Sunday, April 19, 2015

Your Excellency: Genocides Come From the Game of Envy

April 19, 2015

Your Excellency:

There has been a dispute over the Armenian Genocide. The definition of a genocide as "ethnic cleansing"does not address the root cause of a genocide, because genocides occur on every level, including within families. Our first proposal offers the solution for the global genocide that is now devolving, and so the definition of a genocide issue must be addressed and opened to debate.

Genocides come from the Game of Envy. They start when one person puts another on a pedestal, and the perpetrator compares others to his or her hero, and it leads to a sense of judgment. The perpetrator of the genocide is denying his or her own capacity, and he or she weaves an illusion as a form of defense. Once the Grand Lie has been told, the truth does not overcome the lie, it reaches the point where no one knows who to trust. Genocides have been very difficult to end because the knee-jerk reaction that ends a war makes a genocide worse. They keep drawing in others until someone says "stop." Someone must stand up to defend the person who is being judged.

Our proposals go into this in greater depth, and offer a solution for ending the global genocide that came as a result of the preemptive strike that started the Iraq War in 2003, the judgment that Saddam Hussein was Axis of Evil, an act of revenge against Saddam Hussein. Our organization is standing up to defend Saddam Hussein, saying he was innocent of the charges he faced because it appears he complied with U.N. sanctions.

The acts of revenge against Saddam Hussein triggered the collapse of the global paradigm based on power games, because at this point in time, they have reached their ultimate conclusion and achieve the opposite desired result. Power games no longer work. A new paradigm must be established, one that everyone on the planet supports. Our proposal and planning allow future disputes between nations to be resolved in an international court system and the monies now wasted on war to go to the people.

Yours for peace,

Karen Holmes,
Principal

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Your Excellency: Exit Strategy for Iraq is the Solution

12 April 2015

Your Excellency:

As the plan for the international government is debated, it offers world leadership the opportunity to function on a higher level as crises develop.

When in a crisis situation, one's perspective narrows to the point where only two options are apparent, and both are untenable. One option is to ignore the crisis and pass it on to future generation. The other is to fall back to the games of one-upmanship and there is always a backlash to the games. What is not apparent during times of crisis is the third option, and that is to do what is in everyone's best interest. Diplomacy generally puts one's own nation first, and that is a normal reaction, but when the other's perspective is not regarded or is put down, there is conflict.

The application of this crisis-solving concept is our proposals. The first is the overview perspective, and that is the United States at this time. We are a nation of immigrants who came here looking for greater rights and opportunities, a solution to an individual crisis.

The first issue is our Exit Strategy for Iraq, and it sets the stage for the creation of an international court system so disputes between nations can be handled with no loss of life. Our proposal offers a path for ending the global genocide that started as a result of the preemptive strike on Iraq. During that crisis, the United Nations has proven that it can't end or prevent wars, and so this is the solution.

All the nations and every individual will benefit by the creation of the international government court system, so it is in everyone's best interest for it to come about. With that in mind, we can offer the planning and work together as a planet to bring it about, step by step. This sets the stage for our next proposal, the U.S. Constitutional amendment proposal that guarantees to every person on the planet his or her inalienable rights, which is what people who have been in a genocide lack.

Yours for peace,

Karen Holmes,
Principal

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Your Excellency: The Rise of ISIS

2 April 2015


Your Excellency:

As of today, people in 78 nations, including Muslim nations, support the plan for the international government.

Recently, CIA director, John Brennan, declared there are ISIS sleeper cells in 90 nations. With Muslims in nearly every nation, that statistic may be low. Understanding how to prevent the rise of ISIS is vital to the security of the entire planet. Creating a coalition of nations to fight ISIS may seem like the solution, but it back the coalition into a corner. By overpowering ISIS, it will rise in another location, or several locations simultaneously.

A schism has formed between governments and people, with one side standing on principles as the other side falling back to power games. Schisms go through a series of stages--"battles"--until one side walks away. Schisms make nations vulnerable to outside influence.

ISIS is one of the ripples  that have spun off from the preemptive strike on Iraq, a judgment against Saddam Hussein. Each of the nations that are part of our first year's proposals fell into crisis because of the sense of judgment. ISIS is not a terrorist organization, where it will fade away once you offer them a voice. ISIS is also perpetrating a genocide, a power game that continues to draw in people until someone says "stop."

What people who have been in a genocide lack is their inalienable rights, so the solution is to guarantee the inalienable rights to all the people on the planet, and the application of that is to support the plan for the international government. We ask that you open debate on the inalienable rights people have to create one's life without interference, to be treated fairly and equally, and to have a voice in one's government. The United States will guarantee inalienable rights as we work to amend our constitution to create the additional layer of government.

Yours for peace,

Karen Holmes,
Principal