Saturday, December 22, 2012

Tax Liability in the Law

I've been interacting with a Law professor from the Eastern United States, and he presents a case that individuals do have a liability for personal income taxes.  He is the first person with whom I have interacted that conveys both an expertise and motive to inform rather than punish and ridicule those who ask questions about the U. S. Tax system.  I have him talking to Larkin Rose and others in the leadership of the Tax Honesty Movement, and I hope to develop a casual relationship with all concerned going forward, so we can move the tax policy issue forward.

The issue of slavery seems to stump the professor on every sociological and historical level, but he will have time to examine our views and respond in total, as is appropriate.

I am working very hard to get back in school this coming semester with some ABA (American Bar Association) certified classes in mind, so as to set a formal foundation my law studies.

Friday, December 14, 2012

Tolstoy's Ideas Applied to School Shootings

Having spent a substantial portion of my adult life studying Mahatma Gandhi and his teacher, Leo Tolstoy, I'd like to weigh in on their mind relative to school shootings.  Tolstoy's book, The Slavery of Our Times, indicates that a whole host of violence throughout the world comes through tax slavery, which comes from legislation, which comes from the existence of governments.  Governments, according to Tolstoy, are a manifestation of the powerful ultimately threatening to murder those who do not obey to their liking.  This creates a kind of resentment that ripples all over the earth.  The way some children respond to this is to attack the government closest to them:  government schools.  Both Gandhi and Tolstoy seem to allow for people being armed to protect students in the short-term;  however, the longer solution is for governments to withdraw, allowing a kind of Amish social order, but with modern conveniences, consistent with Mahatma Gandhi's village republic concept.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Contemplating a Winter Protest at the White House

I continue to carry a drum beat within against the taxation of the intrinsic value of labor and property and the numbering of people as cattle for those violent purposes.  In exchanges with Dr. Cornel West of Princeton, I've been offered a book title that goes into the nature of slavery, and I find nothing to redirect my opposition to the personal income tax.  

I find it hard to keep a low paying job that doesn't cover even the cost of one class in a semester, so I contemplate the most effective use of my time.  Paralegal Studies and more economics classes are offered to me at school, but they cost between $250 to $1100 each, numbers beyond me for now.  I think I would be best suited to more Gandian styled activities outside the White House, assuming I do not find reasonable options here in Texas in the next few weeks.

I wonder if there are any homeless shelters in DC that are within walking distance to the White House?



Most respectfully,



Gene Chapman

Friday, November 9, 2012

A Night at the Lone Star Film Festival

At last evening's film festival gayla, I met Ruth Buzzy, the beautiful wife and daughter of Ed Bass, came across Billy Bob Thornton, who looked like Dracula as his thin-as-a-bone greenish suite passed in the ballroom at the Ft. Worth Convention Center, eyes covered with dark round glasses even after the sun had gone down some time ago.  The film legend, Robert Duval, crossed my path twice on Thursday, but I gained not much more than, "Where's my seat?," out of him.  Old and rickety, he was in no mood for chat.  Together, he and Billy Bob Thornton moved on Ft. Worth's fast-developing-into-a-big-league film festival like two hookers there long enough for the trick and full payment.

Billionaire Ed Bass's graceful daughter is in high school, she told me. When I posed, "It must be an interesting life," she replied, "Yes, it is sometimes," as she gazed across the room, clearly contemplating the meaning of the Bass name and all it entails.

The high point of the evening was when the producer of The God Father told the audience of probably 400 how he convinced three mafia bosses to come to his office and read the script for the movie, as they had reservations of Italians being negatively portrayed.  When they arrive to the office, they didn't get past the first page with their limited attention span for reading a 150 page script and gave him the green light on just liking him.  He had stood down three mafia figures by simply threatening to make them read.

The most friendly of the bunch was the cigar-toating, Kinky Friedman, who assured me that his plans include a serious run for the Texas governorship in the near future;  although, I'm not sure how a man on record with so many comedic twists and limited economic credentials will become a serious political candidate.  After all, everyone knows from Governor Perry that even a 2.5 GPA in Agriculture gets you laughed off the stage these days.

I met the Mayor Pro-Tem of Ft. Worth and his lovely wife.  While he couldn't tell the difference between Keynesian-Marxism and the Austrian school of economic thought, he does have a business background he related, "with 3,500 former employees."  I offered him a smile and a narrow pass on having the credentials for being a politician.

I met a fellow named, Fred Disney, a film festival board member who assured me that the Disney company doesn't send him any stock, as much as he would like to have some.  He is a fine fellow with gray hair and a disposition that would lead one to believe he to be the head of the company in that film gayla context.  I told him I'd be doing a Google search on him, and it turns out that he's just a good old boy from the neighborhood.

