Mary, Monkey, Sun, Tree and Penis Whoreshippers - Part B - Daryl Kabatoff >June 22nd 2022 2:47 pm 125,971 words (151 pages)
=E2=80=9CThe very concept of a nation founded by European settlers is offen= >sive to me. Old stock White Canadians are an unpleasant relic, and quite fr= >ankly, replaceable. And we will replace them." - Canadian Prime Minister Ju= >stin Trudeau, when asked to comment on his Open Borders Immigration Strateg= >y, speaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer >=E2=80=9CChristians are the worst part of Canadian society.=E2=80=9D - Cana= >dian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking without preparation, without th= >e aid of a writer
=E2=80=9CHonour killings shouldn=E2=80=99t be called =E2=80=98barbaric.=E2= >=80=99=E2=80=9D - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking without p= >reparation, without the aid of a writer
=E2=80=9CThey are not sexual assaults, but =E2=80=98honour=E2=80=99 rapes.= >=E2=80=9D - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking without prepara= >tion, without the aid of a writer
=E2=80=9CIf you=E2=80=99re not willing to embrace Islam, you=E2=80=99re not=
a part of our society.=E2=80=9D - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau s=
peaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer
=E2=80=9CWho remembers the Armenian genocide? If they can=E2=80=99t remembe= >r the Armenian genocide, who is goink to be concerned about the Jews?=E2=80= >=9D - Adolph Hitler speaking without preparation, without the aid of a writ= >er=09
=E2=80=9CAmerica is ruled by a homosexual Indonesian Islamist who demands t= >hat Americans take the death jab. Similarly Trudeau is an Islamist who dema= >nds that Canadians take the death jab, squeak squeak.=E2=80=9D -Squeaky Squ= >eaky
=E2=80=9CWithout writers, nothing speak so good in word stuff.=E2=80=9D - E= >ddie Izzard
If I were mayor of Saskatoon, I would pay my employees in real money, wh=
ich is gold and silver coins. The City of Saskatoon could strike its own go= >ld coins to pay their employees. As mayor of The City of Saskatoon I=E2=80= >=99d give the average worker a 0.06 troy ounce (0.06 AGW), gold coin for ei= >ght hours work. This will reduce taxes to homeowners and to business owners=
considerably. Workers wanting more than a 0.06 Troy Ounce gold coin for a =
eight hour work day can seek out work elsewhere, they may go mine gold for = >themselves or work at alternative businesses, or create their own businesse= >s. Free people are allowed to have guns, land, and are paid in gold and sil= >ver coins, back in the day when people were free Mexico made a 2.5 Peso (.0= >603 oz) gold coin from 1918-1948, and the coin was alloyed at 90% gold to 1= >0% copper, it was alloyed in order to make the coin harder and more durable=
to survive circulation. We should have a small gold coin that is similar t=
o that Mexican coin, but containing 0.06 ounces of gold instead, or less, i= >t would be a savings of at least .0003 ounces of gold per coin, again savin= >g money for the home and business owners by reducing taxes, perhaps. We=E2= >=80=99ll be rich. And the supposed poor among us would have small concrete = >homes in the country - they get their own concrete homes (and pay the city = >mortgage on the tiny house) and a garden, they can work towards gaining wea= >lth with their gardens and taxpayers wouldn=E2=80=99t have to give money to=
landlords. People would not pay taxes for landlords to house the poor, and= would obtain access to locally grown produce.
We may alloy the gold with either copper, nickel or silver or combinatio=
ns thereof, to make the coins harder and more durable to the wear that resu= >lts from the circulation of the coins. We should determine, using =E2=80=9C= >science=E2=80=9D, which particular alloy of gold we should be using in our = >coins. We can use =E2=80=9Cscience=E2=80=9D to determine which alloy works = >best. We can try using =E2=80=9Cscience=E2=80=9D from time to time, at city=
hall, if I were mayor.
The City of Saskatoon may strike coins containing the =E2=80=9Calloys=E2=
=80=9D of precious metals, we should make gold, silver, platinum and pallad= >ium coins, and using =E2=80=9Cscience=E2=80=9D we will harden these coins b= >y adding small amounts of either base or precious metals in a mixture or = >=E2=80=9Calloy=E2=80=9D. Whenever the city strikes and sells coins containi= >ng a majority of silver, platinum or palladium, the city should strive to a= >lways profit from the manufacturing and sale of these white coins and save = >money for the taxpayers. But when we manufacture gold coins it is because w= >e require the coins to pay our workers in gold, so =E2=80=9Cthey=E2=80=9D m= >ay profit. For example we could use combinations of platinum, palladium and=
silver, and perhaps hardened with small amounts of copper or nickel or gol=
d, and manufacture commemorative coins, which The City of Saskatoon would s= >ell at a profit, to reduce taxes. I=E2=80=99m sure that a lot of guys and e= >ven gals would be more likely to invest in these silver, platinum and palla= >dium alloyed commemorative coins if they depicted a woman showing off her b= >reasts. It is certainly something to think about.
The City of Saskatoon could seek to manufacture alloys of precious metal=
s (in order to obtain hardness and durability) without the addition of smal= >l percentages of copper or nickel added to the mix, but instead make the al= >loy using small amounts of alternative precious metals. Perhaps more city e= >mployees would opt to be paid with gold coins that were alloyed with small = >amounts of platinum, palladium or some other precious metal, as opposed to = >being paid in gold coins that were alloyed with copper or nickel instead.
The copper, nickel and chromium coins are all known or suspected carcino=
gens while the gold, silver, platinum and palladium coins are not. If the c= >ity is selling commemorative coinage, we would be on better ground by offer= >ing coins that are not toxic. Similarly if the city is paying workers their=
wages, we would be on better ground by paying our workers in gold coins, w=
hich is real money. Some workers will opt to be paid in commemorative silve= >r, platinum and palladium coinage instead of the gold coin, the city will d= >o the math and benefit on the short term with the exchange, allowing it to = >lower taxes, while the worker who chooses to be paid with the silver, plati= >num and palladium coins in place of a gold coin, may profit over time due t= >o the rising market value of the silver, platinum and palladium. We can sta= >rt by lowering taxes (stop paying compound interest on our bogus national d= >ebt) by paying a small gold coin (maybe 0.0404 Troy Ounces AGW, or perhaps = >0.0357 Troy Ounces AGW) to most city employees for a day=E2=80=99s work, I = >propose that we call this gold coin a =E2=80=9CNamur=E2=80=9D, and we can e= >ven put the image of my cat Namur on one side. People will wonder why they = >are not being paid with gold coins containing 0.0603 or perhaps 0.0600 Troy=
ounces of gold instead, it would remain a mystery. When I am deceased or d=
efeated, the following mayors may be free to decorate their coins with Mary= >, whichever pope, Charles, the Easter Bunny, an Egyptian obelisk, or perhap= >s even Santa Clause and a blinkin=E2=80=99 tree. People like blinkin=E2=80= >=99 trees, a coin depicting a blinkin=E2=80=99 evergreen tree may prove so = >very popular among the peasants, the city may rake in a fortune in coin sal= >es and then cease collecting taxes from homeowners. Using metallurgy, =E2= >=80=9Cscience=E2=80=9D and tasteful art, we would strike coins and thereby = >reduce or even eliminate property taxes for the home and business owners, m= >aybe even provide rebates. Everybody will be very happy and will break into=
dance and song. Using =E2=80=9Cscience=E2=80=9D we have determined that ch=
romium, nickel and copper are all known or suspected carcinogens, so why ci= >rculate coins containing such toxins? Some people may rejoice when they are=
paid in a gold coin that is alloyed with silver instead of copper or nicke=
l, others may rejoice that the gold coin has an image of my Siamese cat on = >it, others may rejoice in being paid with a gold coin that depicts a woman = >tastefully showing off her breasts. Our governments teach us that diversity=
is good, so I would think it would be equally good to have a variety of im=
ages on the coins the City of Saskatoon strikes.
