Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘politics’

Thanks to the savage side of human nature, there’s been election fraud as long as people have been voting to elect government officials.

Read more about the history of election fraud

What’s transpired here in the States since the year 2000 will probably go down in history as the most outrageous and most bizarre example of election fraud ever… thanks largely to 1) the application of modern technologies to gratify savage human motivations (lying, cheating, stealing, fear-mongering, character assassination, greed, desire to prevail at any cost….)… followed up by 2) a stunning twist in the closing hours of the 2012 election.

Here’s what seems to have been happening (judging from the reports cited in the links below)… most of the mayhem apparently choreographed by the neoconservative mastermind … Karl Rove:

2000 election night – The Presidential race between Vice President Al Gore and conservative candidate George W Bush was neck-and-neck as most of the results from the 50 states were in, and it all came down to the votes being electronically tallied in the state of Florida. Thanks to fraudulent voting machines, punchcard ballots, and a 5-4 decision by the US Supreme Court, Bush narrowly won Florida and the US Presidential election, and neoconservative politics with oil industry connections took over the White House… opening the way to subsequent years of massive military destruction in the oil-rich Middle East… but that’s another story. This would all be a huge turning point for America away from democracy….  

Meanwhile, many people noticed the fraud underway on election night, and began to dig for answers….

(More about 2000 election fraud at voterfraud.org – - BBC – - scoop.co.nz – -dissidentvoice.org – - truthmove.org  – -  onlisareinradar.com  - –  commondreams.com)

2002 – President Bush signed into law the Help America Vote Act (HAVA), which was (in the words of Shakespeare) one of those “instruments of darkness that tell us truths… win us over with honest trifles to betray us in deepest consequence.” Essentially, HAVA promised noble voting reforms while distributing the oversight of voting, including electronic voting machines, to the 50 state governments, where computer tampering could easily change election-night voting results in key states like Ohio, Virginia, and Florida. This opened the way to blatant election fraud in the upcoming 2004 Presidential election.

2004 election night – electronic voting results were manipulated, especially in Ohio, which secured a second Presidential term for GW Bush. This time there was a major outcry.

(More about 2004 election fraud at The Nation – - BushStole04.com – - The Landes Report  - –  commondreams.com - - Business Week - – wired.com – -indymedia.org – - blackboxvoting.org – - enquirer.com – - wired.com – - MSNBC– - wired.com – - scoop.co.nz – - Washington Post – - yuricareport.com – -truthmove.org – - American Free Press – - commondreams.org – -consortiumnews.com)

Despite the heated accusations, the network of fraudulent voting machines, which had spread like a cancer through key states, was not disabled. One reason is that the conspirators, to avoid the heat, created a diversion. They devised ways to turn the table and accuse their opponents of voter fraud. Those reverse accusations were a smokescreen. Fighting fire with smoke has become an art form with the conspirators.

(legalinsurrection - - Mother Jones - - Forbes - - michellemalkin - - foxnews - – townhall - – newyorker)

Get a dizzying glimpse here of the neoconservative smokescreen.

2008 election night – The widespread popularity of Democrat Barack Obama swept him into the Presidency. Even the most blatant election fraud could not have turned back the tide, so the conspirators chose to wait… to plan for the next election. The number-one neoconservative agenda, adopted by most Republicans in congress and their media mouthpieces, was to tarnish Obama’s reputation and destroy his popularity over the next four years through the mongering of rumors and fears… so that the Presidency could be stolen from him in 2012. “Winning” was probably no longer even a consideration for the conspirators; stealing the election was the most likely aim.

In the ensuing years, still nothing was done to disable the cheat-easy voting machines set up in key states by the conspirators. A group called “Velvet Revolution” quietly worked behind the scenes to put a stop to election fraud. They even offered a $1 million reward to anyone who could expose and stop the criminal activity involving cheat-easy voting machines. All to no avail. Karl Rove assured the conservative party leaders and their wealthy corporate supporters that things were under control… to expect a landslide victory for Republican candidate Mitt Romney.

2012 election night – The stage seemed to be set for blatant election fraud that would ensure a Romney victory through the electronic manipulation of votes in Ohio, Virginia, and Florida. The massive subtraction of Obama votes and massive addition of Romney votes would ensure a neoconservative victory. The corrupt network was apparently all set up and ready to roll… but an amazing thing happened. On election day, an anonymous team of computer experts stepped in to disable, through cyberspace, the network of fraudulent voting machines in Ohio, Virginia, and Florida, and the Presidency was not stolen after all. Obama retained the Presidency.