Finally, the kindest soul of the evening was a fellow named, Billy Schafer.  As we shook hands upon his entrance into the room, I noticed a finger or two missing on his right hand;  yet, he plays the guitar, I understand.  He was highly regarded by every star and every guest in the room, as they awarded him this or that.  Not that I don't like frivolity, but out of the 75% of the people I shook hands with in that room, he and Ed Bass' daughter were the only two non-frivolous things about the evening, one from billions of dollars and the other from the wrong side of the tracks.

Gene Chapman
TheGandhianEconomist.blogspot.com




Wednesday, October 24, 2012

The Two Pressing Questions that Drive Me

1)  What makes people buy or sell specific financial instruments (i. e. stocks, insurance, etc.)?

2)  What makes people accept or reject slavery?

Sunday, October 21, 2012

My Three Pronged Attack on the Personal Income Tax

A friend of mine called last evening to catch up on events.  I told him that I was continuing my education in three areas of interest and that all three had to do with countering the IRS/ Central Bank and its personal income tax, property tax and social security numbering system of enslavement.

I told him that I'm not going to be an economist, as Calculus III is going to be beyond my math ability.  When he told me that he was thinking of tutoring math, I begged him to go get a Ph. D. in Economics so that he could help us get to the "big boy table" with Bernanke (Federal Reserve Chairman).  I explained that the Keynesian-Marxist means well in their desire of doing the most good for the most people but that we Austrians need numbers of intellectuals to meet them point-for-point on the various media available today and in the coming years.

Both Irwin Schiff and Peter Schiff have a BS in Economics, but that just gets us to the complaint window.  We need Ph. D.'s to get us past that window into the room where leaders make policy.

My plans are to continue toward a J.D. (law) and a Ph. D. in Finance with motion picture production going on along the way, everything having to do with the mission of the Tax Honesty Movement.  I encourage everyone in the Tax Honesty Movement to push those who can to get a Ph. D. in Economics, however.  This is where the future hope of saving America and the World from slavery resides.

Gene Chapman

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

EU Proposes Financial Services Tax

Forever, I've supported a move away from slave-based taxation policy (i. e. personal income tax, property tax) and the dynamics that support such taxation (i. e. social security numbers and the like).  Consequently, I have no problem with a tax on financial transactions that do not include the above issues.

As I come nearer law school each semester, perhaps the issue will be resolved before I am even a lawyer.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Proportional Representation: The Overriding Principle to Vote

I plan to vote for candidates who support proportional representation this November, as my university studies indicate that representative democracy is most undermined when votes are circumvented to a winner-take-all system.  When the minority is not represented, then the minority is not represented.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Mr. Romney: China is not the Enemy

Recently, I saw Mitt Romney, the Republican candidate for the U. S. presidency, propose that China needed a Cold War response to presumed currency manipulation by their government.  I suggest that the Chinaman is not the enemy of the American and that their government is not the enemy of the U. S. government.  Everyone means well for their families and no harm to other countries.  We must rather look into each issue like a surgeon with a scalpel.

The conflict American's feel with China is that China has been violent against its citizens with the assumption that the individual the property of the state; thus, the individual is treated as the property of those in power, rather then the governing official being the servant of the people.  gkchapman2012athotmail.com/

Monday, August 27, 2012

Out of Hospital

Well. I spent the 22nd of August going through the Emergency Room at a hospital in Lufkin, Texas.  I'm to see my family doctor today to see whether I'll be driving trucks soon.  Vertigo, they call it.  It's like being sea sick on dry land.  I thought I was having a stroke of an aneurism.

Friday, June 8, 2012


After three years back in college and two degrees, I'm getting on the bus to get back in a flatbed truck Saturday.  I need to get my cash up to around $80K before I entertain finishing my first bachelor's degree (24 more hours) or my BS in Economics (50 more hours).

I'll spend the summer with the Innocence Project through a local law school here in the Dallas area, working with law students on the Internet to examine a case for overturning a conviction.  I'll apply what I can to Irwin Schiff's case.

I am hearing opportunities pitched to me to invest in media from around the movement.  I should have up to $20K ready to invest this next year.  My main interest is in script development of a pro-libertarian sitcom with a Leave It to Beaver flavor of moral libertarian teaching.