Anticipate a new provincial government that will not pay rent for welfar=
e recipients but will instead help the former renters become homeowners. Ho= >me ownership, even if the home is tiny, will go a long way to improve the l= >ives of people. The tiny homes should have concrete floors, concrete walls = >and a flat concrete roof to lessen the build time and provide shelters of s= >ubstance that cannot easily be destroyed. Provide tiny homes (approximately=
200 square feet per adult, 100 square feet per child), eventually the new =
home owner may get their act together to upgrade the cheap windows and stov= >e provided, add insulation and drywall or some other wall covering, expand = >the first floor or add a second story to the structure, make an outhouse, a= >dd solar panels or a windmill for electric lighting, or even dig a water we= >ll. Provide each new residence with a heavy steel door that cannot be easil= >y kicked in. Rather than giving away tax money monthly to pay rent to a lan= >dlord, instead provide some building materials and kick-start home ownershi= >p. Place leans upon each property so that the houses may not be sold withou= >t the taxpayers recouping their investments. The City of Saskatoon should n= >ot wait for provincial nor federal government assistance with our homeless = >crisis, we should purchase a block of four or six sections of land several = >miles away from the city for the new small homes. The land can be fenced an= >d shared with bison, the houses need to be concrete as the bison would rub = >against them on occasion. Some new homeowners would opt to live in bison-fr= >ee areas - people should have options in life - governments should be provi= >ding options for people rather than taking options away. Governments remove= >d building options from people and forced them to use construction techniqu= >es that result in rotting homes of limited life spans=E2=80=A6 it is likely=
better to live in a concrete home surrounded with bison than live in the b=
asement of a rotting home surrounded by discarded needles while having your=
privacy and the sanctity of your home repeatedly violated by your landlord= who refuses to give tenants the legally required 24-hour notice before bar=
ging into the premises. The concrete houses should be spaced adequately to = >allow for bison, moose, deer and coyotes to walk between, people who want t= >o fence their gardens off from the deer, moose and bison should be allowed = >to do so but not in such a large amount to prevent the passage of animals, = >Perhaps allow people to fence off a maximum of 800 square feet for their pe= >rsonal garden space, and only if they use the space for vegetable or flower=
garden, otherwise leave the area unimpeded for animal traffic. The automob=
iles can be left at one of the parking lots at the outer edge of the sanctu= >ary and people can walk to their concrete houses, some people will want the= >ir concrete house to be located close to one of the parking lots. Bringing = >automobiles into the housing/bison reserve would be sure to disrupt the bis= >on and moose so the vehicles are best left in parking lots at one of the en= >trances. Smart automatic fences can be made that will confine the bison and=
horses while allowing the passage of moose, deer and antelope. The presenc=
e of bison or horses in an area would close the fences in that area to prev= >ent their escape.
Stop funding the downtown Lighthouse shelter and instead provide the imp=
overished with small homes in the countryside, and find other ways to build=
confidence in consumers so they will return to the downtown core and patro=
nize the stores. Saskatoon should use its downtown core for the advancement=
of commerce rather than showing off impoverished and often dirty and lazy =
individuals. The Russian peasants living under the Russian Tsars had the ri= >ght to live in small shacks in the countryside and were allowed to have gar= >dens or small crops, while the Canadian slaves living at the Lighthouse are=
fed grossly substandard meals. I=E2=80=99ve seen grown men cry at the Ligh=
thouse, as they were made to wait over an hour for their dinners to arrive,=
and when the dinner finally arrives the food provided is unpalatable and t=
he portion insufficient to sustain life. People come out of a six-week psyc= >hiatric torture session at the University of Saskatchewan, or at Saskatoon = >City Hospital, and their Brahmin psychiatrist has them injected with a long=
lasting CIA inspired =E2=80=9Cdepot=E2=80=9D drug on the final day of that= horror, leaving them in utter nauseous misery and horror for another coupl=
e of months after they are released. Then they end up at the Lighthouse and=
continue to be mistreated, it=E2=80=99s no wonder that grown men cry. Mana=
gement at the Lighthouse benefits from the donations and are widely known t= >o take food home for themselves while their inmates suffer. Many people who=
are repeatedly =E2=80=9Ctreated=E2=80=9D to the six-week long psychiatric =
sessions end up in Filipino (Catholic) run group homes where the food provi= >ded consists mainly of starches (bread and potatoes) and minimal fruits and=
vegetables. The Filipino Catholics don=E2=80=99t open group homes to provi=
de loving care for the disenfranchised, they open the group homes in order = >to profit from their misery. What taxpayers pay to keep the poor in group h= >omes, and in homeless facilities such as the Lighthouse, can easily buy con= >crete homes for these people in the countryside. And what taxpayers pay to = >keep people in prisons and psychiatric torture centers could instead easily=
buy those people multi-million dollar mansions, and for each and every one= of them.
The disenfranchised living in the Filipino group homes and at the downto=
wn Lighthouse are mainly white people who did not get the opportunities to = >advance in society, and were instead actively prevented from attending trad= >e schools, and/or who were directed into attending non-productive classes a= >t the University of Saskatchewan College of Arts and Sciences. Many of the = >people living in the Filipino owned group homes are forced to leave the hom= >es during the day (even in 40 degree below weather), many of the poor would=
go to the McDonald=E2=80=99s Restaurant on the corner of 22nd Street and 2=
nd Avenue in downtown Saskatoon, there the coffee refills were 30 cents, th= >ere was always a large group of impoverished who would help each other out = >to scrape up enough money for a cup of coffee. People running the city of S= >askatoon decided it was wrong to provide a place for these impoverished peo= >ple to meet and drink coffee together and they had that McDonald=E2=80=99s = >restaurant demolished and turned into a parking lot. Around the same time t= >he authorities of morality decided to close the Mendal Art Gallery, which w= >as another place the impoverished could freely attend. A couple decades ear= >lier the City of Saskatoon similarly decided to demolish the Barry Hotel as=
this was a place that the impoverished Indians and white people got togeth=
er for an evening of fun. The reason for the destruction of the Barry Hotel=
was that people were meeting there and having fun. Now the authorities of =
morality are getting the residents to pay over a hundred million dollars fo= >r the Remai Modern Art Gallery, and none of impoverished ever enter.
