Tuesday, 7 July 2026

An Authentic Gibbon speaks on authentic givens and propositional tyranny



2:00  Word salad
Luke Thompson
3:00  Proposition Tyranny
Christian Nationalism
Christian Nihilism
4:00 Moral confusion and intellectual bankruptcy
O G Rose
6:00  John Vervaeke's Propositional Tyranny
7:00  Propositional Tyranny
8:00  Neologisms are displacement therapy.
9:00  Minimum moral standard
10:00  Propositional Tyranny is "givens"  ie assumptions common to a religious group.
The Trinity is the ultimate propositional tyranny.
11:00  No propositional tyranny in the Koran. 
12:00  The matriarchy wants White Nationalists to die childless, gay and transgender. 
13:00   Orthodox Christianity
14:00   Michelle and Daniel Garner
15:00   Confirmation ceremonies of organised religions.
16:00   Judaism is the first organised religion with divine revelation.
17:00  Chapter and verse?
Doctrine of the Trinity Act 1813
19:00  173.85 million registered US voters in 2024
Thomas Jefferson, Sam Tideman and Michael Servetus
20:00  The Trinity is a propositional tyranny. 
21:00  Edward Gibbon
23:00  Observant Jews are crucial to Jews remaining in existence/
24:00  Thomas Jefferson's propositions
25:00  Unitarians are not Christians. 
Sam Tideman
26:00  Truth is an expectoration. 
27:00  Heretics burned at the stake
The Quakers
29:00  Declaration of Independence
30:00  The Firsts Amendment is supported by quran.com/2/256
32:00  Censorship was greater in the Old World than the New World.

AI Overview                 

Book censorship in the run-up to the American Revolutionary War was more strictly enforced in England than in the colonies.

In England, strict licensing laws and seditious libel charges were used by the Crown to suppress radical thought. In contrast, the American colonies experienced immense press freedom; British colonial authorities struggled to suppress patriot media due to widespread rebellion and a lack of military support.

Here is a look at how censorship dynamics differed between the two regions:

In England: The British government closely monitored the London press. Printers faced aggressive crackdowns on seditious libel if they criticized the King or Parliament. Even sympathetic publishers, such as those who printed Thomas Paine’s Common Sense in London, were forced to self-censor by leaving out highly critical passages or removing mentions of the King to avoid prosecution.

In the Colonies: Although British officials attempted to enforce censorship, colonial juries and widespread public dissatisfaction made it nearly impossible to stop Patriot printers. The revolutionary rhetoric of writers like Thomas Paine circulated freely, and colonial printers openly criticized British policies, notably during the resistance to the Stamp Act of 1765.

The Role of Taxation: Many American colonists viewed the Stamp Act of 1765 not just as a revenue measure, but as a form of ideological censorship. By heavily taxing newspapers, pamphlets, and books, Parliament attempted to price independent presses out of existence and stifle political debate.

39:00  Minimum moral standards
40:00  Theorems are non-contentious.
41:00  The subjects of absolute monarchs were  not consulted about the king's religion. 
43:00  The Trinity is the ultimate in Propositional Tyranny.
45:00  John Calvin
46:00  Banning usury with sharia
47:00  Information overload
TLC
48:00  Corrupt and incompetent ruling classes on both sides of the Atlantic
49:00  Defending our moral convictions if any

Fundamental principles and moral convictions

50:00  Neal Daeduls, Ezra, Skankenstein, PVK
51:00  Zine
53:00  Founding Fathers

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