we're allowed to notice what we notice~

American politics has been dominated by bullshit posturing my entire life, but we have the first amendment for a reason. It's time to have the tough conversations (and maybe even some fist fights) to work it all out.

Government activity is only valid when both authorized by the Constitution and keeps our Rights intact. I don't know if you've read the Constitution lately, but hardly any of what is called government today is legal.

In tandem with the Constitutional corrections, I will be pushing for several cultural alignments that allows NH to continue to thrive as a family-friendly education hub while maximizing our tourism and R&D industries.
I owe no obligations to any organization; I only serve the American people~

Both the US and NH Constitutions clearly define the People's right to counsel while mentioning the bar associations or the government's right to regulate who is allowed to represent who legally. The bar associations are unconstitutional guilds that overtly violate the People's right to counsel.

Stare decisis assumes past court decisions deserve authority simply because they came first, but the dead cannot be questioned, corrected, or held responsible for the consequences of today’s rulings. Every case involves living people and present facts. When courts defer to precedent instead of reasoning anew, they shift responsibility away from the present and entrench past errors under the guise of stability.

This principle applies not only to churches, but to any system that demands conformity and punishes dissent. Political parties function as religions when loyalty replaces reasoning and deviation is treated as heresy. Scientism functions as religion when credentialed authority is treated as unquestionable truth rather than a tool for inquiry. Science and politics are necessary tools—but dogma is not.

The purpose of law is safety, deterrence, and enforcement—not emotional retaliation. Retributive punishment satisfies anger but rarely repairs harm, deters future offenses, or restores social trust. Restitution centers accountability where it belongs: on making victims whole and preventing repeat harm. It requires offenders to repair damage rather than simply suffer consequences disconnected from outcomes.

Lending is a form of risk-taking, not a moral guarantee of repayment. When loans fail, that outcome reflects the risk inherent in the agreement—not personal failure by the borrower. When the state coercively enforces debt beyond bankruptcy protections, it alters how those contracts would otherwise resolve and shields lenders from the consequences of their own risk. That is not neutral enforcement; it is state interference on behalf of one party. A free society does not socialize lender risk through coercion.

Political parties divide people into identities; block parties bring people back into relationship. A healthy culture isn’t built by sorting ourselves away from disagreement, but by spending time with the people who challenge us most.
The lessons we need are almost always hidden behind superficial judgment. Good music, good food, and a healthy bit of intoxication lower defenses and make real conversation possible—something no debate stage ever has.

I wrote the Cohesion Cookbook to help humanity grapple with what I consider to be the Fall of Man: closure addiction. Our minds can't possibly understand everything in reality objectively, but our decision-making norms require us to clear this impossible bar. But the only people "making it" are dishonest or delusional.

Corbin Park—often called the “Millionaires’ Hunt Club”—is a massive private game preserve in western New Hampshire founded in 1889 by businessman Austin Corbin, a key figure in the development of Coney Island. Corbin stocked the preserve with exotic and native game so that European banking elites could feel more at home when subverting our nation. It's signifies our state's corruption, and I think nearly all citizens would prefer that it get converted to a wildlife sanctuary.

Criminalization hasn’t stopped drug use—it has only concentrated harm where people have the least protection.
Freedom includes the right to make risky choices. The collective moral responsibility is not coercion, but truth: accurate information, reliable testing, and regulated distribution that eliminates black-market incentives.
Ending the war on drugs replaces punishment with transparency, autonomy, and harm reduction.

Alliances should benefit the American people and our allies through mutual respect, transparency, and non-interference.
An ally does not undermine another ally’s democracy, distort its economy, or exert unaccountable political influence. When that line is crossed, the relationship must be reassessed.
New Hampshire cannot control federal foreign policy, but it can refuse to materially or politically support the actions of foreign states—including Israel—when those actions violate the basic principles of democratic sovereignty.
Copyright © 2026 Daniel James Schmidt - All Rights Reserved.
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