The American Creed, written by William Tyler Page in 1917 and adopted by the US House of Representatives in 1918, articulates foundational principles including individual sovereignty, the right to be uncommon, the pursuit of opportunity over security, and the rejection of trading freedom for welfare or handouts. This creed emphasizes that Americans should think for themselves, take calculated risks, and maintain courage and resilience rather than cowering before authority or accepting guaranteed existence at the cost of dignity and independence.
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How A 46 y.o. Song Reminded Me of What It Means to Be An AmericanHinzugefügt:
Hi everybody. It's good to see you.
Happy Memorial Day. I just want to give a little reminder. Memorial Day is not barbecue weekend. Memorial Day is in honor of the fallen soldier. That means the warrior who died in battle protecting our freedom as Americans. A lot of people I see it all the time.
They put it up on social media, pictures of their relatives who were in World War II and Korea. and it chances are that they weren't people who died in battle. Um maybe they were, but they never give reference to it, so there's no way to tell. But I think what people are mixing it up with is November 11th, which is Veterans Day. And on that day, you you can throw up as many family pictures as you want that are uh you know, service formals or whatever you have, but Memorial Day is for the fallen soldier. Now, we've lost sight of what it's like to be an American. bunch of people in this country have turned into freaking potatoes and I'm sick and tired of it because as far as I'm concerned, you're a bunch of scumbag traders, especially after what happened in 2020.
I'm still mad about that. If you're new to this channel, um I lost my um uh my own business in 2020. uh the last number that I had heard and it took a long time to find it was 37% of small businesses and uh but that has been revised by 67% for that year and I do believe that that's correct. Um that's why I do this channel because I want to reach out to the people who are still screwed up from it and I still am too and before you get any ideas and write some nasty comments, I have been in three different schools.
I have created two different uh careers for myself. uh unfortunately uh we're on a slow path and I believe that what I the subject I'm covering today is the reason for that. Now don't get me wrong I don't view the world with roseco colored glasses. I understand that so much of this has been in the works for decades. In fact somebody had made mention of Kennedy shooting and correct me if I'm wrong. I believe it was the Smith and Mson Act. Smith Muntz Act. Does that sound right? The Bill of Rights in the Constitution were supposed to keep us protected from government intervention where it wasn't needed, where it wasn't wanted, where it wasn't where it's been forced, like 2020. Okay? So, correct me if I'm wrong on that, but what they said was, "It seems that we lost a lot of our protection after Kennedy was shot." And that was around the time I was born. And I tend to believe that because my parents said that this for years that we were going to lose our freedoms. And uh the whole thing with the data centers is a pretty ugly thing. There's one that's being proposed. I think it's being built out in Utah. Again, correct me if I'm wrong. And it's 62 miles long.
Really? We need a 62 mile long data data center. There's a few things behind that. Um, this is a very interesting theory. They need fresh water. They're not going to recycle it like a generator. They're going to keep using fresh water. They use up enough electricity to cover like 50 towns.
So is the fresh now it's been said that water has memory did they find some call it wo woo if you want but did they find some way in these data centers to take the memory out? What the hell kind of a threat is that? I don't know. I I don't have any concise research on that.
I'm I'm just going by some theories that I've heard that are of interest to me and it really makes me wonder. Um, just keep in mind people, if we don't stand together and keep our freedom, we we are in the process of losing it. I don't [ __ ] want to hear any excuses. I don't want to hear this. I don't want to hear that. I I like to hear that I'm wrong is what I would like to hear because I don't want to see this happen.
um data centers in Japan and China are monitoring social credit scores and central banking which means you have no say in what you do, what you buy, where you go, what you dream of, you name it, you name it, they will be in total total control. your retirement, your 401k, your savings, your stocks and bonds, anything you put away, even cash won't matter in a social credit score system with central banking because they will be in charge of all of it. I'm sure you've heard many many times, maybe not.