Having worked with some of the world’s brightest software engineers in high-tech companies for more than a quarter-century, I know that the successful effort to neutralize those corrupt voting machines took an extraordinary level of knowledge and expertise. It would have been herculean for any engineers outside the inner circle to break in and disable the fraud… but disable it they did!

The following day, the Velvet Revolution group received a letter from the anonymous cyber-sleuths:

Anonymous letter to the "Velvet Revolution" group

Anonymous letter to the “Velvet Revolution” group

-

(More about the anonymous letter:  velvetrevolution  -  beforeitsnews.com  –  examiner.com  –  dailykos.com  –  wonkette.com  –  southdacola.com)

-

This whole drama—from the brazen election fraud starting in 2000, to the superhuman intervention last month that nipped it in the toxic bud—reminds me of messages our INIT organization received from a team of ethereal beings calling themselves The Seven. They often addressed the savage side of our humanity, and our personal responsibility to self-reflect while determining what we can each do to contend with it… within ourselves.

At times like this, in the midst of blatant election fraud, I always enjoy going back through those contacts from The Seven ethereals… to savor the the depth and tone and wording of their messages.

I published most of their messages in our journal Contact!… especially an issue in the summer of 1996, where several of their more important messages begin on page 8.

Read those ethereal messages in Contact!…

Most of those messages from The Seven arrived as computer letters in a plain, basic format coincidentally similar to the one received by VelvetRevolution, above.

Here are couple of excerpts that seem especially fitting at the moment:

An excerpt from one of those computer-text messages, this one by Ishkumar (received at Station Luxembourg 1996 July 19, 11:20 a.m):

Children of Earth, people of Terra! You know the world is not changed by cosmic events but by changes in the individual. Every person is unique and he can build a palace for good or a dungeon for evil. This recognition should make clear to all of you your share of responsibility in all happenings….

And excerpts from a voice message from The Seven, left on the Luxembourg researchers’ phone answering machine around the same time, also contain that tone of other-worldly wisdom:

In the course of bygone decades, of thousands of earthly years, beings interested in the human species meet to decide on the continuation of the project. You must not imagine that only the seven implicated in the actual development of INIT are there. No, it is a coming together of all entities interested in mankind. The interests are various.

We, the Seven of the Rainbow People, have decided to help and support the way chosen by you, in INIT. It is the way of morals….

You already know that also pharisees, ghouls, swindlers, thieves, yes, even murderers, have their interested supporters here among the dead….

This is the seventh time that we accompany and guide you on your progress toward a free, wealthy and sane future in which humanity would have stripped off the chains of intolerance and cruelty. A future in which it will be able to establish fruitful and durable relationships with the light, ethereal realms of existence….

Listen to an excerpt of that message from the ethereal Seven

-

NOT THE TIME FOR COMPLACENCY

Most important in all this: the fact that election fraud was halted by superhuman efforts on November 6, 2012, should not lull us into a false sense of security.

The corrupt network of cheat-easy voting machines is still in place in the key states, they’ll probably be put to use if the conspirators think they can get away with stealing another election, and if democracy is to survive here in the States, those machines need to be neutralized, and election integrity ensured. We can’t assume the same powers that saved the 2012 election will be back in four years to do it again.

For the sake of democracy, election integrity needs to be centralized at the highest (national) level, in my opinion.

Locking it into state governments, with HAVA, was most likely a scheme perpetrated by the Bush Administration—and its advisors—to more easily mangle and manipulate the electoral process in its favor.

Whatever it takes, place election integrity in the hands of national government, so that a single, secure election process is ensured everywhere.

-

That’s what I plan to write about in future articles on politics and the human spirit… what aspects of society are best regulated at the national level… or the state level… or the community level… or the household level…. Very important issue with crucial implications!

Read Full Post »

(Politics and the Human Spirit – Installment 7)

Human society is a hodgepodge of energy and activity. Each one of us (and there are 7 billion of us alive today) thinks our own thoughts, speaks our own words, and does our own thing. Each of us belongs to groups (family, friendships, clubs, companies…), and every group does its own thing. Most groups belong to bigger groups (communities, associations, industries, nations…) and each of these big groups does its own thing.