Saskatoon needs to provide places to park horse-drawn carriages. If I bo=
thered to run for mayor and if I was elected the mayor of Saskatoon I would=
seek to reserve appropriate locations for tying up and corralling horses, =
as some visitors from out of town will arrive on horses or in horse driven = >carriages. People on bicycles will likely come along and pick up the horse = >shit for free, they will take it back to their gardens in the city, or next=
to their concrete homes in the country, where they will fail to compost th=
e material adequately and then spread weeds throughout their communities an= >d neighborhoods.=20
I believe we should allocate Yorath Island to this purpose of stabling h=
orses and parking carriages, and name the area Matthew Hardy Park and name = >the future bridge to Yorath Island =E2=80=9CMatthew Hardy Bridge=E2=80=9D. = >Matthew Hardy liked the testimony of Jesus that I gave him, and he visited = >me while I was being tortured by Hindus at the University of Saskatchewan i= >n Saskatoon, his enthusiasm of my testimony got him killed, his remains wer= >e found years later on Yorath Island, and so the Hardy family was denied a = >son and a brother and I was denied the visitor and was left with parents wh= >o demanded that I take a pill (Catholics lobbied my parents to shut me up).=
Matthew Hardy was thrilled to see the math I showed him, it linked his nam=
e to his birthday and to numbers in the Bible, it provided evidence that hi= >s name and birthday were both gifts from God, and the God was the God of th= >e Bible. All of Matthew=E2=80=99s friends saw themselves as some type of wi= >tches, they dressed and talked in darkness and were not happy to hear any t= >estimony of God=E2=80=99s Word. The psychiatrists who were torturing me cit= >ed my interest in numbers as a reason to torture me further, the people I s= >howed evidence that their names were in harmony with their birthdays and wi= >th the numbers in the Bible all chuckled, one or two gave me a few coins fo= >r my work. Far more people laughed at me, libeled, slandered and assaulted = >me than those who tossed me a few coins for my work. My Doukhobor relatives=
only cared about their Catholic evergreen tree traditions, none had an oun=
ce of compassion for me=E2=80=A6 all the Doukhobors had become Catholics wh= >o did not say anything to jeopardize their peaceful and toiling lives.
Free people are paid in gold and silver coins and are allowed to own lan=
d and guns=E2=80=A6 allowing some Canadians to possess land and possess gun= >s, and allowing them to buy commemorative gold or silver coins at the post = >offices and banks at greatly inflated prices, is just a show. The Charter o= >f Rights and Freedoms foisted upon us by Trudeau Senior doth not recognize = >our right to own neither land nor guns. Those that have gun licenses should=
be aware that the license is just a temporary permit to possess a gun and =
the gun may be removed from them at any time, and similarly those that have=
land risk similar loss. In some regards the Russian peasants had more free=
dom than the Canadian slaves. Both the Russian peasants and the Canadian sl= >aves are provided with priests that wave smoke and splash some water around= >. The Russian peasants were made to fight for their country while the Canad= >ian slaves are made to eat substandard food while their nation is handed ov= >er to Chinese and Islamists. The Russian Tsars defended their nation while = >Ottawa strikes secret deals with both the Chinese and the Islamists, and ev= >en allows the Chinese to launch legal suits against us in secret courts sho= >uld we hamper their unfettered access to Canadian resources. In Russia the = >Tsar would have people exiled to Siberia if they dared to criticize the pri= >ests who claimed to be the sole authority on Scripture, in Canada they had = >me repeatedly arrested and tortured for daring to speak out against their p= >agan evergreen tree idols and their censorship of cannibalism. I said they = >have Egyptian penises on the roofs of their churches, they called me a pedo= >phile and employed Hindus to tortured me, I requested assistance and people=
laughed at me and called me a pedophile, the more I cried out against the =
system, the more the Canadians laughed at me. The churches in both Russia a= >nd Canada incorporate phalluses built into their church architecture, not u= >nlike the Moslems, Sikhs and Hindus with their mosque and temple architectu= >res, but to say that Christians are capping their churches with penises res= >ults in their church members and the general pubic laughing at me, libeling=
me (calling me a pedophile), assaulting me, and ultimately torturing me. S=
top psychiatry, it is so horrible.
An end to Catholic (pagan) fertility rites on city property=E2=80=A6 no =
money spent on decorated evergreen trees, decorated evergreen tree wreaths = >and blinkin=E2=80=99 lights, on their purchase nor on their annual installa= >tion and removal. Removal of the pagan representations of penises on Broadw= >ay Avenue. Removal of all Egyptian phalluses located on city owned properti= >es (such as on the Broadway Bridge and at City Hall). An end to the arrest = >and psychiatric torture of those who criticize the Catholic (pagan) phallic=
traditions. An end to psychiatric treatment (torture) within the city=E2=
=80=A6 it is the churches that are sick and not the people who criticize th= >e pagan traditions taught by these churches. The city should look at not on= >ly ending torture in the hospitals (a real mismanagement of tax money) but = >look at compensating people who suffered under the hands of psychiatry. The= >re is a real risk that if we do not stop psychiatry, then increasing number= >s of =E2=80=9Cnormal=E2=80=9D people across this nation will start facing w= >idespread torture.
The so-called =E2=80=9CChristian=E2=80=9D churches teach people to honor= pagan fertility tree traditions that are in direct opposition to God=E2=80=
=99s First Three Commandments=E2=80=A6 people are taught to honor pagan fer= >tility traditions in place of God=E2=80=99s Commandments and then these peo= >ple go on to commit violations of other of God=E2=80=99s Commandments, the = >resulting crime destroys lives and results in higher taxes for businesses a= >nd homeowners. The churches (and mosques and temples) should be taxed in or= >der to alleviate these higher taxes that they themselves are causing throug= >h their pagan teachings. The Doukhobors should pay increased taxes as they = >too have adopted the Catholic fertility rites and so have become Catholics,=
they claim to abide by God=E2=80=99s Commandments but they honor Catholic =
fertility rites which are in violation of God=E2=80=99s First Four Commandm= >ents. Doukhobors used to be a benefit to Canadians, now they negligently te= >ach people to abide by Catholic fertility rites. When people adopt Catholic=
fertility rites then they become Catholics, and that includes Doukhobors. =
It will be difficult to collect increased taxes from the Zoroastrians as th= >ey are difficult to find=E2=80=A6 Zoroastrians faced tremendous persecution=
from Moslems over the centuries and now they hide. The Doukhobors (the Old= Believers) faced tremendous persecution from Christians over the last few =
centuries and now they avoid persecution by embracing Catholic fertility ri= >tes and by changing their Slavic names to Anglicized names. The Canadian Uk= >rainians turn eggs and trees into decorated idols and actively help to teac= >h my Doukhobor relatives to embrace the Catholic fertility rites. Now my Do= >ukhobor relatives love Catholic fertility rites far more than Jesus. The Je= >hovah Witnesses are a Catholic church as they embrace the Vatican=E2=80=99s=
Sunday Sabbath. The Jewish community will not face additional tax burdens =
because they do not systematically teach people to violate God=E2=80=99s Co= >mmandments but teach people to abide by God=E2=80=99s Commandments instead.=
Please note that I never stated that one is saved by keeping God=E2=80=99s= Commandments, nor do I hold such a view.