Most respectfully,



Gene Chapman
geneamtvn@hotmail.com

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Corporate Marxism

A few months ago, I was sitting outside one of my classes at university with my professor and a few other students, waiting for the previous class to end and clear out, when I asked if "Corporate Marxism" is a known term to describe what we are experiencing in America today?  She had been degreed in the study of pure Marxism and related that she had not heard the term used before.  As I try to find terms to accurately describe our issues, I guess I'll coin the term here.  The corporation has married the collectivist state and is enslaving you and me to that unholy union.  It's nature is Marxist because there is a badge and a gun tied to it:  force/ violence;  and it contains all the elements of The Communist Manifesto.

Musings of A Central Bank Strike for Pay Raise

The U. S. Inflation Calculator on the Internet indicates price inflation of 121.4% since I got out of high school in 1984.  My pay in relative terms has only risen 75% across all occupations I've tried and examined during that time.  Maybe I just need to go on strike at the Central Bank.  Monetary inflation always outpaces price inflation, and price inflation always out paces labor wages.  I'm just sooooooooo sick of this dynamic in Keynsian-Marxist economics.

The Basic Value of Life

Well, I did my first 10 1/2 hour day at welding .052 flux cord, building rail cars for the railroad yesterday, and I got a good light burn on my left side.  My eyes are slightly burned but ok, but I know this thicker welding wire is a killer to eye health.  The only people who seem to thrive at this place are convicts, so I'm not too impressed with 118 degree F work this summer being a career starter.  This is the place where my best friend from welding school quit after about a month of heat last summer and died in his sleep three weeks later.  He was five months younger than me.  I've had insomnia since I started this job, so in total my body is telling me that this job (career) doesn't seem to be for me.

Two years of welding school for nothing more than a piece of paper to hang on the wall and a dead end life experience.  I guess I'll see about going back over-the-road in a truck.

Oh, I guess it's not that bad.  I am 24 hours from my first bachelor's degree, and law school or a master's in social economy is that much closer.  Who knows where it will all wind up?

Friday, June 1, 2012

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Stop the Presses!!!

I am this evening informed that I am accepted into the Summer Innocence Project as an undergraduate law student intern.  I will be working a "case on appeal" with other law students, and I hope to apply my gleanings to Irwin Schiff's case.

Monday, May 21, 2012





Gene K. Chapman, CEO
Mahatma Gandhi Global Library and Book Exchange
P. O. Box 295545
Lewisville, Texas 75029

May 21, 2012

Irwin Schiff
Federal Correctional Camp
XXXXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXXXX

Dear Irwin,

Your letter dated May 17, mailed to me May 18 and arrived moments ago, informs me that your proposed protest materials did not get to you.  They are not yet returned to me, so I shall conclude your warden is impressed with my art work and is keeping them for his own artistic interest on his office wall, if they do not arrive soon.

I am enclosing photocopies of the signs that may get to you.

Anyway, we are moving forward on the July 4th protest at the Dallas Central Bank, 12 noon to 2 p.m. on your recent letter of approval.

Please share my contact information with Cindy Nunan, so we may work to get your case proper attention.  The Innocence Project contacted me last week for a phone interview but then did not come through with it.  They stay busy.

I am looking at taking some time out of school to get my money up, as I'm down to my last $900.00.  A welding job offers up to $77K per annum that I am to test for next week.

Most respectfully,



Gene Chapman

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

It Would Have Been Nice to Vote, But ....

It would have been nice to vote for city council today in Lewisville, but a couple of things went wrong.

First, I was asked to provide a "government issued" identification card, which turned out to be my driver's license that cost me about $60 two years ago.  This results is a de-facto $60 poll tax to vote in Lewsiville, Texas, on its face.  I paid the $60 poll tax before I thought it through.

Second, when I asked for a paper ballot, I was informed that such did not exist and that I would be required to vote on a computer.  I left without attempting to legitimize the illegitimate. 

Having been a 2008 U. S. Presidential candidate for the Libertarian Party, I can say with first hand authority that computer voting is illegitimate.  I watched one computer poll after another be broken into by hackers back then, they then laughing at us on the Internet at their achievement.  A computer vote is a poll subject to manipulation and cheating, only the hackers don't advertise their activity when they are done, making illegitimate the vote.

I am about to complete this week my fourth university class dealing with political topics, and every class I've had unanimously ridicules to the point of laughter the idea of voting on a computer being legitimate.

Our system of voting has become an Orwellian dystopian interpretation of jabberwokish doublespeak.  My suggestion to the citizens of Lewisville, as a citizen of 34 years, a former political candidate and a current pre-law student is that they think long and hard in paying taxes to an illegitimately elected city government.