Lots going on within and among societies all the time. Things would be total chaos were it not for regulation.

What’s Regulation?

There are probably as many ways to define regulation as there are names for it: management, leadership, administration, governance, ordinance, superintendance, guidance, direction….

If we tossed them all into a pot and boiled them down, we would probably wind up with two basic ingredients of sensible regulation — monitoring activities and making changes when necessary.

Monitoring doesn’t have to be a constant vigil.

  • We might monitor environmental degradation, weather patterns and the growth of civilization on the planet’s surface with an occasional series of photographs from satellites orbiting the earth.
  • Monitoring a child at play might require an occasional glance.
  • Monitoring employees in a company might involve an occasional progress report by employees on the status of their projects.

Making changes is easy, but making the appropriate changes at the appropriate time is harder:

  • When to restrain the rapid growth of societies and industries to protect the oceans, atmosphere and rain forests…
  • When to call an exploring child back within easy earshot…
  • When to interrupt an enthusiastic employee whose project is moving ahead quickly but is starting to veer off-course…

These are difficult situations to judge. Excessive restraint can stifle enthusiasm and innovation. Excessive liberties can lead to chaos and crisis.

Monitoring and Making Changes Through Insightful Decisions

Effective regulation involves intuition and foresight while deciding how closely to monitor activity, when to make changes, and what changes to make. The decisions involve parents in a household, teachers in the classroom, managers in a corporation, governments in our cities or nations, and members of the United Nations in a tense and troubled world.

Insight is the key to good decisions… and insight comes not from the brain and physical mind, but from the finer spirit within. It’s more an intuitive thing, not so much a rational thing.

Life on Earth is too complicated—people within families, within cities, within states or provinces, within nations… —to come up with a rigid set of rational rules or commandments that apply in all cases. Maybe the best we can do is to assess each particular situation and determine who is best suited to make decisions in that case… who has the most reliable foresight.

So here’s the big question: When it comes to making changes in the complex nested structure of society, who should decide what in any given situation?

And here are four ‘rules of thumb’ I’ve come up with after talking to various experts over the years:

(What experts? Well… these… and these… for example)

Regulation Guidelines

1. Every decision should be made at the lowest possible level, but high enough to take into account the needs and well-being of those affected by the decision.

Most decisions in human affairs, day in and day out, are made by individuals. That’s the way it’s always been, and that’s the way it probably will always be. But, as people start bumping into each other and stepping on each other’s toes (metaphorically speaking), larger regulatory groups have to be set up to help sustain peace and order. Parents make decisions for the family, city councils make decisions for the community, state and provincial governments make decisions at that level, national government makes decisions for countries, and the United Nations, ideally, would be empowered to make decisions for the planet.

2. Decision-making bodies should reflect the diversity of the people they represent.

A society of men and women shouldn’t be regulated by a group of men. A society of blacks, whites, and Orientals shouldn’t be regulated by a group of white people. A world government shouldn’t be run by a bunch of Nazis or Romans or Egyptians or Americans; it should consist of representatives of all nationalities, cultures, and religions. (Say, that sounds kind of like… what… the United Nations?)

3. Forge a balance between the right of individuals to be free and the right of nations to be stable.

Essentially this means finding a balance between freedom and equality… balancing human rights with equity and justice among all people.

Here’s how things have worked among some of the more influential players in world politics over the past century.

  • Autocratic socialists (communists) rate equality high, freedom low. Cuba, China, and the former Soviet Union are examples.
  • Democratic capitalists rate equality low, freedom high. The USA is an example.
  • Autocratic capitalists (fascists) rate freedom and equality both low. Recent examples (during World War II) include Germany under Hitler, Italy under Mussolini, and Japan under Hirohito.
  • Democratic socialists rate freedom and equality both high. Japan, Canada, and most European countries today are examples.

That practical model (by the late Canadian researcher Hanna Newcombe) suggests that the best-balanced governments are democratic-socialist in nature, such as those throughout most of modern Europe. Most problematic are the fascist governments, such as Japan, Italy, and Nazi Germany in the 1940s, when industry and government formed a tight alliance, forged a nationalistic agenda, and forced the people to align to it or to be ostracized.