People are systematically taught to embrace traditions in place of God=
=E2=80=99s Commandments, their libraries are filled with books advocating w= >itchcraft and homosexuality, and their media is but a mouthpiece for the Ca= >tholic Church that repeats the call to turn trees into decorated idols and = >provides encouragement to violate additional Commandments, resulting in cri= >me and higher taxes. So not only should the churches, mosques and pagan tem= >ples be taxed to help pay for the costs they impose upon society, their med= >ia should be taxed as well.
Multitudes of soldiers gave their lives for our freedom, and our governm=
ents honor their sacrifices by erecting Egyptian obelisks (representations = >of penises) for them, and by placing statues of soldiers next to or on top = >of these Egyptian penises. And every winter the soldier=E2=80=99s tombstone= >s are decorated with wreaths made from evergreen trees, which they also tur= >n into decorated idols. Turning evergreen trees into decorated idols is an = >ancient fertility rite that is now religiously honored the Catholic church= >. When Catholics decorate the graves of the war dead with their Catholic sy= >mbols of fertility, they are using the dead soldiers to push their Catholic=
beliefs upon others. These soldiers never fought for your Catholic fertili=
ty rites but for your freedom. These are traditions that have become so imp= >ortant that society is willing to have those who point out the pagan filth = >be arrested and tortured in psychiatric facilities. There are more appropri= >ate ways to thank service men and women for their service than to honor the= >m with a pagan dink, or with a decorated fertility tree idol.
The city closed down the Mendel Art Gallery, it was a wonderful place th=
at provided free access to art and to a conservatory full of plants. Only o= >nce I went to Saskatoon=E2=80=99s new art gallery, I was turned away as the=
entire facility was closed to the general public, but other people were st=
ill being admitted, those being admitted were arriving in limousines and th= >ey were wearing outfits that exceed the cost of what I spend on clothes in = >three years. I did not return. One would think that with four stories the n= >ew art gallery is large enough to always accommodate people of differing so= >cial-economic backgrounds at the same time. One would think that the old ga= >llery would not be shuttered until the new gallery was ready for occupancy,=
but this was not the case and the general public was left without a galler=
y for years - the wealthy among us cared little that the city was without a=
working gallery while the new gallery was being constructed as they could =
easily afford to frequently fly to other communities and other countries to=
view the art there. I support the re-establishment of the Mendel Art Galle=
ry and an end of cash transfers to the new gallery. A study should be done = >on the new gallery and determine how it can be repurposed, perhaps it can b= >e used to teach aviation or perhaps the space can even be used to build sma= >ll airplanes. There is a much greater desire of city residents to own their=
own cars, motorcycles, boats, airplanes and helicopters than to spend mone=
y for admission into an exclusive art gallery where people arrive in limous= >ines.
The city used to hold the immensely popular =E2=80=9CLouis Riel Relay Ra=
ce=E2=80=9D in the 1980=E2=80=99s and 1990=E2=80=99s, the event drew great = >crowds to the center of the city. It was a way to bring together people of = >all cultures, not just Metis, but also Native Aboriginals, Whites, Chinese = >and most of the rest of the diverse community. The relay race even involved=
people riding horses along the river bank, people racing canoes up and dow=
n the river, others running with heavy packs, it was truly exciting and tho= >usands upon thousands of people annually showed up to view the spectacle. T= >hen the city cancelled the event and put Chinese Dragon Boat Races in their=
place. About the same time the Chinese Dragon Boat Races began, the media =
stopped their campaign to demonize the Chinese people, and instead ran =E2= >=80=9Cnews=E2=80=9D stories of how the Chinese were embracing =E2=80=9CChri= >stmas=E2=80=9D (aka turning trees into decorated idols), saying =E2=80=9CLo= >ok at their beautiful blinkin=E2=80=99 trees - the Chinese people are just = >the same as you and me.=E2=80=9D The media played upon people=E2=80=99s lov= >e of pagan fertility rites in order to push a pro-Chinese agenda. I support=
a return of the Louis Riel Relay Race to downtown Saskatoon. If Chinese pe=
ople want to maintain their traditions they should do so without cancelling=
our traditions.
High school students know how to smoke in large groups, resulting in clo=
uds of carcinogenic toxins irritating the homeowners living close to the sc= >hools=E2=80=A6 if the students can afford drugs, tattoos, body piercings, d= >esigner clothes, automobiles and smart phones, then they can also afford fi= >nes for littering and jaywalking. Sometimes the weather is such that the ci= >garette smoke hangs in the air, it makes life miserable for those residents=
who live adjacent to the high schools. When sleeping people smell tobacco =
smoke their hearts speed up and they wake up, people living in apartments s= >uffer and die early deaths, the age quickly because they are unable to slee= >p soundly due to their hearts racing from the second-hand smoke.
