it’s one thing to preach to a congregation
Thou shalt not suffer a witch… and quite another thing to go off a kill some hippies prancing under the light of the moon.
One could observe, indeed, that making a profit from Freeman nonsense might be the only thing it’s actually good for…