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Showing posts with label Presentations. Show all posts

Friday, September 12, 2025

Discover Necessary Goodness That Motivates Good Behavior

Update: 9/28/25

A mimic:  What goodness brought together let no person divide.

Workshop to Discover Necessary Goodness That Motivates Good Behavior

Accepting authority, power, and responsibility perceived in primitive literature and imposed by physics

 

Civic citizens defend and preserve each other’s opportunity to pursue necessary goodness. Civic citizens do all they can to enhance children’s natural desire to discover and practice good behavior.

 

Seven seemingly ineluctable principles:

1.       Only the person may and can constrain chaos in her or his way of living

a.       Higher power – Church, state, or the partnership of the two, fails every individual

b.       Extant education fails

c.       Each person keeps beliefs humble to whatever constrains the consequences of choice.

2.       The civic person is humble to a mystery: necessary goodness at the recent edge of discovery

a.       Civic tradition continually yields to discovered goodness.

3.       Every human infant innately desires to pursue good behavior yet many children puzzle over erroneous social influences.

4.       Good behavior defines human being (the practice); inspires acquisition of wisdom.

5.       Civic citizens do all they can to aid children’s natural desire to comprehend and intend good behavior.

a.       Lesser species often neglect or abuse the children.

6.       A civic faction, We the People the People of the United States, pursues statutory justice* “to ourselves and our Posterity”. Posterity includes newborn-to-citizens and legal immigrants.

7.       A civic people amend the Constitution when injustice is discovered; through representatives, civic citizens legislate reform unto statutory justice.

*In statutory justice, injustice-discovery invokes legislative consideration to possibly amend the law, while maintaining obedience to the Constitution.

Preface to the workshop

Dream:  The civic people reform every education institution and function so as to encourage children to comprehend and intend to develop good behavior during a complete lifetime. Each child pursues this knowledge through adolescence, unto adulthood, into retirement, and unto death. Civic people mutually preserve each other’s opportunity to pursue goodness. They collaborate to accomplish what nations and religions, so far, failed: legislating and enforcing statutory justice when harm is discovered or imposed. In other words, a civic people pursue necessary goodness.

Adults choose to aid children. Adults pursue hopes and comfort yet practice civic integrity.

Colloquially, “civic integrity” displaces the “freedom and liberty” slogan: 1) Fellow citizens grant the Declaration of Independence (1774) takes its accurate status – colonial declaration of war against England, in order to clarify that the 13-states’ negotiated United States Constitution. Its ratification to 14 states, on December 15, 1791, marks the beginning of the pursuit of statutory justice to the USA’s 50 states. 2) Civic citizens do all they can to aid children in their natural desire for good behavior or, to the mirror, “I do all I can to aid children”. 3) Civic citizens listen to each other with appreciation, in order to establish mutual opportunities. 4) Civic citizens develop the law as statutory justice, in order to avoid and resist harm. 4) Responsibility to goodness prevails yet does not expect utopia. 5) Cultures learn to regard “scripture” as opinion about Homo sapiens.

Origin of this proposal: At Perkins Road Park, Baton Rouge, LA, in Summer 2025 Harry Dunn with Donovan Gray paused Phil’s walk-in-the-park to tell a squirrel story. Phil segued to the discovery of the mystery of necessary goodness, which ineluctably motivates a person to good behavior. Harry and Donovan happily pursued the ideas. The 3 people agreed to work together to present the story to listeners in Baton Rouge. Phil immediately began sharing with the two his opinions about Genesis 1:26-28, which we hereby dub “The Sumerian Perception” to humankind.

We happily cite the Bible as literature with opinions about Sumerian primitive-discovery of the good and essential because it impacts a majority of modern Homo sapiens. The Bible is opinion reported between 3700 years ago and 1900 ya. It records consequences of not benefitting from ineluctable truths that were discovered beforehand. For example, the Sumerians took responsibility for public welfare at least 5500 ya.

Delights among the Perkins-Road-Park-trio continued and are expected in the future. We request fellow citizens to aid our journey to fulfill our goal: impactful and positive presentation of the mystery of necessary goodness to the city.