The federal government recently legalized marijuana, but renters have no= place to smoke and can face fines for smoking in public places, it is a so=
rry state of affairs for the smokers who rent. It is also a sorry state for=
the renters who do not smoke and have to tolerate the smoke from the other= tenants. We should look at providing designated smoking areas for people t=
hat smoke tobacco or marijuana. Renters smoking inside non-smoking faciliti= >es should consider moving to a tiny house located outside of the city, whic= >h they would become owners of, before they are charged for administering no= >xious substances. Be aware that just a small amount of second hand smoke, o= >r incense, will wake most non-smokers out of a deep sleep as the smoke make= >s hearts beat faster. Abused people, such as those coming out of psychiatri= >c facilities, don=E2=80=99t sleep very soundly, they find themselves living=
in the worst possible housing scenarios where people smoke and party day a=
nd night. The abused people go from absolutely horrid living accommodations=
in psychiatric facilities to the absolutely horrid living accommodations o=
f smokey rental facilities in the city where people are literally bouncing = >up and down the hallways day and night. People coming out of psychiatric = >=E2=80=9Ccare=E2=80=9D facilities are very close to death and require adequ= >ate rest, which is not provided to them in the putrid dumps they end up in = >after their release. I pity the people who live in apartment buildings loca= >ted next to the high schools, where putrid tobacco clouds endlessly hang. L= >ife is short for most people who end up getting =E2=80=9Ctreated=E2=80=9D b= >y psychiatrists, and they don=E2=80=99t smile much before they die.=20
No tax money to be utilized for sports. Institute a program to help mili=
tary cadets, sports groups and other clubs raise money for their organizati=
Mary, Monkey, Sun, Tree and Penis Whoreshippers - Part B - Daryl Kabatoff >July 21st 2022 12:11 pm 129,595 words (146 pages)
Mary, Monkey, Sun, Tree and Penis Whoreshippers - Part B - Daryl Kabatoff >January 6th 2023 12:12 am 170,136 words (193 pages)
=E2=80=9CThe very concept of a nation founded by European settlers is offen= >sive to me. Old stock White Canadians are an unpleasant relic, and quite fr= >ankly, replaceable. And we will replace them." - Canadian Prime Minister Ju= >stin Trudeau, when asked to comment on his Open Borders Immigration Strateg= >y, speaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer
=E2=80=9CChristians are the worst part of Canadian society.=E2=80=9D - Cana= >dian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking without preparation, without th= >e aid of a writer
=E2=80=9CIf you=E2=80=99re not willing to embrace Islam, you=E2=80=99re not=
a part of our society.=E2=80=9D - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau s=
peaking without preparation, without the aid of a writer
=E2=80=9CWithout writers, nothing speak so good in word stuff.=E2=80=9D - E= >ddie Izzard
If there is huge interest then we (with help from the Aviation Departmen=
t) can develop a prototype of a powered glider that has an enormous wingspa= >n. Many builders will instead choose to build a plans-built plane of a pre-= >existing design, such as the BD-4, rather than wait for the development of = >the prototypes. And smaller TIG welded airframes can be put together cheapl= >y, and quite likely with fewer hours of work than required for the composit= >e aircraft. Note that even the airplanes that are constructed primarily of = >wood still require metal parts to be fabricated and securely stored until t= >he builder is ready for installing them, and many metal-bodied airplanes ha= >ve wooden wings. Many of these metal parts are cheaply constructed, people = >with limited resources can start by assembling these lower cost items. Peop= >le are free to decide which aircraft they wish to construct, but recognize = >that if you stick to a co-operative plan where several or many copies of th= >e same plane are made, many of your construction problems will be solved as=
others are involved working along side of you to help complete the steps. =
We should be providing options for people rather than taking options away a= >nd make it easier for people to start building without delay.
By simply following the principles of aviation and without using complex= mathematics nor wind tunnels, people may construct airplanes that fly very= well (see =E2=80=9CFlight Without Formulae=E2=80=9D by A.C. Kermode). Cons=
ider that those people who use the complex mathematical formulas and even w= >ind tunnels end up with airplanes that still undergo revision after revisio= >n after revision. Even little girls can fly their own planes and save other=
children from being abducted by gypsies (see The Girl Aviators=E2=80=99 Mo=
tor Butterfly by Margaret Burnham, published by M.A Donohue & Company). If = >the builder chooses to make such an individual and unique aircraft, then of=
course the parts they manufacture cannot be traded for parts of a design a=
pproved and actively supported by the Aviation Department.
There are lots of projects that can be tackled in Build Option 22, many o=
f them require TIG welding. Many of the projects would have components that=
would be cut out with lasers or water jets or cutting torches from large s=
heets of metal, the individuals building the project would of course pay fo= >r that service (unless they own and use a cutting torch), and then assemble=
their projects in the large TIG welding facilities located in downtown Sas=
katoon, stretching from Third Avenue to Ave C or so, and south from 20th or=
22nd Street or so to the river. Rowbotham proclaims we can print debt-free= money out of thin air to pay for this and other critical infrastructure pr=
ojects (See =E2=80=9CThe Grip of Death: A Study of Modern Money, Debt Slave= >ry, and Destructive Economics=E2=80=9D by Michael Rowbotham). This TIG weld= >ing facility is a critical project as people would be learning skills and b= >uilding futures for themselves, and ample opportunities would exist in the = >facilities to teach them to fly.
Saskatoon requires two or three new airports on the outskirts specifical=
ly made for the homebuilt aircraft. We should not allow the homebuilt creat= >ions to fly over the city with the exception that the smaller and quieter p= >lanes should be allowed to travel immediately above the South Saskatchewan = >River and so through the very center of our city - planes could even be lau= >nched from a slipway on the roof of the TIG welding facility (a very large = >building located on the south side of downtown stretching from Second Avenu= >e and 20th Street to Avenue C South and the river) and then navigate along = >the river. We could have races and paintball dogfights over the river, an e= >vent as such would bring visitors to the city and generate revenue. We coul= >d have a water aerodrome on the South Saskatchewan River, and perhaps limit=
the aerodrome to small airplanes that meet extremely tough noise limits or= perhaps allow noisier aircraft to use the facilities during the day. Consi=
der allowing the children to fly their own aviation creations at night with= >out any licenses, and re-educating the air traffic controllers.
We could be building multiple forms, and then allowing builders to utili=
ze our forms, and they would drape their plywood and/or fiber glass and/or = >carbon fiber and such over our forms, such as was done in constructing the = >Mosquito. While the forms are being developed the builders could rebuild en= >gines and build propellers for their engines, build landing gear and other = >smaller parts. We could have forms for members to borrow that result in sle= >ek and fuel efficient racers, like the Yak. We can also allow members to bu= >ild a scaled-down version of the P-38 Lightning. We could build powered gli= >ders that resemble a U-2 Spy Plane, we could make multiple forms for the fu= >selage out of concrete or some other stiff material. Small jet engines are = >an equivalent cost of a cheap used car, buy a pair of these small jets and = >make them retractable. We could even develop jet engines and make the desig= >n or parts available to the members. We can accomplish much when we work to= >gether.
We could build a fleet of amphibious aircraft, seaplanes, flying boats o=
r perhaps even floatplanes, having a fleet of these one or more of these fo= >ur aquatic aircraft would enable us to provide an air taxi service to the n= >orthern lakes. By facilitating the building of low cost aircraft in Saskato= >on, and perhaps by building components for these airplanes in other communi= >ties, we could link northern and southern communities. Presently it costs m= >ore money to fly from Saskatoon to many communities in northern Saskatchewa= >n, than it costs to fly from Saskatoon to Europe. Check out the retractable=
wing-tip pontoons on the PBY-5A, by retracting the pontoons on airplanes w=
e will reduce drag and save on fuel.