Um, but there are a lot of YouTubers out there who will uh have some connection with somebody who can get your money turned into gold and silver. I'm still not sure about that. But they always say get your money out of the bank because central banking system means that you are no longer in charge. You no longer matter and you have lost your freedoms.
And the gov is going to tell you exactly what you're going to do. They're going to tell you when the [ __ ] and the wipe your ass. And that is not what's what being America is all about. There's a lot of segways that I can mention in that. But what I want to concentrate on here, and you're going to see me look down. Now, I'm not a script reader. you know, I'm off the top of my head and and I prefer to do that. But sometimes it's frustrating because a lot of times I forget certain things and then when I listen to the the video to edit it, I'm like, "Damn, I should have said that.
Damn, I should have said that." It's always going to happen, right? So, I'm trying to keep this rolling and trying to keep this moving quickly. I don't want it to go too too long, but there's a nice story at the end of it that inspired me to get back into this fight.
you know, be a strong American, be a courageous American, be a brave American. So, you're gonna see me look down. I'll talk about that later. You're gonna see me look down only because I'm referencing off my tablet so that I get the information correct because I'm under so much stress all the time and in survival mode, I don't memorize like I used to. Sometimes I do and I get lucky.
And I hope to get over that hump. But for now, I'm going to have to look down.
Now, on my post for True North Skies, True North Sky actually, now I had to change it because I got disgruntled with it and then and then I had a stalker and that that's why I had to change things around a little bit. So, sorry for the confusion, but I put up the American Creed quite a while ago and nobody really paid attention to it. So, I thought it's Memorial Day weekend. Let's find out what it's like to be an American again. Goddamn it. Because I'm sick and tired of all the sloppy [ __ ] out there messing things up and just going along and doing whatever they're told to do. I'm really, really sick of that. We're supposed to fight for our rights. We're supposed to question everything. I'm going to read from this.
I'm going to give you a very short history of where it came from and then we're going to go line by line. I'm not going to take forever. I'm just going to make one comment or no comments for the lines because if you have a heart and soul and you are a true human being and you truly know what it means to live in America, you will understand every word of this creed. And I also want to give you a little warning. This is very, very close to my heart. I'm going to hold it together as best I can, but it does make tears well up. So, I'm I'm going to do the best that I can. So, bear with me. I don't know how much I'm going to be able to edit. All right, we're at 7 minutes.
Let's get started. The American Creed is a set of foundational political principles and ideals rooted in liberty, equality, justice, and sovereignty. That is such an important word. Everybody has lost the the feel for that. Sovereignty means you are of your own. Okay, let's keep going. Of the individual, not the mass, but the strong individual.
multiplies and creates a stronger mass.
Do you see what I mean? We don't all have to be the same. We can still be individual, but we can work together to be a stronger group that define the na the American national identity.
The phrase also refers to a specific 1918 document and a public media initiative focused on these core values.
It was a statement written by William Ty Tyler Page in 1917.
So this is not new news, you know, this is not some influencers crap. This is the real thing. And adopted by the US House of Representatives in 1918. It is a compilation of foundational phrases taken directly from historical documents, the way we used to live, the reason we did the things that we did to create this country, like the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Gettysburg Address. So, let's get to it. And again, I'm going to try to make this as painless as possible. The Americans Creed. I do not choose to be a common man. It is my right to be uncommon. That means you can be yourself and nobody everybody can judge you but you can tell them to go [ __ ] themselves. You go do your own thing in the best interest and try not to hurt anybody. I seek opportunity to develop whatever talents God gave me. Not security. That is extremely important. And that goes back to what happened in 2020 where people were being forced out of jobs because they wouldn't take an invasive injection that may or may not have killed them.
Your god-given rights and talents are more important than the security, the false sense of security that another entity is giving you. You can find it within yourself. You must think for yourself. I do not wish to be a cap citizen. I most certainly do not. And it kills me to think that these data centers might be controlling us. Humbled and dulled by having the state look after me. No thank you. Now I I'm an entrepreneur. I always have been. That's what built this country. That is the backbone of this country. And in 2020, it was destroyed for that specific reason to break the backbone.
