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Latter-day Liberty: A Gospel Approach to Government and Politics

Latter-day Responsibility: Choosing Liberty Through Personal Accountability

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Welcome to the blog of Connor Boyack: author, activist, and advocate of liberty. Email me here.


Archive for March, 2010

Wikileaks: A Bulwark in the War for Your Mind

Posted by Connor on March 27th, 2010

photo credit: Arenamontanus Control the information, and you control the people. This political truism is the hallmark of dictatorships throughout the world’s history. To maintain power over a group of people, it is necessary to deprive them of access to certain facts that might influence their actions in a manner that is inconsistent with the [...]

In the past few years, political opponents of Mitt Romney have accused him of being a so-called “flip flopper” for changing his stances on certain key issues. Others have classified him a “wolf in sheep’s clothing”—a “demon sheep” before the fad caught on—as one who wears the “habiliments of the priesthood”, as J. Reuben Clark [...]

The Census, the Constitution, and Civil Disobedience

Posted by Connor on March 16th, 2010

The following article was also published at infowars.com. via: Young Americans for Liberty Principled patriots who seek to support and defend the Constitution often point their ire in the direction of the elected officials who represent them—those who have taken an oath promising that they themselves will be faithful defenders of the document. While this [...]

Enforcing the Law on Law Enforcement

Posted by Connor on March 10th, 2010

photo credit: Dred242 A few days ago, a Utah Valley University student was questioned by a couple of police officers regarding his possession and “open carry” of a handgun. Someone had called the police to report a “man with a gun”, and the police swooped in to save the day—this after the student had been [...]

photo credit: OperationKids A piece of legislation currently working its way through the Utah legislature seeks to expand the authority for Utah law enforcement agencies to use so-called “administrative subpoenas” to obtain information from internet and other telecom service providers about individuals who are allegedly suspected of certain types of crime. Sponsored by Representative Brad [...]

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