If I were mayor of Saskatoon, I=E2=80=99d encourage both city residents =
and our neighbors living outside of our city to participate in using the pr= >oposed facilities to construct and modify boats, aircraft and ATV=E2=80=99s= >. We=E2=80=99d provide storage lockers for the parts you are assembling for=
your project, and a machine shop where you may manufacture your parts, eve=
ntually you will have enough parts stored that you would be provided with a=
larger secure space to assemble your project. People should have options i=
n life, governments should be trying to help provide people with options an= >d not take options away.
I propose a very large building along the south side of downtown Saskato=
on spanning into Riversdale where visitors could travel on moving and stati= >onary sidewalks and escalators while enclosed inside clear tubes. Separated=
by plate glass, visitors could safely view the airplanes or other projects= being completed around them while seated and having coffee at one of the m=
any coffee shops. I imagine undecided Cindy and her female friends would be=
roaming the premises, coffees in hand, looking at the many projects, while= the muscular guys would be going shirtless, dripping in sweat, as they lab=
our upon their metal and wood working projects, welding and grinding away. = >The women can see the projects under construction before they choose what p= >roject to start upon. Friendships would be developed.
The City of Saskatoon should purchase 40, 80, 160 or 320 acres of rural =
land so these projects can quickly begin while building this proposed facil= >ity in the city. Even a small group of people, independent from the City of=
Saskatoon and who are interested in one or more of these twenty-eight buil=
d options, can unite and pool their money and purchase the required land an= >d erect some cheaper buildings close to the City of Saskatoon.
Build Options Eight, Nine and Ten are a system of similar tracking vehic=
les. The boats being built should be engineered to carry one or more of the=
similarly tracked vehicles from Build Options Eight, Nine and Ten, and als=
o engineered to be easily transported by large ships. The rafts carrying su= >pplies also need to conform to size restrictions to aid in transport by the=
larger ships. The boats should be loaded upon ships and then unloaded at a= distant port, perhaps at the mouth of the gold-bearing Lena or some other =
gold-laden river. I suggest that white Canadians should flee Canada, take a=
well-supplied trip up the mouth of the Lena and establish a community near= where a smaller river meets the Lena, where the gold or other mineral pros=
pects look favorable, perhaps 1000 miles upstream on the Lena. Doing such w= >ould establish a community in pretty much the geographical center of Yakuti= >a, work together to survive the first winter and then establish other commu= >nities in the region, depending upon mineral and other resources.
Bring along excavators to help dig in for the winter. Each participant s=
hould bring along thousands of pounds of food, thousands of pounds of other=
supplies (tents, tarps, clothes, 24 volt or 48 volt off-grid electrical sy=
stems, lithium powered hand tools, stoves, screws, books, fuel=E2=80=A6.), = >much of the food and supplies brought along on small boats and rafts capabl= >e of navigating the Lena River. The Yakutians are fond of metal workers, ma= >ke sure to bring along your machine shops, portable lumber mills and road b= >uilding equipment when you emigrate. Prepare to pay taxes to Putin in the f= >orm of gold, so that he may keep his Russian Republic strong. Or stay and p= >ay taxes to Trudeau and have him raise your children=E2=80=A6 Trudeau uses = >the media and schools to teach your children to ram their penises up each o= >ther=E2=80=99s arseholes. Trudeau works at preventing white people from mee= >ting, uniting and forming families, and desires control over all the childr= >en, I suggest we take all the machining tools, also the children, and flee = >in well-equipped convoys to Yakutia, there we can build wealth, build guns = >and regroup. At the very least, each participant would be required to have = >a raft carrying 6,000 pounds of food and other supplies so they would stand=
a chance to survive the first winter, and the owner of the raft would requ=
ire a boat owner to tow said raft upriver. If you are bringing a vehicle on=
a boat or raft as well, still bring that 6000 pounds (or much more) of foo=
d and other supplies. Build the boats and rafts so they can be easily loade= >d onto and unloaded from the ships. Then build a community along the Lena R= >iver or nearby the Lena River, build it out of rocks and concrete on a sout= >h facing slope, build guns, mine gold, coal and other resources, regroup. A= >nother group can land at Magadan perhaps without rafts and boats and seek o= >ut a suitable site for a community along the Hiway of Bones or nearby that = >hiway either in Magadan or Yakutia. Canadians can sponsor other Canadians t= >o go on the expeditions, perhaps expecting to follow behind the following y= >ear and bringing additional resources when emigrating.
Should you find yourself landing at the Lena River Delta, travel up the =
Lena with a boat pulling your raft. I would suggest you also carry (or tow = >or use as outriggers) three or four smaller and light weight flat bottom bo= >ats so you may navigate into other rivers that you find along the way. You = >may need several small flat bottomed boats in order to transport your many = >thousands of pounds of tools and other supplies upstream an alternative riv= >er. People landing at Magadan and then travelling up the Kolyma Hiway shoul= >d consider towing or carrying boats with them. Go to the expense of making = >aluminum containers to haul your food and other goods, so they float and so=
the goods are secure in transit. The aluminum containers, when empty, can =
always be used at your chosen destination to assist in housing and mining.
Imagine perhaps as many as one million Canadians emigrating, leaving Can=
ada to greener pastures, each bringing with them a small fortune in dehydra= >ted foods, and bringing with them machining equipment, and construction equ= >ipment, portable lumber mills, metals, fuels, cement and glass, and establi= >shing new communities in places such as Norway, Sweden, Finland, Yakutia, M= >agadan or Kamchatka. Whichever land we emigrate to would be blessed with an=
economic windfall. Canadians might be wise to build boats, rafts and aircr=
aft, in preparation of a future migration. I also imagine society will coll= >apse so very quickly that Canadians will not have a chance to flee the mess= >es that Biden and Trudeau are creating. In actuality America is being ruled=
by Obama, a homosexual Indonesian Islamist who whispers instructions into =
Biden=E2=80=99s ear, and his Queen Michelle wears size 12 men=E2=80=99s sho= >es and played football in college. It is very important to this homosexual = >Indonesian Islamist that Americans line up and take the jab. And Obama prob= >ably follows orders from Charles, who is an Islamist as well, while Trudeau=
certainly doths. Anyway, some people in Saskatoon may build Yaks and fly t=
o Yakutia. It would be helpful to those who embark upon an expedition to Ya= >kutia (or elsewhere) have support from airplane owners, and the airplane ow= >ners find support from those carrying supplies up roads and rivers. I image=
that we can establish several communities in the Russian far-east and have= these communities continuously linked by air and working together developi=
ng and manufacturing airplanes, food processing and mining equipment and su= >ch.