Most respectfully,



Gene Chapman,
2008 Libertarian Party U. S. Presidential Candidate

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Irwin Schiff Letter

Gene Chapman
XXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXX

April 28, 2012

Irwin Schiff
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
XXXXXX

Dear Irwin,

It was quite a shock to get your letter in the context that I just received an invitation to interview for an undergraduate volunteer position at the Innocence Project at a local law school.  I mentioned your case to a few mutual friends as one of the purposes of wanting to join, so I would be curious to know if your letter was a pure coincidence, just out of curiosity, nothing more.

I hope to learn from participation in the project either ways in which we can free you or overturn the taxation of labor altogether.  Obviously, I'll be trying to turn all the attention I can your way, while there.  This is pretty heady stuff for a trucker trying to be a lawyer, but I'm at base camp on Mt. Everest, you might say.

I am happy to hear that your family is being recognized in Germany.  I'll get my contacts to look into your suggested Internet materials.

This summer, I have a welding class to keep me in good shape for a local welding job should my local trucking job fall apart.   My trucking career got hammered by two speeding tickets in 2007,  running for the LP nomination that could be easily explained in FBI counter intelligence terms, but who knows.  Maybe I'm just an old fart who needs to get out of a truck.  I have been out of financial aid since last June, as I have around 300 hours of undergraduate work behind me. I'm twenty-four hours from a bachelor's with economics heavy in the mix and over fifty hours from a pure economics (BS) degree that would open the door to the Ph. D. economics path.  I have a math class this summer to see if the Ph. D. economics route is realistic.

I'm looking at either law school or a master's in something like social economy after the first bachelor's degree.  The sociology degree path seems already approved, if I want it.  My proposed thesis is something like,  Sociological Retardation of Children, Adult Individuals and Cultures Relative to the Imposition of the Dynamics of Slavery (i. e.  Taxation of Labor, Taxation of Property, Numbering People as Cattle, Debt Service, Theft of the Value of Labor Through Monetary Inflation).  All the professors I know and with whom I interact are on board with it.  It is to be done along the lines of Dr. Kenneth B. Clark's doll test that was the basis of the Brown v. Board of Education case that overturned Plessy v. Ferguson and integrated the U. S. Public school system.

Dr. Cornel West of Princeton University and I shared some emails, and the book he suggested, Slavery and Social Death:  A Comparative Study, by Orlando Patterson, gets into a term, "wage slavery," discussed by Karl Marx.  I am hoping to go that "slavery" route on a constitutional challenge to the personal income tax, as well.  I'm pulling every rabbit out of every hat I can for you and the cause.

That's enough for now, I suppose.

Most respectfully,



Gene Chapman


Friday, April 20, 2012

Gandhiji and Abortion

Interestingly, Mahatma Gandhi left the door open to abortion in his book, India of My Dreams. As I contemplate his thought process, I think of a woman as the captain of a ship while she is pregnant. She has lives on board for which she is responsible. Yes, she may take life, but no, that authority is not absolute. There is and should be a hearing, as with a captain at sea, when the taking of life is made by another.

Carl Sagan said, "Life exists when a carbon based unit grows as the result of the consumption of another carbon based unit." So we know that that which is within the woman is life, human in nature. And "vibrancy" is only a debate about when ones' life is valuable enough to be protected or not by adults. Is a 90 year old man vibrant enough to be protected? and so forth. So, I suggest that we not do violence to women who choose to terminate a pregnancy, but neither should we allow the captain to kill off those aboard the ship at their whim.

Gandhiji viewed crime as a mental illness that should be treated. When a woman ends a pregnancy, she should be evaluated to see if there was cause. If there was not cause, then she is treated for mental illness.

Gene Chapman, CEO
Mahatma Gandhi Global Library and Book Exchange

Friday, March 30, 2012

First Meeting With a Graduate Counsellor

I had my first face-to-face meeting with a graduate degree counsellor today. He says I need three Sociology prerequisites, as I gather myself for a Master's in Sociology. My thesis is now entitled, Gross National Happiness Relative to the Imposition of the Dynamics of Slavery (i. e. Taxation of Labor, Taxation of Property, Numbering People as Cattle, Debt, Theft of the Value of Labor Through Monetary Inflation.)

Thursday, March 22, 2012

"HeSheItWeThey"

There is an inner peace when I contemplate God as a personality. This personality, for lack of a better term, I call: "HeSheItWeThey." And I'm not too sure about the "It" part.

Gandhiji referred to God as "He," but I am unable to find where he gets this.

His book on prayer is a soothing exploration of God, and I recommend it: MahatmaGandhiGlobalLibrary.blogspot.com.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Never Shall I Return

Yesterday, a kind woman at university gave me a Christian tract in an attempt to convert me back to my twenty-seven year past in the Christian religion.