Reform from Machiavellian-force to humble-goodness can only be done by individual people collaborating to good behavior: civic integrity. History has proved that power higher than a civic people renders chaos. Neither religion nor government intends to discover and pursue necessary goodness, and they have together brought the world to 2025-chaos. We three men perceive we are insufficient civic-citizens, and our first task is to add women to the team, either as participants or active advisors.

We intend to initiate a global movement grounded in necessary goodness, each element of which must be discovered as time unfolds. We have no intention to solicit money, as long as we perceive no benefit to the world’s children.

Immediate intention: Develop a Grass-Roots Presentation to Baton Rouge Inhabitants

We propose to develop this movement at Baton Rouge libraries then present it to Baton Rouge fellows, perhaps at a BREC facility or other low-cost venue, such as the stadium at Perkins Road Park. Perhaps the city will fund an event at Galvez Plaza. Perhaps millionaires will fund an event at Tiger Stadium, LSU.

Workshop approach:  Each month, we will present an essential topic for iteration with the participants, listening for civic improvements; hope to perceive improvements to the improvements then re-discuss. Continue this iterative process until all listeners perceive collaboration has approached the ineluctable* truth: conclusions from which mutual listeners cannot emerge. Then record the process and conclusions, knowing new input could restart iterations. We welcome discussion with groups who have not participated. We invite fellow citizens to suggest new topics to evidence humankind’s progress toward fulfilling the Sumerian Perception. For example, we presently have no presentation on leisure’s impact on goodness.

*Ineluctable: together, not to be avoided, changed, or resisted (Merriam-Webster online); think of a wrestling hold from which the opponent cannot emerge. European dictionaries tend to omit “changed” from the triune constraint.

We will establish and maintain active advisors with nomination by participants. At least for this first year, advice will be accepted or shelved by A Civic People of the United States, the Louisiana corporation founded in 2015.

After this initial year’s extendable meetings, continue the process from generation to generation – “to ourselves and our Posterity”, referring to the preamble to the United States Constitution. The quest for necessary goodness does not expect utopia.

Participation: Participants leave each meeting with consequences for consideration and possible improvement. Each person seeks opportunity to modify the path and direction of the work, in order to pursue humankind’s necessary goodness rather than a narrow view, such as submitting to higher power or mere force. Every participant’s contribution is precious to humankind.

If necessary, the current or a previous topic may delay the next planned topic. Consensus chooses such delay.

Knowledge: Presenters declare they can only express opinion. That is, much as they pursue it, they know they do not possess the ineluctable truth. Rather than cite references, they use key words so participants may independently search Online. The intention is to include essential happenings without attempting to fully explain. Our intention is to touch an overview from the Big Bank, 13.7 billion years ago to the world’s chaos in 2025, but not to explore the depths of knowledge, such as every detail of Sumerian law codes. Not knowing the ineluctable truth, we have no desire to persuade: civic citizens earn their opinion.

Venue:
Goodwood Library, Baton Rouge; 3rd Sundays, October 2025 through January, 2026, 3 PM until 6 PM excepting October 19 from 4:30 PM until 8:30 PM; second floor, room 2A, 2B, 2B, and 2A, respectively. Reservations for the rest of 2026 are to be made in November 2025.

 

1st Topic: Homo sapiens in charge of order

See Powerpoint presentation for October 19, 2025.

2nd topic:  Consequence of not accepting duty

The complete Bible reports the consequences when Biblical civilizations do not accept the Genesis-1 message, for whatever reason. The Bible is literature on par with the Sumerian codes of law and treaties with other governments.

Genesis 2:4 begins a saga of the G-d seeking a faction’s obedience, branching to factions who claim obedience is not essential.