Those people emigrating away from Canada would of course benefit by havi=
ng sponsors to assist them with funds to make the boats, rafts, vehicles an= >d to obtain the supplies. Sponsors would of course benefit when they travel=
to the new communities, or move to the new communities=E2=80=A6 the sponso=
rs would have different levels of VIP status depending upon their input. I = >suggest the Aviation Department, which is in charge of the security of the = >boat building and most other build options (in charge of the secure lockers=
and buildings), utilize the funds in however way the board members see fit=
. We will need metal lathes and presses as well but I expect people would d= >onate some of their older and unwanted equipment, perhaps equipment in need=
of repair. And so likely we would be better off using any donated funds to= purchase aluminum in large quantities rather than invest in tools. Putin w=
ill charter us a freighter and carry us, our boats and rafts, our guns and = >other supplies, from Vancouver to the Lena River Delta or further upstream.=
Each person who constructed a raft and\or a boat would have a heated cabin= built into their rafts and boats that they could occupy during transport.=
=20
Especially note that each person who built a raft or boat using donated =
supplies would be obligated to use a portion of their space to transport Av= >iation Department supplies and equipment or other members=E2=80=A6 and so t= >here may be a vehicle or other supplies on your raft that you do not own, i= >n addition to people, and you may be called upon to utilize your boat as a = >tugboat and help pull supplies down the Lena River.
Builders who draw upon such donated resources would have to agree to use= the finished boats, rafts, planes and vehicles to assist the emigration by= helping to move resources for the entire group, and would later have to pa=
y cash for any materials provided if they decide to keep the finished proje= >ct for their own private use. The donations would be used for emigration, t= >he builders drawing upon the donated materials would be beholden to the Avi= >ation Department and would be obligated to use the constructed vehicles, bo= >ats, rafts and aircraft to assist in moving supplies to Magadan or Yakutia = >(Sakha Republic) or Kamchatka or Chukotka, likely depending upon which of t= >hese locations would welcome us, and depending upon what Putin would prefer= >. Perhaps different Russian far eastern states and regions will compete and=
lobby for us to establish our presence and metal working facilities at the=
ir states and regions, I suggest that you establish a settlement near some = >coal reserves. The Aviation Department should assist people to move to eith= >er the Russian Far East or to a Scandinavian country, or perhaps to Greenla= >nd, and so people who built rafts and are beholden to the Aviation Departme= >nt would have the option to emigrate in an Aviation Department Convoy to th= >ese different locations if approved by the host country. The Aviation Depar= >tment hopes to establish communities in these foreign nations to assist Can= >adians to flee from Canada and continue to help train them in useful trades=
while assisting them to build themselves aircraft, boats and homes.
The raft you constructed by using materials owned and provided to you by= the Aviation Department, could be half occupied by materials and by wood-w=
orking and metal-working equipment the Aviation Department is transporting = >to the Russian far east. People making use of the Aviation Department facil= >ities to make rafts and other vehicles will of course be trained in some fo= >rm of metal working, and so will bring their skills with them to Yakutia (S= >akha Republic) should we emigrate there (more gold and diamonds and coal an= >d there than in Scandinavia, perhaps more freedom too). Some people will co= >nstruct their boats and planes with no intention of leaving the country, an= >d so will keep their skills in Saskatchewan or another Canadian province, a= >nd would be fully responsible in funding the construction of their own proj= >ects.
If people are in the process of fleeing Canada (or the USA) and leaving i=
ndependently and without the assistance of Saskatoon=E2=80=99s Aviation Dep= >artment, I suggest you meet at Magadan and make arrangements in Magadan to = >travel inland and bolster an existing community, such as Atka (200 km north=
of Magadan), or Orotukan (300 km north of Magadan). Establish communities =
or bolster existing communities along the hiway running from Magadan to Yak= >ustk, perhaps space the communities roughly 100 to 200 kilometers apart. If=
we had communities spaced roughly every 100 to 200 kilometers along the hi=
way we could assist all who travel the hiway by offering fuel, food, clothe= >s, supplies, lodging, likely jobs and entertainment as well. If we had comm= >unities spread out along the hiway, each community could be constructing sp= >ecific parts required for our communally-built airplanes, which I suggest b= >e Short Take Off And Landing (STOL) aircraft. The parts can be delivered to=
Yakutsk and/or to Magadan and the aircraft can be assembled there. We can =
space out communities along the hiway, perhaps in or near the communities o= >f Atka, Orotukan, Susuman, and beyond all the way to Yakutsk in the Sakha R= >epublic, and manufacture components for our aircraft from different factori= >es along the hiway Aircraft can also be assembled in smaller towns located = >between Yakutsk and Magadan, parts that we manufacture would flow both dire= >ctions down the Hiway of Bones.
It makes sense to purchase land in The City of Magadan and use it to hel=
p Americans and Canadians who are in the process of emigrating to the Russi= >an Far East. It also makes sense to purchase some land in the town of Atka = >to similarly assist those Americans and Canadians who are in the process of=
emigration, as the town is situated along the hiway and can provide lodgin=
g, meals, fuel and information to the travelers who are passing through, an= >d is attractive due to being located close to Magadan. Also Atka boasts som= >e nearby lakes (about five miles to the south east), making it ideal for ca= >noeing, fishing and camping while waiting for additional members of your pa= >rty to arrive from Canada or USA.
Establish communities that can serve as depots, where individual may drop= off thousands of pounds of supplies and then travel the region until makin=
g a decision upon where to settle and move those supplies to. Then the Avia= >tion Department, acting as an emigrant organization, would secure our suppl= >ies in depots in our communities along the hiway, and use our trucks to mov= >e the supplies from Magadan to any location along the hiway to Yakutsk or b= >eyond. We could purchase land in both Yakutsk and Nizhny Bestyakh (or very = >nearby each community) and build boats, small aircraft and homes there. Ins= >tead of building aircraft in Saskatchewan, we can flee to Magadan and Yakut= >ia and build them there.=20
Bring along portable lumber mills. And I suggest that when you flee Cana=
da for your very lives that you bring lots of deck screws, I suggest you ea= >ch bring along about 100 pounds each of #8x2=C2=BD, #8x3, #10x3=C2=BD, #10x= >4, and about 200 pounds of #10x6. Bring along those 20 volt drills and saws=
and a great number of screw driver bits. If you are intending to spend the= remaining years of your life in somewhere in the mountains of far eastern =
Russia, you are advised to bring along an abundance of screws as they help = >to make it easier to construct temporary shelters and permanent homes.
