Thursday, July 3, 2008

Military Mobs

To several generations raised with television sets in their homes, the phrase "have gun will travel" seems to be an axiom especially applicable to the large numbers of military-service recruits who use their training to relocate to the environments of their own choice.

With the past few decades, military mobs have taken over a number of international locales after mental transmission of a mental-set of worldwide palm trees. (The term 'mental telepathy' was also removed from some dictionaries.)

Growing up in Bradford, PA, guns were mostly used as a way to secure a fresh meal, when wildlife trespassed on family property, other creatures either curious or because pushed onto personal property as a strategy. 'Trespassing' was therefore a key word within that region and others, since the wanton killing of other species destroyed the balance of nature and ensured fatal conflicts among other species in different settings. 'Trespassing' was also used to intimidate other people, with the inference that the trans-Atlantic immigrant William Bradford might just as well have dispatched indigenous people without the close proximity of turkeys.

The movements of military mobs are documented in housing and employment records, as well as in history books, but the reasoning behind such moves remains largely without explanation. The use of the mental-set of historical palm-trees, said trees now 100+ years old located throughout the planet, is omitted from the public records using the keyword 'private' as rationale--although the word 'secret' is more appropriate as a cause of friction and mob-type damage evident in such regions (including evident hurricanes and earthquakes as a way to clear out interlopers). Military maneuvers have proceeded throughout the planet without explanation or reasoning reported, with a consistent pattern of conflict/warfare resulting.

Those 'crashing' near a special palm-tree have little explanation for their actions and behavior other than some belief that the tree is part of their family history. Military personnel carrying such mental images in their memories are helpless to counteract the kind of strategies that assign them to posts near such trees, or to resist the reactions of inhabitants both domestic and foreign to such a specific focus upon an individual tree, including the hardship of maneuvers to claim and secure such palm-tree locales among well-armed troop members.

Whereever such conflict becomes 'inevitable' during overseas occupations or domestic forays, the actual focus within specific regions should be routinely documented, rather than remain a military or state secret.

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