I can never return to a religion that tells the black man that "we are all of one blood" in one phrase and uses the next phrase to beat him bloody with a stick back into the "bounds of [his] habitation."

I can never return to a religion that tells children in Sunday School that "God don't make no junk" and then tells the hermaphrodite that they are a twisted freak of their father's sins, worthy only of rejection and death.

I can never return to a religion whose never-changing God teaches believers that they may hold slaves in one place (within their holy book) and then that their mission is to "preach liberty to the captives" in another.

I can never return to a religion that tells me to "fake it till you make it" and then tells me to never be a hypocrite.

I can never return to a religion that tells me there are 2,000 year old people today waiting for Jesus to return in the Second Coming, noting that there is no Internet coverage of the 2,000 year old people down the street anywhere on the planet (Matthew 16:28).

No, I am Gandhian, a worshipper of God as Truth Only. The Nazarene is not my enemy, but he and his father, if described accurately in the Bible, are not Truth Only. And any Spirit of God that is within me is not from that which is less than Truth Only.

"Divine knowledge is not borrowed from books. It has to be realized by oneself" (M. K. Gandhi).

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Advice to Young People

In 1994, I spent several months as a prison guard in East Texas at one of the larger prisons. At that time, I learned how prison is a microcosm of the Marxist institutions we use in everyday life (i. e. public schools). The high school I went to as as a child was called, "The Lewisville Prison," by the kids.

As a university Economics student these days, I would suggest to a young person that you invest in ways that cannot be exploited by Marxists. If you invest in real property, then you have the 1st plank of The Communist Manifesto to consider, taxation of property. They can raise taxes at arbitrary rates and times, leaving you unable to live even in your family home.

I like the idea of investing in your own education because Marxists cannot take it from you, unless they kill or maim you. They are know to do such things.

Get schooled in playing an instrument, welding or car repair; things that will give you an edge in prison. Marxist can't do much to take that from you in prison; you know, the world they are creating.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Tell Pete Hendrickson that We're Coming!

I received an email noting that Tax Protester Pete Hendrickson, who is in prison, asked where "Superman" was to free us from Keynsian-Marxism? Well, I'm not Superman, but I do know that the conversation is changing in America, and lots of us are making that happen, including the Pete Hendrickson's, Bob Schulz's and Larkin Rose's of the world.

The other day, a student became the object of some small laughter in one of my classes for asking about the gold standard in a recent university lecture. This was not an issue just few years ago.

As for me, I'm tens of thousands in school debt at forty-five years old as I work toward a Ph. D. in Economics and a J. D., the same degrees held by Ludwig Von Mises (Mises.org). I saw years ago that we Tax Honesty Movement people are degreed too shallow to get invited to the big boy table of ideas. Even Peter Schiff an Irwin Schiff hold only BS Economics degrees, just enough to get you to the proverbial complaint window.

Change will happen in a mix of Kenneth B. Clark styled sociological studies, as we saw in the Brown v. Board of Education, along with the tax case found in "For A New Liberty," by Murray Rothbard.

We're coming, Pete. We're studying to be law librarians, lawyers, economists, etc. We're coming, Pete.

Gene Chapman
TheGanahianEconomist.blogspot.com

Friday, March 2, 2012

The Path Forward to Preserving the Value of Our Labor

Because of the defeating nature of property ownership in a property tax crazed environment, a deflationary future in most stocks, I see the only viable move is for investors to unify into a buying group of high end art (Picasso, Monet, etc.), which appreciate at faster rates than other investments without intrinsic tax issues.

Gene Chapman

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Email to SocialistWorker.org

I was handed a copy of your paper this morning on the university campus where I study. I liked the format and appreciate the notification of problems within the world. However, I think it lacks two elements:

1) Love.

2) An appreciation of the Jainist proposition that there are many faces of Truth that need to be examined before a story can change the world.

Most Respectfully,



Gene Chapman, CEO
Mahatma Gandhi Global Library and Book Exchange

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

a Gandhian Worker's Party

A "Gandhian Worker's Party" should exist to accomplish five objectives:

1) To govern with Truth Only.

2) To end monetary inflation.

3) To end the taxation of labor (slavery).

4) To end the taxation of property (property being the physical manifestation on labor).

5) To end the numbering of people like cattle (a third primary attribute of slavery in antiquity).

