I mostly do liberty stuff here on Twitter, but recently been #tumbling again, so thought I'd share this so you can see where the tumbling in "tumblingit" comes from.
@Brewer123123123@ChaseForLiberty It's pretty simple- I oppose any time someone violates someone else's inalienable rights. In the American revolution many great things happened, and many bad things happened.
@FiddleElphier@ChaseForLiberty Not just radical libertarian- a more accurate historian would point that out as well. But since the government schools need to justify their immoral imposed governance, students aren't taught to separate the two events.
@ChaseForLiberty Talking about the constitution connected with the 250 celebration is like talking about the Easter Bunny at Christmas time. We need more Jesus, and fewer jelly beans. π
@ChaseForLiberty There are two groups of "founding fathers" that the authoritarian state lumps together to attach their immoral imposed government with justified independence. Many revolutionaries didn't support the constitution.
@Brewer123123123@ChaseForLiberty The revolution happened before the war. The war was just a defensive measure.
Use of force is only morally justified in defense of life, a and property.
I advocate for making corrupt politicians, bureaucrats, and governments irrelevant.
@Brewer123123123@ChaseForLiberty People who believe in liberty (currently known as libertarians) managed to get a good chunk of their world view in place 250 years ago.
@IJ So glad they didn't violate your natural rights! (Which come from nature, not an act of government)
I hope your health situation goes well for you too.
@Brewer123123123@ChaseForLiberty I agree with you, from the perspective of sheep, who don't actually think for themselves, and follow the arbitrary whims of a popularity contest.