So that kills me to be control. I can't do it. Um, I want to take the calculated risk to dream and to build, to fail and to succeed. That is our right to fall on our face or rise above as many times as we have to. It's just our right. There's nothing horrible about that. I refuse to barter incentive for a doll.
That was the blood money of 2020. If you don't remember that little measly couple thousand thousand dollars to sit home and do what you're told and appeal to authority. Yeah, screw that. I prefer the challenges of life to the guaranteed existence. That's right. Because life is a challenge. It's a series of risk.
Every day we walk out of the house, no reason to be afraid of everything, but every day we walk out of the house, every day we get up, we face challenges.
But that's what makes us human and that's what makes us American because we are tougher than nails and we can figure it out. And yeah, like it said, if we fail, we can always pick ourselves back up and succeed. Okay, here we go.
The thrill of fulfillment to the state of state stalecom of utopia. You got that right. I will not trade freedom for beneficence nor my dignity for a handout.
That that appears to be uh referring to welfare, the state of welfare. It is needed in many many cases. There are a lot of hardships that can justify it.
But just grabbing it for the sake of grabbing it. I remember during 2020 somebody who I thought I knew for many many years said, "Oh, I can be bought."
I was like, "Fuck you. Shut the f up.
Get I don't That's a traitor as far as I'm concerned." All right, let's move on. I will never cower before any earthly master 2020 again. You all coward. You all chickenened out. Oh, well, we'll just try it for a little while. You know how many times I heard that line from men? From men. Oh, we'll just try. What are you talking about?
You try it for a little while. No. No.
We find out. We do our research. We figure it out. We learn. We talk amongst ourselves and then we tell you know who to go take a crap in the corner because and piss up a tree because it was all [ __ ] All right. This is this is really important to me.
It is my heritage to stand erect proud and unafraid.
There's no re who said who said it best FDR. There's nothing to fear but fear itself. And he was absolutely right. and say whatever you want about the man and his politics, but that is a very true statement. Come on, we got to grow a backbone here. We got to get got get some some life in us again. Let's not be so sppy and sappy and feeble about everything. Be strong and be courageous.
enjoy the benefit of my creations to thank and act myself and to face the world boldly and say this with God's help I have done and this is what it means to be an American and yes we have lost sight of that and it it breaks my heart because when I saw what happened in 2020 and everybody just folded over and I'm out there trying to go about my business being ostracized lambbasted um smear campaigned abused.
I I couldn't believe how everybody just gave in and it was just so sad to do that. So, this is the light-hearted part of the story. Um, in my other channel, Outdoor Academ, it's all academ. It's academia. Uh, a lot of biology, a lot of conservation videos, um, a lot of documentaries, a lot of history. So, I don't expect to see I use like this channel to like look up music and stuff like that. So, I don't necessarily see music. Now, you're going to think this is kind of silly, and it is in a way, but it it's it it's important to this because it helps spur it helped me almost feel tangibly how we used to be.
All right, so this music video pops up on my feed in Outdoor Academ, you know, my like my college um channel, and guess who it is?
It's Benny Mardonus Into the Night. I'm like, why does that keep popping up? I don't go looking for stuff like that. What did I do to cause the algorithm to put that in? Now, I'm not woo woo and I'm not very superstitious, but I still do knock on wood. And just, uh, point of reference, uh, that's a very, very old English tradition. And what it meant was if you knocked on a tree, a tree is a magnificent force of life and there's a lot of positive energy there. And that's what knock on wood comes from or knock wood. Um, so I will do things like that.
And every once in a while something is so uncanny it makes you wonder if something is trying to give you. Yes, I know it's the computer and yes, I know it's YouTube and it's you screw screw tube and and it's it's it's social media and that's just social media, but it was just uncanny that he kept showing up.