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Briggs v. Elliott applied to Tax Law Case

As we evaluate cases for exploration in application to any tax slavery case (taxation of labor, taxation of property, numbering people like cattle, monetary inflation), we must remember Briggs v. Elliott, which utilized the work of Psychologist Kenneth B. Clark to show a sociological problem developed in black children when placed in "separate but unequal" schools. Rolled into the Brown v. Board of Education case, this was the seminal issue in the reversal of Plessey v. Ferguson and the legislation to desegregate America's school system.

We need to show that an inferiority problem develops in those involved in any kind of slavery dynamic.

Gene Chapman
TheGandhianEconomist.blogspot.com

Friday, February 10, 2012

Dr. King's Assassination

As I read Dr. King's last speech to the SCLC, I see that he was proposing libertarian socialism or even philosophical anarchism, which is aligned with Mahatma Gandhi and New Testament Christianity. But in the context of the Cold War, use of fully voluntary little "c" communism made King appear to be talking of big "C" Communism or Marxism, which is a murderous ideology that steals farms from farm families and leaves them to die in labor camps, etc. I think King's message was moral, promoted outside of a state apparatus, but his use of that one interchangeable word got him killed.

"America: Freedom to Fascism"/ Movie Notes for Next Project

According to Douglas French, of the Mises Institute, in his February 7, 2012 article entitled, "It's 1980 Again," the M2 money supply has increased "from $683.7 billion in August 1971 to the current $9,712.8 billion." This represents a 14.2 fold increase in the M2 money supply over that time, if my math is correct.

The U. S. inflation Calculator on the Internet presents a 455.4% increase in inflation within the economy over that same time frame, if I am reading it properly. There does appear to be a benefit, though immoral, to M2 inflation, as $683.7 billion translates to $3,113.5698 billion of inflation within the economy. This represents a $6,599.23 billion difference/ net benefit between where the M2 money supply is today ($9,712.8 billion) and where inflation within the economy has taken us ($3,113.5698 billion).

Any further treatment of Aaron's movie will need to address this issue.

Gene Chapman
TheGandhainEconomist.blogspot.com

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Need Books for "Occupy Wall Street" Onsite Libraries

Dear Folks:

I am interacting with various books stores/ libraries that have been set up within the Occupy Wall Street protest areas across America. If we can move these kids away from Marxist Statism, their real enemy, and a few degrees toward liberty with "India of My Dreams," by M. K. Gandhi, we will have accomplished to grab this movement by the horns and lead it away from slavery and toward Gandhian Libertarianism (a.k.a. "philosophical anarchism," as Gandhiji is described as promoting). This is opposition to income taxes, property taxes, social security numbers, even the existence of the state.

This is what we've been looking for for these long many years. I'm buying 100 copies, as the library can afford the books for this project. Any contacts you can make in the protests areas is greatly appreciated. These books will free the youth of America toward something more beautiful than Marxism.

Please contact me at: MahatmaGandhiGlobalLibrary@yahoo.com/

Most respectfully,



Gene Chapman, CEO
Mahatma Gandhi Global Library and Book Exchange

Monday, January 30, 2012

Another Death in My Universe

Well, the mother of my best friend from high school died on last friday, so I have a wake to attend tonight. My past is clearing off the planet, now with 5 deaths close to me in 4 months.

No Reckless Endangerment of Myself Conviction in South Carolina

Well, I spoke with a lawyer in South Carolina, and he says the possible Reckless Endangerment of Myself issue either does not exist or it will be expunged for a fee of $1,000. It's just a simple business deal with the judge, says the lawyer. So law school or pass port to India, here I come.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Id, Ego and Truth-centric

When I determine if something is a law worth keeping, I ask myself if it is Id-Centric (instinctual or of the body), Ego-centric (for personal benefit within a social setting) or Truth-centric (of the higher moral dimension; aka Super-ego). More needs to be done of this study.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Crossroads Getting Easier

Well, I've been back in college for 2 1/2 plus years, and I've got my AAS in Welding Technology (Pi Theta Kappa Honor Society, Physics Student of the Year, Welding Student of the Year -- 2010 thru 1011). The bachelor's degree I'm in now, I prefer in Economics alone, but the Industrial Dispute Resolution (Applied Economics) path is only 18 hours beyond this semester, and it has a unique concentration in Economics already completed, so I'm on my way to a master's and doctorate in Gandhian Economic Philosophy much more quickly this way.

Law School is open to me, they say. I'll see how things develop.

Finance is another option I'm examining in undergraduate studies, but I think it's time to get into upper level work. We'll see.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Ellen Degeneres Letter

Gene Chapman, CEO
Mahatma Gandhi Global Library and Book Exchange
P. O. Box 295545
Lewisville, Texas 75029

January 25, 2012

Ellen Degeneres
XXXXXXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXXXXXX

Dear Ellen:

As a Gandhian Economic Philosopher, I want to thank you for your recent "State of the Union" speech. It is a very real problem that central banking (5th plank of "The Communist Manifesto") is utilized to redistribute the value of labor from the poor and other work-a-day folks into the whims of politicians and their wealthy donors.