Democratic socialism has its flaws, but it’s probably the best-suited government form for the foreseeable future.

4. Foster our intuition through spiritual practice, especially meditation.

This, arguably, should be high on the list of personal priorities for every human being alive, but in particular those who aspire to any sort of leadership or regulatory role in life. If you want to make good decisions, you’ll have to rely on the gift of intuition and foresight. Otherwise, everyone you represent will suffer to some degree.

Developing foresight starts with the realization that we’re brilliant, timeless spiritual beings enjoying a brief carnal roller-coaster ride here on Earth.

Having a good, rational mind isn’t good enough.

The “rational” human being is essentially a short-lived animal with a pretty good brain. But that animal also has hormones and an ego that force it to behave irrationally from time to time. It’s always a struggle for the rational mind.

The “intuitive” human being is the animal who has trained its brain and physical mind to connect to the finer, infinitely bright spiritual mind within. Meditation is the most effective way to forge and sustain that connection.

Once the connection is made, brilliant insights and transformational visions can stream into the carnal mind from finer realms.

-    Read more about meditation

This all traces back to what I call our “noble-savage” nature. Our noble qualities of love, trust, wisdom, and good will emerge from the finer spirit within us, while our savage emotions of fear, greed, and hatred spin out of the hormones and egos that were hard-wired into these carnal bodies long, long ago.

-    Read more about those ancient times

The more we meditate, the more of these noble qualities can stream into these savage carnal body-minds that form the rough outer core of our humanness. We can give these carnal bodies a golden aura through our spiritual practices.

And the golden glow can spill over into the political machinery we call government and society.

Without spiritual practice, we’re just a crowd of clever, moody animals waiting to react to whatever happens next in this brutal world in which life preys upon life to survive.

Politics and the Human Spirit series:

1 Introduction     2 Privatization and the public good     3 Military     4 Information     5 Spirit of Society     6 Education     7 Regulation    8 Economics    9 Managing the World in the 21st Century  –  10 The carnal line between noble and savage   –  11 Embrace the divine; it’s where we shine  –  12 Who decides what?    –   13 Finally… good politics

Related articles:

Best and worst countries to be born  –   Election fraud 2012  –   Best and worst US presidents  –  Humor in politics  -  Human spirituality and politics  -  Biggest political news  -  End of the American dream  –  Blown to bits in the computer age  -  Standards, the key to peace  –   What Obama and Stalin really have in common   –  Bad counsel and a short leash   –   Capital punishment & the human spirit

Read Full Post »

(Politics and the Human Spirit – Installment 4)

Even as a kid in school I was fascinated by the nested structure of things… systems within systems within systems.

In high school and beyond, one of my main interests was the similarity between the inner workings of the human body and the inner workings of human society. I spent years thinking, researching and writing about how societies behaved like big, lumbering people… and how people did for their societies what body cells do for the body. I saw a lot of similarities and also a lot of differences… and I tried to understand exactly what it was that made human beings different from body cells.

In my thirties, when I got cancer and had a spiritual awakening, those bio-social fascinations retreated to the back burner for awhile as I immersed myself in the exploration of the afterlife and spiritual existence.

Now it’s all starting to come together in my mind, painting a fascinating picture of human life.

Information in the Body

Your body’s made up of 100,000,000,000 (100 trillion) body cells. Every body cell has its own routines and motivations… flexing muscles, running the organs… playing its part to keep you functioning. The cells are like 100 trillion little people all working together but each doing its own thing within a compact biological society… the human body.

About 1% of those body cells (1 trillion) are nerve cells, or neurons, which make up the brain and nervous system—a vast network that carries Information to all the organs and tissues.

Nervous System

About 10% of the neurons (100 billion) are in the brain.

So, about 0.1% of our body cells are brain cells.

The brain is the body’s computer complex. It processes information and serves it to all parts of the body. Most of the decisions throughout the body are still made at the cellular level, via DNA, energy production in the mitochondria, and other activity within and among cells… but the high-level decisions that affect the entire body are executed largely by the brain.

Brain Cells

So the brain is the body’s computer hardware.

It runs a program that we call “the human mind.” The mind is the living software program that directs much of our behavior as a human being. It’s essentially a mental model of reality.