So, as I'm saying it, you know, when I was a kid and that song came out, I was 15 years old. And back then, we used to do a lot of song pirating off the radio, which meant what we did was we sat with a tape recorder with a blank tape, and we waited for this in our room. You know, we were kids, so, you know, we didn't have to go out to work or anything. We weren't in school. We would spend the whole day listening to the radio because it you couldn't just pick and choose like you can today. you had to wait until the DJ was ready to play something and you waited for the song to come up. So, my friend had done this and and she was big at pirating, but she gave me a copy of uh Benny Mardonis' Into the Night because it was hot at the time. It was 1980 and everybody was listening to it. And yes, it it was a magnificently beautiful orchestral voice. I know the first couple of lines are a little seedy, but as I'm listening to it, my brother bangs on the door and he says, "You need to stop listening to that. This isn't what you think it is."
Older brother trying to protect his sister.
And yes, it's true. I'm not condoning this behavior, but during that time, there was an awful lot of that going on.
Um, older men going after younger women.
In fact, it happened to me many times.
And if you ever saw the video they did on that back then, he's literally with an underage girl. And you know, my brother was like, "That's about saturatory rape." Now, believe it or not, and again, I'm not condoning any of this, believe it or not, I grew up in a very musical family on my father's side.
They could sing, dance, read music, play multiple instruments, and when I was a little kid, we learned all the dances.
Of course, I forgot all of them by now, but um we had a lot of fun. you know, after dinner, certain nights, my grandmother used to play piano in organ for like three different churches. She would like play one note in one church and then run to the other play. No, no, I'm just kidding. Um, she jammed and we all did and we had a great time. So, I understood pitch and tone. Um, I understood a little bit about method and I knew what a great voice sounded like and I knew what a good tune sounded like. uh not all the details and the specifics, but the first couple of lines of Into the Night are seedy, but there's a reason for that, and I'll explain it.
Um, but the rest of it, what what an incredibly hauntingly beautiful orchestral voice that was. And it was if you could ignore the first few couple lines, the rest of the song was like it was like vomiting emotional trauma and the the pain of of love. And yes, I know this sounds kind of corny and all, but that's why I absolutely loved this song.
And when it came up on my feed, I listened to it a few times and I was like, man, that's a hell of a [ __ ] song. And so I looped it for a little while and all these memories started flooding back like my brother banging on the door saying, "Stop listening to that. I don't want you to get the bad wrong idea." Oh. Um, sideline to that. I had plenty of experience with that. And, uh, it's funny in the creepy video that they did. Um, when he's on the phone, I I had lots of those happen when I was younger. In fact, it stopped probably I don't know when I started menopause.
Um but anyhow, um there was this uh one particular incident uh I I was a candy striper at a hospital and I used to go in early to help out cuz you could do that. It was it was a hometown hospital and everybody knew each other. So I would be walking up the road. It was right up the street from me at like 6:30 in the morning and a girl I went to high school with, I was what, 16, 17 at the time and her father was stalking me.
Yep. guess what he was up to. And he'd say, "Hey, Rain, you know, after you're done, you know, I could swing by and pick you." Yeah, whatever. Get lost. Get lost. Get lost. You know, I was I was smart enough to know to that that was creepy. I may not have completely understood it, but I knew it was creepoid, freaky stuff going on, and I didn't want anything to do with it. Well, he did it once more and I had had enough. So, what I did was do or die. I used to go out for runs. I I was a long-distance runner at one time. In fact, I was supposed to go into Olympic training camp and I was a young kid and I said, "No, no, no. I don't want to do that, stupid." And I'm glad I didn't because a lot of those Olympia ads are like cripples now and they die horrible deaths because that constant training is rough for you. But anyhow, back to the point of uh statutory rape.
Um, so this this guy did it one more time and then after work I went for a run and I'm out running and I'm down around where where the houses, you know, the girl I went to school with and the perpetrator father and I thought, you know what, I'm going to try something again. Do or die. I didn't know if it was going to work. So I stopped by the house. Um, her mother said, uh, oh, uh, your friend, I'm not gonna say her name, but your friend isn't here. And I went to school with her. And I said, "Oh, well, I started a conversation with her and she goes, "You know what, Irene?