Putin would be sure to issue us a general pass allowing everybody coming= on the excursion from Canada (everybody fleeing Canada for their very live=
s) to bring their guns along with them. I suggest that if Putin dothn=E2=80= >=99t allow us to bring our guns (both handguns and rifles) to the Russian f= >ar east, that we instead go (flee for our lives) with our guns (and our scr= >ews) to Finland instead. Sweden is out of the question, they allow the Isla= >mic immigrants to have guns and bombs and will prevent the immigration of w= >hite people, whether they have guns or not. Norway could open their doors t= >o the Canadians who flee with their lives and who try to immigrate with the= >ir guns as they could use more soldiers for their army, navy and airforce, = >but since Canadians never fought in defense of Canada, they would be unlike= >ly to fight in defense of Norway either. If Putin dothn=E2=80=99t want Cana= >dians immigrating to the Russian far east with our guns and our metal worki= >ng tools (and our screws), then we could go to Finland and make guns and ai= >rplanes there instead. The people of Finland would enter into a debate abou= >t why they would ever want a big bunch of Canadians immigrating to their na= >tion again due to the question of those Canadians being unable to fight in = >defense of Canada, so why would they suddenly want to fight in defense of F= >inland???!!! In the end Finland would welcome the Canadians and also allow = >them to carry their guns with them, but only because they would be bringing=
huge amounts of metal working machinery along with them and would help to =
create employment for the Finnish people. So the Canadians who land in Finl= >and will adopt Finnish culture and will have to learn to speak through thei= >r noses, and that is a good reason to go to Magadan instead. In the end the=
Canadians would only flee to a country that allowed them to smoke marijuan=
a and hashish, and would happily speak through their noses in Finland if th= >at was what was required to smoke their weed.
Consider meeting in Sapporo Japan and make arrangement there to secure a=
dditional supplies before chartering ships and travelling onwards to Magada= >n. Winter weather conditions annually close the port of Magadan, while wait= >ing for the harbor to open you can use the opportunity to shop for and buy = >used Japanese mini-trucks, snow mobiles and such, secure all sorts of other=
supplies, and charter a suitable ship to take you and the other emigrants =
to Magadan. I imagine a tourist office or the main police station in Sappor= >o can assist you to get in contact with other westerners in Sapporo who are=
hoping to sail to Magadan in the spring or summer when the port is accessi=
ble. It is possible that Putin would send a ship to Sapporo to pick you emi= >grants up. If I was elected as Mayor of Saskatoon, I=E2=80=99d encourage pe= >ople to flee for their lives and go to Magadan, perhaps to first stop in Sa= >pporo and pick up supplies. With the present state of politics in Canada, i= >t may be wise to sell everything you have and fly to Japan where you will p= >urchase supplies, and then in the spring board a boat in Sapporo and sail t= >o Magadan, and then from there perhaps travel onwards to Yakutia. You are g= >oing to look rather silly traveling around Japan with 600 pounds of screws,=
especially if they are available in Japan cheaper than in Canada.
People wanting to build aircraft, whether in the west or in the Russian =
far east, should consider making an assembly-line and rolling off copies of=
a commonly desired model, perhaps a flying boat that seats just four peopl=
e. Another group of people will be incessant that they will each have a Sho= >rt Takeoff And Landing (STOL) aircraft, and so that group would be best ser= >ved by building assembly-line copies of the same plane=E2=80=A6 One seater = >STOL? Two seater STOL? Four Seater STOL? There may be enough interest to wa= >rrant making single, two and four seater STOL=E2=80=99s and rolling these t= >hree models off assembly lines. If the majority wants a four-seater STOL, t= >he people who desire a one or two seater STOL may still manufacture what th= >ey desire, we should have the room available to accommodate people=E2=80=99= >s projects. If city has the ability to spend hundreds of millions of dollar= >s on assorted projects of very questionable worth, and more on projects tha= >t they have no business funding, then similarly the city should be able to = >spend a bit of money to construct space that is suitable for you to build a=
project.
Find 100 people each wanting to build the same aircraft, perhaps a one-s=
eater STOL, this aircraft has a complex wing design. The 100 projects can b= >e approached haphazardly with individuals constructing assorted parts of th= >eir aircraft independently from one another. Or allow everybody could unite=
and build the 200 wings and the 100 fuselages and perhaps the 100 tails, t=
hen draw for these incompleted planes, then leave it to the members to inst= >all their own choice of engines, landing gear and avionics. Or 20 people co= >uld unite and build the 100 sets of wings for the 100 aircraft while the ot= >her 80 people build different components for these 100 airplanes. This latt= >er scenario would likely speed up the process of building the STOL aircraft= >, and 80% of the builders will not have to worry about building wings for t= >heir aircraft. Hopefully there would be enough interest to get a second set=
of 100 (or more) people together to build a different aircraft, and perhap=
s get a third group of 100 people united so they too may build 100 copies o= >f some third style of aircraft for themselves. If you wanted an airplane an= >d had very limited wealth, you would likely choose to join the group that s= >eeks to make extremely cheap airplanes (likely mostly wooden and cloth) tha= >t are light weight and so can function with lower horsepower engines. Perha= >ps your group will cooperatively own some engines that you may borrow until=
you are able to purchase your own. There might be some smaller groups of b=
uilders, for example there may be 25 people who desire to build some plans-= >built airplane who do not wish to join with the other groups of people buil= >ding other aircraft designs. There might be only three people wanting to bu= >ild a certain plans-built plane, provide them with storage locked and hope = >they work together.=20
If you keep your aircraft simple, smaller and on the lighter side, then =
you can use a pair of small (and light weight and cheap) jet engines that a= >re originally meant for use on the scaled-down radio controlled airplanes. = >Find a group of people who each desire to build the same glider and then mo= >dify that glider with the small jet hobby engines that pop up out of the fu= >selage or tail. My best guess is that there are many hundreds of people in = >and around Saskatoon that would like to own a pair of small jet engines for=
their extremely light weight aircraft, so many so that it would warrant bu=
ilding our own jet engines rather than buy them from Asia.=20
The city provides a room for the builders, first large rooms where all t=
he prospective builders may meet and discuss building different designs, th= >en smaller meeting rooms for the builders who decided upon the same design.=
At first the groups could make use of smaller building facilities, perhaps= sharing machine shops with others groups as they manufacture parts for the=
ir own designs, then later the groups would graduate to their own larger fa= >cilities that would allow them to build wings and assemble their fuselages.
I believe many people will want to use welders to fix and customize thei=
r automobiles and trucks, we are in need of facilities for these projects t= >hat are well separated from other projects. People can start by bringing a = >clean vehicle that has no papers or any other materials in the glove boxes = >or scattered about. Then they can drain the vehicle of fuel and remove the = >gas tank(s), and leave their gas tanks wrapped up and outside in the empty = >gas tank storage location. Then they can roll their vehicle upon a movable = >platform, then they can remove their wheels and tires and similarly have th= >ese wrapped up and stored in an alternative outdoor storage location. Once = >their vehicle is stripped of paper, fuel and tires (fire hazards), and once=
their vehicle propped up onto a movable platform, then they may move their= vehicle into the building where there will be a secure storage location fo=
r it. When they are ready to work on their vehicle they may roll it out of = >the secure storage and work on the vehicle, then return it to the secure st= >orage when they are done for the day. People welding near fabric seats can = >remove their seats and other flammable materials and leave these items outs=
Mary, Monkey, Sun, Tree and Penis Whoreshippers - Part B - Daryl Kabatoff
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