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Show Page 6 The UTAH INDEPENDENT July 16, 1971 LOCAL HOW MAN SEIRIOUS IS THE I.R.S. SUES Continued From Page 1 Reprinted from Law and Order Magazine 'Hat such a procedure by all legal ona constitutes tyranny because a single arm of the government is exercising all three of government contrary to the Constitution. It also serves An interesting sidelight of this statement is the fact that it was not presented in some obscure to put more and more power into Constitution. Mr. Belnap cites instances where the Internal Revenue Service, outside the jurisdiction of the courts, has confiscated pro- perty, attached bank accounts, and put liens on property, all Mr. Belnap said. I feel that it is now time to revolt against the tyrannical practices of the Internal Revenue Service and that we can be successful in doing so by using the legal machinery guar- anteed us by the Constitution, he concluded. The unusual case, certain to be of interest to those concerned about their Constitutional rights, has been set for hearing in the U.S. District Court of Judge Ritter, Monday, July 19, at 10 A.M. in court room 250 in the Post Office Building at Salt Lake City. ar, id process of law. and records without consent of the individual, the bank is also guilty of violating an individuals Constitutional rights and can be held liable for damages. Several cases in recent months have resulted in such banks being sued, base- ment of a but before a sophisticated audience of Federal officials and employees in Washington, D. C. Abe Fortas, who was then the Under Secretary of the Interior, praised Dr. Chisholm for wanting to put aside the mistaken old ways of our elders. Mr. Fortas called morality authoritarian imperatives, divorced from reason and life. He said, We must smash the housing of preconception and prejudice which encases the mind and spirit of men, and set them free to cope with the forces of dissolution and disintegration which are loose in the world. (Psychiatry, November, 1946, p 2). Mr. Fortas know that the smashing of Little these imperatives in his own life would lead to personal activities which would one day deprive him of the privilege of being appointed Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. But that is another story. It merely illustrates the point that moral imperatives are not as divorced "from reason and life as Mr. Fortas had originally assumed. In Dr. Chisholm s original speech he made it clear that the elimination of morality was an inescapable necessity. He disclosed that its demise would be accomplished by persuasion if possible, but by force if necessary. Said he: There is something to be said for taking charge of our own destiny, for gently putting aside the mistaken old ways of our elders if that is possible. IF IT CANNOT BE DONE GENTLY, IT MAY HAVE TO BE DONE ROUGHLY, EVEN VIOLENTLY (Ibid. Emphasis added.) think-tank-semin- theexecutive branch of government and therefore operates to deprive individuals of the inalienable rights guaranteed by the This, too, is unconstitutional, Mr. Belnap said, because the Constitution says that no man shall be deprived of his property without due process of law which means that the Internal Revenue Service must prove in a legally constituted court, by trial, that a person is obligated to the government. When an individual is denied access to the courts, we are living in a state of tyranny . Further, when a bank turns over an individuals bank account Cleon Skousen HOW WOULD DR. CHISHOLM ELIMINATE "MORALITY"? powers without due W. by "We must abolish the concepts of right and wrong!" This startling intellectual aberration did not come as the pronouncement of an inmate from state hospital. It came from some maximum-securit- y a man, who, for many years, had charge of many such hospitals. The speaker was none other than the famous Dr. G. Brock Chisholm who was appointed the first Director General of the World Health Organization and served simultaneously as the founder and President of the World Federation of Mental Health. Dr. Chisholm represents a powerful school of off-ha- nd intellectuals who determined, right war against after World War II, to launch an all-oand of wrong. Dr. right morality , or the concepts Chisholm blamed war, crime, mental illness and most n of the social problems of the world on the moral code. Said he: The only psychological force capable of producing these perversions is morality, the concept of right and wrong . . . For many generations we have bowed our necks to the yoke or the conviction of sin. We have swallowed all manner of poisonous certainties fed us by our parents, our Sunday and teachers, our politicians, our priests, our newspapers and others with a vested interest in controlling us . . . Freedom from moralities means freedom to observe, to think, and behave sensibly, to the advantage of the person and of the group, free from outmoded types of loyalties and from the magic fears of our ancestors. If the race is to be freed from its crippling burden of good and evil it must be psychiatrists who take the original responsibility. (The Reestablishment of Peacetime Society, by Dr. G. B. Chisholm, published in Psychiatry, February, 1946.) old-fashion- ed opinion-moldin- g ut Judaic-Christia- day-scho- ol WHAT WOULD SE THE CONSEQUENCES? A substantial number of psychiatrists, psychologists, and government officials who became aware of this talk were deeply disturbed by its ominous implications. They saw elements of social subversion in this speech. It seemed to them that Dr. Chisholm was calling for the ancient, irresponsible and pathological pattern of conduct which became known as hedonism. Dr. Chisholm talked of morality as though it were some kind of trap from which hu- manity must be liberated. He had claimed that morals were taught by parents, Sunday and day school teachers, politicians, priests, and newspapers because they had a vested interest in controlling people. His detractors pointed out that even the most elementary examination of moral principles will demonstrate that the genius of morality is not in giving someone a vested interest 1 jrmmiiuiiiimmmiimiM All Kinds of Insurance Home Business Group Medical Auto Bonds Office Ri 487-57- 89 295-17- 44 AGENCY 30 East Kensington Ave Salt Lake City, Utah B RyATRftHB Q'QKSiTiQRE aO0QB55 Life BEACON INSURANCE .PHONES: HI O yffiro nan Ssssto 5ti3h$neii Selection a (SEB 603310 shuiii eian anon |