Let's not stand at the door. Come on in, sit at the kitchen table. I've got some work I'm doing in the kitchen. Hang out, talk." So, I was waiting, waiting, waiting. And he walked in and he was floored. And he walked out of the room and I never ever saw him again. And it was at the point in time where we were getting to that age where we were moving out into our own world. So, it never became an issue again. So don't don't think that I'm condoning uh older men going after younger women. I know it's historically it's a historical fact.
It's been going on forever. Um so when I bring in bring up Into the Night, I'm not focusing on the memory of being stalked as a mid-age teenager. Um what I am focusing on is the 1980s and what this song represented to me when I heard it, when it came up on my feed. And just this I almost could feel the way we used to be just like in an American's Creed and we were strong. We were resilient.
Yes, there was a lot of stuff in place that was trying to stop us from being free Americans. I remember big uh big Bush, you know, Daddy Bush uh long before his his IT son uh took a took charge um saying w basically welcome to the new world order. I'm paraphrasing, but that's basically what one of his speeches said. And I remember my mom heard it and she was just fuming. I mean, steam was coming out of her ears because she knew. She's born back in my parents were born in the 20s and the 30s. They saw what was going on. But the song it it brought back the courage, the audacity that we had, the levity that we had, the way we handled stress and we handled con controversy and difficult situations, how we worked together, uh fight or win, it round us rounded us out and it made us better human beings. Not like we are today where the men are a bunch of soy boys. I mean Christ, I work in the environmental field. I see an awful lot of that. Um, they're afraid to stand up. I mean, look at 2020. So many of these these men, they were like, it's like, what the [ __ ] are you talking?
You're the leader of the pack. You're the leader of the family. You're supposed to be making the decisions and and we're here to back you up. Not that we're subservient. That's not what I'm saying. But the the women here are to or keep are here to keep the society and the community together after the man makes a decision. But you also make it together, right? We work as a society.
We work as a community. And and that's that's what this song made me think of.
Not the words of the song, but the era that the song came out. We were still really tough. There was a lot of anti-atriotism during the time. And it's a shame. Um, but it's it it it comes and it goes, but I think now it it's like we're we're we're like a dead fish in the water. It really feels that way because people 2020 was a sign to me that nobody wanted to be an American anymore. Nobody wanted to stand up and be strong. They just wanted to fold over. I mean, what are you going to tell what are you going to tell your grandkids and your nieces later on? You know, well, oh, grandpa, why is it like this? And I heard that it used to be better. Well, that's because I was just following orders and I did what I was told and I was bought out because I could be sold. I could be bought. Come on, people. Snap out of it. This is ridiculous. What are you thinking? Don't be so feeble. Let's be strong and smart about this. All right, so a little sideline. Uh I like to research things.
I'm not in school and I got a little tired of searching uh researching Laura Wilt's because that's one of my environmental focuses this year. And when uh Benny Mardonis came up, um of course I started to do some research on him. And of course I did forget one thing. Um, the first few lines of V into the night was a comment that Benny had made to his writing partner. Um, his, uh, neighbors had fallen on really hard times and he was trying to help the kids out by giving them jobs to do, going to the grocery store, cleaning the house, walking the dog, and the 16-year-old walked in in the morning after they had pulled an allnighter up, writing, and they were trying to figure out how to get this into night song started. and uh his partner had made a derogatory comment about the 16-year-old and uh Benny just said she's 16y old 16 years old leave her alone. So that's what that was. Um he had quite a life. He wasn't a one hit wonder. He was a it was the same song, two hits almost 10 10 years apart and it covered two centuries. That's pretty interesting. So, his father abandons them when they're young.
Uh, let's see. He goes into the Navy. He wasn't drafted. He went in on his own.
He lived in Maryland. So, that makes sense. Um, he's blown up in an explosion.
Almost loses his eyesight. Spends months and months in a Boston VA hospital.