Each of us has our own unique mental model—an inner roadmap—that helps us navigate through life. It’s shaped largely by the information streaming into our mind through the five senses, also the finer spiritual impressions we get through the higher senses… for example, during dreams, intuitive hits, and meditations.

As information enters our mind we are constantly touching up the map… adjusting the model to fit the new information.

If we could remove that living computer program from the brain, it would be called our “spirit.” It’s the part of us that lives on after we die.

But while we’re alive on Earth, for all intents and purposes, the mind is the software program run by our cranial hardware—the brain.

So that’s the general (and much over-simplified) idea of how information is spread, assimilated, and used in the body. As a combination of body, mind, and spirit.

Information in Modern Society

Government at the national level (what we in the States call “federal government”) is the brain of society, processing high-level information and serving it to the system in the form of laws, rules, and regulation.

National politics is the mind of society. Decisions are made by political bodies within government (legislatures, councils, judicial systems…) that try to take into account the well-being of the rest of society.

Government is the hardware for social regulation; politics is the software. Politics, in its purest form, would be the spirit of society.

Politics today has not yet evolved into its purest form and is not really the spirit of society… and in my next article I’ll try to explain why. Meanwhile…

Societies today do indeed bear some resemblance to the human body. If the brain of society is national government, the nervous system of society is a complex system of parts that spread information and decisions throughout the system… especially the Internet.

Excerpt from an Internet Map

Read about this Internet map

Society’s nervous system, being the disseminator of information, would also include (as well as the Internet) schools, libraries, the media, and the various lower-level governments serving states, provinces, and cities.

When comparing the diagrams above (Internet and nerves), it appears that, thanks to modern technology, society is starting to look more and more like the human body.

It’s interesting to speculate, based on how the human body works, just how human societies might someday look, as they evolve in such a way that politics reflect more and more the spirit of society.

More in the next article….

Politics and the Human Spirit series:

1 Introduction     2 Privatization and the public good     3 Military     4 Information     5 Spirit of Society     6 Education     7 Regulation      8 Economics    9 Managing the World in the 21st Century  –  10 The carnal line between noble and savage   –  11 Embrace the divine; it’s where we shine  –  12 Who decides what?    –   13 Finally… good politics

Related articles:

Best and worst countries to be born  –   Election fraud 2012  –   Best and worst US presidents  –  Humor in politics  -  Human spirituality and politics  -  Biggest political news  -  End of the American dream  –  Blown to bits in the computer age  -  Standards, the key to peace  –   What Obama and Stalin really have in common   –  Bad counsel and a short leash   –   Capital punishment & the human spirit

Read Full Post »

Before proceeding with the dramas surrounding INIT, I need to share some other, more personal lessons I’ve learned (and am still learning) from ITC. This is one of the most important ones:

You on Earth often wonder, “What can I do when I keep falling back into familiar old patterns, making the same mistakes over and over again?” The answer is the same for everyone: Don’t follow your emotions freely; control them. Of course, this is an art, and it takes practice. If you really want to become a good person, but you simply live in a carefree way without reflecting on your actions, then you will never become the person of good will whom you wish to be. On the other hand, if every morning you propose to yourself, with all your soul, not to offend anybody, to be good to everybody, then you have to bear these good intentions always in mind. At first it’s not easy to do, for you quickly forget your intent as you go about the day, falling back into the old patterns. But if you stick with it, you will succeed. Retrospection is a basic condition we all have to fulfill to be complete. With time will come the strength and the cognition for mastering yourself, and then you will have something beneficial to offer many people.

In mid-December 1986, Maggy Fischbach received this communication from the late Konstantin Raudive through the “EurosignalBridge,” a configuration of equipment that her spirit friends helped her develop to let them convey long, clear voice messages through her radio sounds.

At the time that message came through in Luxembourg, my wife Regina and I, living here in Colorado, had a two-month-old baby boy. When Regina came home from her middle-school counseling job, and I from my technical writing job, we spent most of our spare time taking care of our son. If someone had told me then that a woman across the Atlantic had just received that message from across the veil, I’d have shrugged my shoulders… and probably rolled my eyes. The concept didn’t fit into my agnostic worldview. I didn’t know then that the wisdom being gathered through ITC would soon change my life.