Allow me to suggest that rather then beads, Gandhiji's spinning wheel, for example, may provide a better mechanism to preserve wealth, while circumventing the central bank's monetary inflation policy, which is almost the sole cause of the poor getting poorer and the rich getting richer.

Other problems intrinsic to the Keynesian-Marxist central bank are the taxation of labor, taxation of property (property being the physical manifestation of labor) and numbering people like cattle in order to tax labor and/ or property: three of the primary attributes of slavery in Antiquity. Slavery represents a violence against Peace, and this devolves into a violence against World Peace.

On a final note, your use non-violence is not unnoticed by the global Gandhian community. Your kind humor and donations to the hurting represent the most public evidences of Gandhian Libertarianism, as I coin it, and will in time bring America to a place of loving understanding and equality for the homosexual community.

Blessing to you,



Gene Chapman, CEO
Mahatma Gandhi Global Library and Book Exchange

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Gandhian Libertarianism vs. Libertarian Socialism

As I am at university this semester in class with various communists types, I am learning a great deal of other ideologies, and it causes me to reflect upon my own developing school of economic thought.

In Libertarian Socialism, there is an expectation that there is a provider of the benefit, as in a family unit, wherein the young children wait for father or mother to return home with food, for example.

In Gandhian Libertarianism (my developing school of thought), the children become producers early on -- about 10 or 12 years old. The idea is that we produce in a cottage industry with no expectation of being a recipient of goods or services, only a giver.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Mahatma Gandhi Suggests to us

In one page of "Non-violent Resistance: Satyagraha," Mahatma Gandhi suggests to us that "silent service" to IRS agents, as in mowing their grass or painting their homes, etc., we have an authentic opportunity to change their hearts.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

A Wonderful Day!

Today, I began a university study of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. My professor is an accomplished expert on the subject, who has been on the History Channel and is an author. It is so refreshing to interact with someone so informed.

I also exchanged emails with Noam Chomsky. What a day!!!!!!

Monday, January 16, 2012

Letter from Law School

Well, the response from the law school indicated that I just need to pursue entrance requirements and that decisions do not focus on one lone issue. Evidently, my law school prospects are not uniquely impacted by the issue in South Carolina.

Well see. I have my prospects in many areas, including Gandhian Philosophy, BBA, MBA, Library Science, etc. Economics will be the unique concentration in my BAAS degree, while it will also remain on my front burner in the foreseeable future for a BS and/ or BBA.

I am sure that to impact the existence of the personal income tax, property tax, social security number and monetary inflation, I shall need some letters next to my name, just to get a seat at the proverbial big boy table.

Friday, January 6, 2012

Gene Chapman
P. O. Box 295545
Lewisville, Texas 75029

January 5, 2012

Star Telagrahm

Dear Editor:

I watched with sadness the decision of leaders in Ft. Worth to humiliate some of their citizens by publishing the names of those arrested for DUI. This was based, I believe, upon your two primary religions in Western Culture: 1) Keynesian-Marxism, which presumes that the ends justify the means, and 2) Biblical Christianity, a collection of 66 philosophy books that are in gross dysfunctional conflict with one another, if taken to be inerrant, making everyone into a demon in the eyes of someone and no one worthy of a genuine act of discretion, mercy or redemption.

In my Gandhian view, religions inform law, but no written document is inerrant. Keynesian-Marxism seeks to enslave the individual to the collectivist state through its coercive inroads on the rights to property, while Biblical Christianity has been proved less that inerrant in various books like, "Jesus Interrupted."

The truth is that the ends do no justify the means, for in one sense the ends do not ultimately ever arrive, so only the ever evolving means are what we have. If we deprive ourselves of proper means, then we destroy all into a mud hole of dysfunctional defamation and wrath.

I urge the leaders of Ft. Worth to sit quietly, contemplating the truth in relationship to their policies, waiting for the cow bells that surround truth to fall silent until they experience that release of tension within the pit of their stomach that is the sign that all the questions have been answered and that truth has been attained. This is the path to good governance and an economy of permanance in a world of peace.

Most respectfully,



Gene Chapman

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Funeral: The Best Person I Ever Knew

I just got in from the funeral of Minde Lee Slate, the best person I ever knew. She was just less than a month of her 88th birthday. My mother and she were best friends, more a mother and daughter relationship, from my angle. I knew Lee from my earliest days on earth to today. Nothing but good memories and a life full of family elegance and successes for several generations through her three daughters.