1.       A king and priest, anointed to solve the dilemma, is prophesied in Zechariah 6.

2.       The faction was disobedient, so G-d flooded them out, beginning in Genesis 6.

3.       G-d made a blood covenant not to flood the people again in Genesis 8.

4.       Centuries later, Israel emerged after a covenant with Abraham in Genesis 12.

5.       Do 10 commandments in Exodus 20 abide Genesis 1? Advocate necessary goodness?

6.       A faction of Israel predicted a messiah in Isaiah 7 and 53.

7.       Israel alienated many peoples, including Arabs.

8.       Hebrews 9, dismissed by Israel, claims that Christ is the blood sacrifice for all believers, whether circumcised or not and whether obedient or not.

a.       Anyone who acknowledges Yeshua of Nazareth 2000 years ago is not a Jew, because Jews still wait for a Messiah or not.

b.       Christians project Yeshua onto Old Testament, scattered prophecy.

                                                               i.      “Jesus” is a miracle-working, western imposition onto Yeshua.

                                                             ii.      “Christ” is the executed then resurrected Yeshua to some, like Messiah to Jewish Christians, or Christ to Christians.

                                                           iii.      Christ is G-d.

Prophecy, miracles, and blood sacrifice confound the Bible’s influences to necessary goodness. The consequence is that differing believers exclude most civic people. The civic people among the various believers may and can reform use of the Bible story, in order to facilitate rather than prevent good behavior.

If Judeo-Christianity collaborated on discovering necessary goodness, and good behavior became evident, the rest of the world -- humankind -- might be on the way to order on earth according to Genesis 1:26-28’s Sumerian Perception.

It is important to limit belief in humility to whatever constrains the consequences of human choice.

(To be developed.)

3rd topic: Judeo-Christian values

Extensive New Testament reports of Yeshua, the actual person, influencing necessary goodness that accommodates the Sumerian Perception. Yeshua and Biblical constructs about miracles, blood sacrifice, and obedience influence 55% of the world’s population and is a controversial topic to 90% of the world’s Homo sapiens. Judeo-Christian values repress Yeshua’s influence to goodness with the miracles of “Jesus” and the “blood of Christ”. Focus on necessary goodness may and can resolve this worldwide dilemma. Maybe it’s better to drop the controversy and focus on goodness. (To be expanded.)

4th topic:   Homo sapiens’ quest for statutory justice

European or western political thought accommodates Yeshua-improved Sumerian Perception. Outline:

·         improving Sumerian law codes started 5500 years ago under polytheism headed by a goddess

·         A Semitic-speaking group left Ur to escape human sacrifice, 4000 ya, and wrote Genesis 1.

·         Genesis 2 then Moses’ law further subjugated women, 3400 ya

·         Cyrus Cylinder, 3000 ya, Persian abolition of slavery, and the Roman republic instead of kingdom

·         Papal bull authorizing Portugal to trade African slaves to the Americas, 1455

·         Magna Carta, 1512

·         John Locke, 1690

·         Edmund Burke, 1790

·         Thomas Paine; “African Slavery in America”, 1775

·         The Treaty of Pairs; ratified by Congress to 13 independent states in the USA, 1784

·         The negotiated US Constitution, ratified to 14 states December 15, 1791

·         Ralph Waldo Emerson; “Divinity School Address”, 1838; persons can pursue perfection

·         Marx, 1848

·         The civic faction of America ends slavery in America, 1865

·         Marcuse (1965) and Cone (1970)

·         WikiLeaks , 2006, documents reveal governments’ resistance against human responsibility

·         A Civic People of the United States, a Louisiana corporation, 2015

·         Workshop, “Discovering Necessary Goodness”, 2025

(To be developed.)

5th topic:   appreciating necessary goodness.

Humankind classify themselves according to harm they perpetrate or none:

1.       Civic citizens practice necessary goodness and influence civility, impacting,

a.       Passives and divines, who may awaken to civic duty,

b.       Dissidents and rebels to the law, who may choose to reform,

c.       Criminals, who harmed others or their property, who may be constrained and provided aid to reform, along with

d.       The wicked, who perversely abuse others, e.g., sex trafficking, and

e.       The evil, who perpetrate atrocities, such as microwaving babies, inviting annihilation.