Today I harbor more good will than ill will toward those around me… although two situations still test me: driving and politics. On George Carlin’s driver scale, I lean a little toward the “maniac” side by nature—impatient, passing slow drivers, and honking at people ahead of me when they’re stopped at a green light. Regina thinks I may have been a New York taxi driver in a past life.

Hey, but she’s not perfect either. She leans toward the “idiot” side of the Carlin scale. She’s one of those people who starts rummaging for something in her purse three seconds before the light turns green. When we’re together in the car—doesn’t matter which of us is driving—there’s always a lot of advice (not always polite advice) coming from the passenger seat. I’m often amazed how incompatible we are in the car… we make such a great team otherwise.

Anyway, this week I hope to watch my driving angst recede in the rearview mirror, thanks to ITC messages like the one above. I adopted a new driving attitude of patience, acknowledging that we’re all doing the best we can. I taped this note to the dashboard of my car:

Patience
Best we can…

I took a casual hour-long drive around town, enjoying the brisk autumn air, driving calmly, staying out of people’s way, and immersing myself in good will toward all the traffic around me. What a great experience! Breaking the pattern of impatience in the car will take some work, I’m sure, but the benefits are going to be great… such as removing a big source of marital strife.

My political angst seems to run a little deeper and will probably be harder to break. It can be triggered by a political headline or picture, or by an opinion overheard in a crowd. Right-wing politics in America is my plutonium trigger. It started after the controversial election of the Bush-Cheney administration in 2001 and the soon-to-follow heartless bombing of Baghdad. I don’t recall ever being as furious with anyone as I was with that little clique of men and women running the country.

I remember a dream I had at the time. Bush and Cheney and another guy—either Karl Rove or Donald Rumsfeld–were strutting down the street like they owned the place, oblivious to the mayhem they were creating. I confronted them, and an altercation broke out.

The dream was far too vivid and detailed to be a mere creation of my subconscious mind. I’m sure I was visiting a scenario in the astral worlds of spirit (which is a sort of energy template of this physical world). And I now believe it was my intense feelings about these guys that pulled me into some kind of karmic collision with them, acting out conflicts on the other side.

It’s what I call the law of resonance. When you think of something with passion—and it doesn’t matter if the passion is love, trust, and good will, or contempt, fear, and malice—that thing is pulled toward your sphere of being… or you are pulled toward that sphere. In any case, when your consciousness resonates with another consciousness, the two of you drift together. That, I believe, is how I drifted into a karmic connection with the people I didn’t like.

So, today I also plan to turn over a new political leaf. Somehow I need to disarm my intense feelings about politics, so that I’m not triggered by random comments and headlines. I’ve tried it before, with just moderate success… but I have to defuse this thing. It’s not an easy world and, again, we’re all doing the best we can.

Here on Earth it’s easy to take these conflicts for granted—these troubled feelings that come up day to day and seem like a normal part of our lives. It seems natural, here on Earth, with our egos and hormones, to experience a roller coaster ride of emotions… feeling warm and friendly with someone at one moment, and feeling hostility toward someone else a moment later.

It may be a natural way of life on Earth, but it can make for a difficult transition to the next life… where thoughts and consciousness are the complete reality. As Konstantin implied earlier, retrospection and emotional self-control are key to a happy afterlife.

Maggy once asked the superhuman spirit Technician about people who let their emotions run wild. How do they adjust to the next life? His reply:

Many of them do not find their way once they arrive in the worlds of spirit because they never learned to work with the powers of thought. Some of them are unsuitable for our world, and we have to send them back to Earth. This is especially true of those who have grown accustomed to using their thoughts for negative power only (spreading fear and malice). Other, more kindly people here work with their hands (if their minds are not proficient), much as people do on your side. There are workers in the mountains, on farms—even real dairy farms of the Middle Ages.

The age-old lesson: Take the time and effort to foster love, trust, and good will for your fellow inhabitants of this wild planet, and master your emotions. That’s the definition of spiritual growth… and the key to a happy afterlife.

What I Learned from ITC, the series:

1 Being sensitive in a harsh world     2 Controlling emotions     3 Leaving the family of man     4 How spirits navigate time and space     5 Hardships heighten the human experience      6 To establish a bridge     7 Grasping the illusion of time (ethereal view)    8 Grasping the illusion of time (astral view)    9 Grasping the illusion of time (dismal view)

Read Full Post »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 115 other followers