I decided I'd rather be burned on a pyre than buried in the ground, though.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Law School Letter/ Greenville

Gene Chapman
P. O. Box 295545
Lewisville, Texas 75029

January 3, 2012

XXXXXXX Dean
XXXXXXXSchool of Law
XXXXXXXXXXXXX

Dear Dr. XXXXXXX:

As I am preparing to apply to your law school, I want to address the possibility that I carry a "wreckless endangerment of myself" misdemeanor conviction in Greenville, South Carolina. You see, I am a committed Gandhian, and between April, 2003 thru April, 2004, I did 123 days of combined fasting on behalf of what has become the Ron Paul Agenda. (I have interacted with members of the Gandhi family, been quoted on the front page of "The New York Times" twice, and I even run the Mahatma Gandhi Global Library and Book Exchange with input from about 1,300 Gandhian intellectuals, students and activists from the around the world, just to set the stage for my role in what has become the Tax Honesty Movement, the Tea Party Movement and the Occupy Wall Street Movement.)

During one of my fasts in Austin, Texas, in 2003 or 2004, my FBI handler, Special Agent MXXXe VXXXXXXXr, called me on the phone one night and ridiculed me for not dying, saying, "We know you're not gonna fast to death." The fact is that I began to lose mental faculty and thus internal control of the first Austin fast about the 37th day, ending it on the 40th day, so there was a good bit of truth to his ridicule. I began immediately to study other Gandhian tactics and Duc Quang's auto cremation tactic in Vietnam came to mind.

In January, 2005, I was discussing "self immolation" on the Internet that could be done in front of an IRS Building in Greenville, South Carolina, aware that "self immolation" includes "fasts unto death" and a broad range of lesser tactics that also include "auto cremation" but that do not necessitate auto cremation. The Greenville Police Department's view was that I planned to auto cremate that special day, so they pulled me over on the way to the IRS building and placed me in a mental hospital for 36 days of evaluation. It was determined in the month long evaluation that I was depressed from my long fight with the IRS and very committed to my views; but otherwise, I was fine. Dr. CXXXXXn, my hospital psychiatrist, told me that the Fed's were gonna bury me in a mental hospital next time, if I continued my aggressive tactics against the IRS, aware that they could find nothing wrong with me. (Arun Gandhi, Mahatma Gandhi's grandson, told me earlier in my protesting to expect this type of action against Gandhian tactics.)

After the 36 days, I was transferred to the Greenville County Jail for a 28 day sentence and a court hearing on the last day. I was not provided legal council, as I'd requested. And after meeting several inmates in the county jail who had been forgotten in the system as much as 18 months past their sentence, they claimed, I opted out of a jury trial that would have been another month away for a judge only trial.

The judge explained in the court proceeding that the police officer accusing me of a propane leak in my RV had been his fishing buddy for 28 years. I explained that when I bought the RV in 2001 that I'd spent about 20 minutes trying to light the propane stove by turning every possible valve and that I have never had so much as a whiff of propane in that truck. I said, I knew that propane tank to be bone dry, so I silently concluded that I was being railroaded into a conviction with no legal council, under the duress of being forgotten in the county jail and with stated aggressive intent against me by the Fed's, who wanted me "controlled," according to Dr. CXXXXXXn.

There was a smell in my RV, but it was from stain that I had put on some wood for my then pastor's book shelf project. I carried the stained wood from his office to his home the weekend before I was picked up by the police and had not aired out the RV over the Sunday between.

I've made an effort to check my police record, but I came up clean. I want to clear my name, if necessary, and continue my effort to move America away from the Keynesian-Marxist system of slave economics (taxation of labor, taxation of property, numbering people like cattle, etc.) toward a mix of Austrian School Economics and Gandhian Philosophy and an economy of permanence in a world of peace.

Before I get too financially involved into the law school effort, I need to know how this possible conviction might impact me at your law school and in the bar exam, etc.

Most respectfully,



Gene Chapman

Monday, January 2, 2012

LSAT Test Preparation Search

I began my search for an LSAT test preparation course today. They all want about $1,400 for the course. I need to take the LSAT in June to have optimum entrance options into various law schools, I'm informed.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Pro-Ron Paul Agenda Fast Ending Well

Well, we are coming down to the end of the 3 day Pro-Ron Paul Agenda fast, 5 1/2 hours to go. All went well, and I think I gained some clarity of the effort in my own mind, as I reported in the previous posting. Good deal