Civic citizens collaborate to aid necessary governance with the other classes; influence, facilitate reform, constrain, avoid and resist, and annihilate, respectively. Categorizations are based on practice rather than values; intolerance of oppression. Practice follows comprehension and intention. Thus, a person born into a criminal community may accept his or her desire for good behavior and therefore pursue comprehension of necessary goodness.

(to be developed).

6th topic:  Achievements through science

(to be developed).

7th topic:   United States’ proposal

The United States Constitution improves western or European thought (to be developed).

8th topic:   Opportunities to amend the US Constitution respecting the Sumerian Perception; Machiavelli Chapter XI (to be developed including indications from the 1774 Congress’ development of the Declaration of Independence). First Amendment’s inadequacies; religion, speech, press. Majority jury votes, 9:3 in criminal trials.

9th topic:  How education departments repress children’s natural desire to acquire goodness. The decision to parent a child according to necessary goodness (to be developed including Kahlil Gibran’s “On Children”).

10th topic:  Wellness

Physical

                Diet

                Exercise

                Work

Psychological

Reading and writing

Motivation and inspiration

Civic integrity

11th topic:  Conclusion: Since the Sumerian Perception, humankind constructed “higher powers” – governments, churches, and ideologies – they brought the world to chaos. For 5500 years there have been billions of victims and oppressors, and humankind has not accepted the authority, power, and responsibility to provide order on earth. Despite the endless details that could distract fellow citizens from the overview, this workshop developed and intends to expand, most individuals may perceive that only the civic faction of the people can accept the duty to reform their associations so as to discover necessary goodness to humankind and encourage, facilitate, and empower good behavior. The civic faction, continuously pursuing good behavior, seems to be the ultimate constraint-on and hope-for humankind.

Proposals for the first city-wide presentation:  Necessary Goodness in a Confused World: how adults may and can aid children in the pursuit of good behavior during life. (to be developed).

12th topic:  Review and finalize the work.

13th topic:  Organize the first city-wide event (to be developed).

Flyer (attached)

Obsolete:

Do you feel your church (like-minded participants) should reform your religious institution toward pure goodness? Is necessary goodness an option?

Do you long to justify the claim that you do all you can to aid children’s natural desire for goodness?

If so, join our 12 month-project to develop a theory of necessary goodness that inspires and motivates good behavior. Our intention is to share the results with Baton Rouge in about two years, or in 2027.

Our audience is civic people -- Baton Rougeans who pursue good behavior as they understand it.

We need a steering committee to help design the 11 presentations for accurate, precise, and deep impact toward comprehending and reporting necessary goodness in human being (the practice).

Participants will, by mutually listening for shared concerns and empathy, direct the steering committee.

Please consider contributing to this work.

Volunteer registration (draft in process)

Active Advisors

                Family: Holly Beaver, Rebekah Beaver, Minta Marionneaux, memories with deceased loved ones

                Friends: Nicholas Ortego

Possible Help to Phil

https://nonprofitleadershiplab.com/free/5practices/?

Copyright©2025 by Phillip R. Beaver. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted for the publication of all or portions of this paper as long as this complete copyright notice is included.

Find this document, updated from 9/12/25 using the search: "Discover Necessary Goodness"

Click on the first URL listed and go to the 9/12 post, currently the first one.

Thursday, September 12, 2019

Announcing 6th annual Constitution Day celebration at EBRP libraries

A potentially wonderful message for our time emerged after our annual celebration of June 21, Responsible Liberty Day.
In the U.S. preamble’s literal proposition, willing citizens communicate, collaborate, and connect to aid 5 public provisions---Union, Justice, Tranquility, defense, and Welfare---so as to encourage responsible human liberty to living people now and in the future.

For Constitution Day, after briefly reviewing a Louisiana corporation, A Civic People of the United States, we propose to discuss how the above view of the U.S. preamble emerged.

Second, we propose engaged discussion of the U.S. preamble's potential role in shifts from "political correctness" to "identity politics". We perceive the former excludes some fellow citizens and the latter invites civic understanding among fellow citizens. 
The meeting is at 7:30 PM, Tuesday, September 17, 2019, Goodwood Library, Baton Rouge, LA. There are 8 seats. A second meeting can be scheduled on request.

See more details online at https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/entertainment_life/local_events/?_ev_id=489814_6th_annual_constitution_day_celebration. If you cannot attend but want to, we can arrange a second meeting.

Wednesday, May 15, 2019

Planning Responsible Human Liberty Day (in the USA)


  
Note: when this message was originated, we had rejected the modifier "human" as cumbersome but now recognize that it is essential: it takes 2 to 3 decades for a feral infant to transition into a person who intends to live a complete human life. Therefore, on October 28, 2019, we revised the proposed title of the annual commemoration day to "Responsible Human Liberty Day".
End of "Note"


Our sixth annual celebration of June 21, 1788 is scheduled for June 20, 2019 at 7:00 PM at EBRP Bluebonnet Regional Library, Room 1. The public is invited. See the announcement on our Facebook Page at https://www.facebook.com/events/332978470722765/.



Each year, we commemorate and celebrate the day the people of nine states ratified the U.S. preamble and the articles that accompanied it, establishing the 1787 U.S. Constitution. Ratification left four eastern-seaboard states globally free and independent. Two states joined the USA before operations began under the people of eleven states on March 4, 1789. The states beyond the eastern seaboard were less influenced by colonial-English strains of bias, yet many English traditions erroneously prevail in the USA.



The USA is uniquely predicated on the self-discipline of the individual citizen. A Civic People work to establish the U.S. preamble’s proposition: mutual, comprehensive safety and security for fellow citizens.



In keeping with the leading edge of our work, we are introducing perhaps the world’s first Responsible Liberty Day. It is appropriate for this commemoration and celebration to originate in Baton Rouge for many reasons, not the least of which is the fact that observations and articulations were developed in the public meetings at EBRP libraries conducted by A Civic People of the United States, a Louisiana civic-education corporation. Moreover, Louisiana, the 18th state in 1812, is a former French colony and thus was England's adversary, for example, in 1781 at Yorktown, VA.



In March, 2019, substantially in a discussion started by Michael Rappaport, we observed that the U.S. preamble’s proposition to individual citizens is to collaborate for five public provisions for freedom-from oppression so as to accept and encourage responsible human liberty. Union, Justice, Tranquility, defense and Welfare would secure responsible individual liberty to living citizens now and in the future. I encourage every fellow citizen to interpret the U.S. preamble so as to offer for collaboration their preferences for how his or her lifetime will be spent. My interpretation for my life is:  We, a civic people of the united states, practice self-discipline for integrity, justice, peace, strength, and prosperity, so as to encourage human liberty to living citizens and to develop statutory justice in the USA. Of known species, only humans have the awareness and grammar to develop, accept, and encourage responsible liberty. 



The U.S. preamble is silent on the motivations many people perceive or construct to oppose the U.S. preamble’s proposition. The preamble is also silent on the standards by which We the People of the United States discover statutory justice. In our theory of a civic culture, the-objective-truth provides the standards for justice. The-objective-truth is the ineluctable evidence by which truth is judged.



We think these articulations are only the beginning of U.S. reform from competition for dominant opinion to collaboration for individual happiness with civic integrity. We hope you will be excited and want to join in the work by attending this informative meeting.



We discuss 1) what A Civic People of the United States does to develop a civic culture and 2) explain our observations about the U.S. preamble’s proposition. The public is invited to join these and future discussions about 1) how the U.S. preamble became ineffective, 2) what can be done for an achievable better future, and 3) what it takes for an individual to accept responsible human liberty.



Copyright©2019 by Phillip R. Beaver. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted for the publication of all or portions of this paper as long as this complete copyright notice is included. Revised June 4, 2019

Monday, September 24, 2018

Constitution Day 2018 presentation

Meeting plan
  • 1.Five years’ “preambling” progress: the leading edge
  • 2.Civic fellow citizens celebrate Constitution Day
  • 3.Factual study: American myths within global myths
  • 4.Clarification and collaboration
  • 5.Next planned library meeting
  • The leading edge of five years’ collaboration


The Preamble to the U.S. Constitution on June 21, 1788
“We the People of the [nine] United States,
in Order to
form a more perfect Union,
establish Justice,
insure domestic Tranquility,
provide for the common defense,
promote the general Welfare, and
secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and
our [grandchildren],
do ordain and establishthis
Constitution for the United States of America.”

Review of five years progress for future collaboration.
The 1788 preamble legally dissolved the Confederation of 13 states and established the Union of 9 states.
The preamble addresses both civil authority and voluntary self-discipline among fellow citizens.

Under the preamble’s agreement, equal citizens divide: willing, passive, dissident, rebel, alien, and enemy.

It’s an agreement for the individual civic-discipline to manage governance so as to provide impartiality.

Each human being has IPEA:
the individual power,
the individual energy, and
the individual authority
to either develop integrity or not.

With civic integrity, the individual commits to neither initiate nor tolerate harm to or from any person or civic institution. A civic people resist actual harm.

Mindfulness* seems a civic more than spiritual practice.

The preamble’s agreement invites fellow citizens to develop individual happiness with civic integrity.
* Awareness; presence.
Developing integrity, the individual may discover and embrace fidelity to the-objective-truth,
yet may humbly pursue personal happiness rather than yield to another’s burdens, fears, or plans.
The human being is so powerful that it takes about 3 decades for an infant-person to develop the understanding and intent to live a complete life.

Complete human development---self discovery---typically takes beyond 6 decades, if it happens at all.

The fellow citizen owns his or her person and uses IPEA to manage, for good or for evil, lesser powers: appetites (banality), societies (coercion), and governments (force).

Celebrating the constitution’s potential for fellow citizens
Civic individuals maintain a wonderful world.
A smile is effective whether with silence or with speech.
The National Anthem

Presentation offered for today’s collaboration
  • I. What history-myths about America bother you the most?
  • II. Four fellow-citizen opportunities for civic integrity
·          
    • 1) We may overcome the civic impacts of global slavery
    • 2) We may yet reform from British colonization of the eastern seaboard, especially the tyranny of civil theism
    • 3) We may stop neglecting a dream: the opportunity to pursue individual happiness with civic integrity
    • 4) A civic concern you’d like fellow citizens to consider
  • III. What do you propose so as to resolve the concerns?
  • IV. How can a better immediate future happen? De-mystify American history using a global view

  • Overview, 1760 BCE to 2018 CE(3,800 years)
  • Highlights in three segments to follow      
    • •1760 BCE to 1573 CE (3,300 years; global)
    • •1692 to 1787 (65 years; North America’s eastern seaboard)
    • •1788to 2018 (230 years; U.S. develops under British tradition)
o     
      • •Louisiana was primarily a French colony until 1803

  • •Consider Individual Independence Day each June 21.
    • To promote individual happiness with civic integrity

U.S. Slavery within 1600 years of Christian-church error
1760 BCE: Code of Hammurabi embraces slavery
1400 BCE: “God” frees Israeli “enslavement” in Egypt
431 BCE Thucydides: human beings under the law are equal
405 CE: New Testament erroneously condones slave practices*
430: Bishop of Hippo: slavery a consequence of the slave’s sin
1455: The pope “authorizes” African-slave trade to use the African “commodity” to colonize the Americas
1573-1807: England dominates African-slave trade
* For example, slaves are coerced, by hopes for their souls to enjoy afterdeath-favor, to brook unjust beatings in life: 1 Peter 2:18-25.
Spirituality is for hope after death: integrity is for life
1692: Salem minister-politicians kill 20 of 200 “witches”
1763: Colonists sense enslavement under British Christianity
1774: Farmers take civic authority to liberate Worcester, MA
1774: 13 eastern colonies order state constitutions
1776: Decl. of Ind. regresses to Nature’s God “authority”
1778: France and 13 colonies combine wars against England
1781: France and 13 colonies defeat England at Yorktown, VA
1783: George Washington proposes a resilient, civic nation
1784: 13 free &independent states ratify 1783 Paris Treaty
1787: Shay rebelled against the Articles of Confederation
1787: 1/3 of delegates won’t sign the U.S. Constitution
Developments after 1789 Congress restores British Tradition
(1788, June 21: 9states under the preamble w/o theism)
1789: 11-state 1st Congress re-institutes Blackstone, elitism, theism
1791: 14-state 1st Congress ratifies theism in the Bill of Rights
1803: France sells Louisiana territory to the U.S.
1852: Frederick Douglass introduces himself as “fellow citizen”
1856: R. E. Lee: blacks to be slaves until they become Christians
1861: 7 southern states attack for “more erroneous” theism
1863: Lincoln speaks of governance: could have been civic discipline
1941: Einstein asserts that integrity emerges from physics
1964: no discrimination on race, color, sex, or ethnic origin
1968: “African-American Christianity” emerges
2018: African-American Christianity touches royal wedding
Conclusion offered for collaboration
Fellow citizens may regard the signers of the 1787 Constitution as providing the opportunity for freedom-from British tradition. Fellow citizens may deny “founders” impositions against the liberty-to develop civic integrity.
Resolution
Fellow citizens may collaborate for individual happiness with civic integrity, which may be discovered using IPEA, the preamble’s civic agreement, and the-objective-truth.

Next meeting: Why Individual Independence Day Each June 21?
  • 1. The U.S. has not yet reformed from British colonialism.
  • 2. The U.S. empowers civic collaboration for happiness by constraining continuous, essential, individual discovery
  • 3. The preamble’s agreement invites civic collaboration
    • 1)Citizens discover the-objective-truth and its benefits
  • 4. Each human has individual power, energy and authority (IPEA) to either develop integrity or not
    • 1)Integrity empowers comprehensive fidelity
  • 5. An attainable, better future may start and be celebrated each September 17 in the U.S. and abroad

Collaboration is gratefully acknowledged.
All pages are copyrighted September 19, 2018 by Phillip R. Beaver to protect rights to express the collaborative ideas again. The essential theory: A civic people maylive private lives, candidlyusing both the preambleto the constitution for the U.S. and the-objective-truth; members collaborate for comprehensive safety and security.The theory is lived with my wife, Cynthia and family; discussed continually with Kishon Seth, Henry Soniat, Hector & Mari Presedo, Gordon Totty, Woody Wilson; advanced first with Hugh Finkleaand Holly Beaver with the National Anthem sung by Rebekah Beaver on Individual Independence Day, 6/21/14; 9/17 with Dennis Eilers, Joyce Murray, and Mona Sevilla;Mint Marionneaux10/26; Kelley Young 12/11; BrijMohan, PremMohan, Gordon, Satish Verma, and Shawn Hanscom12/15/14. Diana Dorroh1/29; Jeremiah Wright 2/19; Daniel Liebeskind3/7; Dona Bean 3/18; Katherine Shurik, ChCEHarelson, Doug Johnson, Mark Logan, Richard Martin, Ron Sammonds, Tom Hannie, Elizabeth Johnson and Roger Alexander, 4/8; Austin Guidry 4/19; Rich 5/13; Alex Townsend 6/20; Rebekah Beaver 7/20; Jay Vicknair7/29; Jacob Irving 8/6; Anna Fogle9/14; Erick Martin 9/14/2015. Bob Souvestre 2/2; ShahedKhan 2/29; David Earle 4/19; Kate Gladstone 5/17; John Earle 5/18; Joyce Goldner6/21/16; Lorraine Davidson 6/21; Ruth Finklea, Connie Holmes, John Howe, Rose Howe, 9/6. Charlotte Burns, Scott Courtright, Nancy Kunen9/20/17. Tyler Roberson, 5/22; Shed Duplessis, 8/14; Diana Dorroh9/17; Frank Campbell 9/19/18. MaryStein, EBRPL Director, receives revised presentations.
Citizens for A Civic People of the United States, Baton Rouge, LA

A personal preamble by/for Phil Beaver
Willing people in our state habitually collaborate for mutual, comprehensive safety and security:
Continuity (for family, grandchildren & beyond)
integrity fidelity to the-objective-truth & wholeness)
justice (freedom-from oppression)
defense (prevent or constrain actual harm)
prosperity (earn the liberty-to responsibly pursue choices)
privacy (responsibly pursue individual happiness)
lawfulness (obey the law while reforming injustices);
and to cultivate justice in the constitution for the U.S.
Integrity* is a practice
  • 1. Do the work to discover the-objective-truth.**
  • 2. Learn how to benefit from the discovery.
  • 3. Behave so as to benefit: practice fidelity.
  • 4. Publically express the benefits of the discovery.
  • 5. Listen to public response so as to collaborate and mutually improve the practice.
  • 6. Remain open minded to future discovery that demands change in behavior.
* Honesty may neglect understanding and thus fail integrity.
** The-objective-truth exists and can only be discovered.
Vocabulary for comprehending contents
  • “Civic citizens”, during their individual lives, collaborate for mutual justice more than for tradition or society.
  • Mutual, comprehensive safety and security is for the adults (including dissidents), children, grandchildren and beyond.
  • •Humans may in integrity collaborate for the-objective-truth.
  • The-objective-truth is actual reality, which willing humans work to discover and use for individual and mutual security.
  • Willing citizens use the preamble to classify civic issues; dissident fellow citizens differentiate themselves by inviting actual harm.
The world I experience and observe.
Home
Friendships
Stores
Online forums
Public library meetings
Reading, talking, and writing
Parks
A preambler’s dream

Lift Every Voice and Sing
The Black National Anthem

For more understanding of the three history pages and for the published report (revised by collaboration)
1760 BCE The Code of Hammurabi treats slavery as an established and accepted institution
1400 BCE Writers controversially express that God freed Israel from enslavement in Egypt
431 BCE Thucydides expresses that merit under the law is not lessened by status or poverty
405 CE Final 27-book New Testament canon includes passages that condone slavery; 1 Peter 2:18-21
430 Catholic Bishop Augustine of Hippo: slavery has arisen as the result of sin
1455 Pope Nicholas V “granted” Portugal the right to enslave sub-Saharan Africans
1573 Sir John Hawkins under Elizabeth I led England to dominate Atlantic slave trade through 1807
1692 Clergy-political officials in Salem, Massachusetts executed 20 of 200 accused “witches”
1763 Colonists perceive they are personally enslaved under Blackstone and Canterbury
1774 Farmer’s militia takes authority and liberates Worcester, MA: kicks British officials out
1774 Eastern colonial representatives change “colonies” to “states” and form a 13-state confederation
1776 States declare war for independence under the constructed authority “Nature and Nature’s God”
1778 France, already at war with England, adds the American war for independence
1781 England surrenders to France and the confederation of thirteen states at Yorktown, VA
1783 George Washington suggests four civic “pillars” to form a nation with resilience that may survive
1784 Having won in war, thirteen free and independent states ratify the Treaty of Paris
1787 2/3 of delegates to Philadelphia sign the preamble in the constitution for the USA;1/3 dissidents
1788 June 21 nine states establish the U.S. under civic people rather than under Blackstone or states
1789 the first Congress, with eleven states, reinstitute Blackstone common law and theism
1789-91 the remaining dissident states join the U.S.
1791 Congress, with 14 states, ratifies the Bill of Rights, completing the politically amended constitution
1803 France sells Louisiana territory to the U.S.. Louisiana has few British passions, if any.
1852 Frederick Douglass, with U.S. President attending, introduces himself as “fellow citizen” and affirms the preamble
1856 Robert E. Lee: African slaves to be subjugated by the Almighty until conversion to Christianity
1861 Seven southern states, under “a more erroneous” theism, attacks the U.S. (27 Union states)
1863: Lincoln could have spoken at Gettysburg about discipline of by and for the people: who wants to govern neighbors?
1941 Albert Einstein asserts that physics and integrity have the same source (my paraphrase)
1964 Congressional acts against discrimination on the basis of race, color, sex, or ethnic origin
1970 African-American Christianity emerges in domestic debate and, ironically, in 2018 England

2018 Perhaps the U.S. has reached a political extremity and ascent toward civic integrity is possible