Is exposed to Ancient Orange that comes later.
ends up with a magnificent hit and a drug addict. And I had kind of lost interest. I mean, I love the song. Very, very handsome man. He was Chilean. Did you know that? Beautiful bone structure.
And I remember losing interest because I I had heard, you know, you either read it in Rolling Stone magazine or you might have heard on a rock station. Uh, you know, and he disappeared out of sight and I thought, "Oh god, that's terrible." He actually moved to I think he lived in Woodstock in the 70s or the 80s. I'm not sure. It might have been a combination of both. But that's town in New York that was very it it's not it wasn't the site of the um concert that was over in Bethl, New York. That was west and south southwest of uh Woodstock. And um it was it was like a haven. It was a safe place for Vietnam vets, especially those who had traumatic problems. and then he doesn't go to rehab, but he works on uh solving his uh drug problems on his own. Um ends up with a with his with a son and around 1985 and uh that that pretty much snaps him out of it, brings him back to reality.
And then he wants to get even farther and farther away from the drugs because yes, uh Woodstock was very supportive of uh any vet with PTSD or shell shock. Um, but there was a lot of drugs there. So, he moves up to Syracuse, New York, and he ends up living there for a long, long time between there and I think California.
Strange thing is uh when I started uh going up into uh uh that area. I didn't live in central New York. I lived like on the southern tier of New York. That that's like along the Pennsylvania border more or less. Uh basically, Western Casco Park. So, um, he was so big in Syracuse, New York. But the whole drug thing kind of confused me because now, and it has been for many, many years, it's a drug soaked town. It really, most towns are actually, no matter how beautiful they are, there's always a lot of drugs around. But I just found it very interesting. You know, me, you know, I love to do research. So, of all places, he moves to Syracuse. You know, the snow belt must have liked snow a lot. and uh he has he revives his career and then I think it was in 2000 Agent Orange caught up with him and probably the drug use and abuse and he ends up with Parkinson's. Well, he lived with it for like some 20 years and he died June 2020. Um he was 73 years old.
Uh, no, it was not the C. It was complications of Parkinson's and he had had some operations that had weakened him and uh he was in um assisted living for a little while, isolated from his wife because of the big C. Um, no indications that there was anything that touched him during that time and then he ended up um going back home under hospice care and then he died at home.
But it's it's sad that he's gone because that was despite despite the research I did and what I just told you about his history. He grew up in a time when when like I just explained throughout this video, we spoke differently. We interacted better. We had better grammar skills. We had excellent sentence structure. We knew how to communicate with each other. And we have fallen out of that. And we have got to get back into that. Yes, I understand that what may be happening could be something that we cannot stop.
I'm not sure how we can. I'm not sure how. Uh I had mentioned it once before I think in another video. Laura Casease, I'll leave a link. She uh was the um she graduated from West Point with a degree in engineering. Um, she's the one who walked New York City streets during COVID, proving time and time again in every single video that everything you were hearing on the news was nothing but [ __ ] And she had mentioned in one of her videos after she left New York City and went back to Texas that uh, back in I think it was like 2009 or 10, she was working for one of the biggest construction companies in New York City, I believe, or it might have been Washington DC and they were building this really big data center. And the first thing she said was, "Who are they spying on?" And everybody thought she was being a conspiracy theorist, like, "Oh, you know, whatever, whatever." Um, but yeah. No, so she was right. It it was it was very interesting to hear that because I've been listening to her videos again after uh seeing this video of uh uh Moronis. Um I thought I'd go back and review. as sickening as it is and as much as it makes me puke as to the way uh this country folded over, I thought I would review some of them and and I remember hearing that and I thought, "Wow, you know, this has been going on a lot longer." Of course, you know, a lot of this stuff has been in the works for decades and decades, but just just the epitome of the way we were, the the the feel of how we were, how we lived our lives, we were stronger and we were tougher. And I know I keep repeating myself, but I want everybody I'm going to put the post up of the America Americans Creed in my post section and I want you to read it and I want you to live by it because we have got to do something to stop what's going on. I mean, you know, the golden calf just happened. It's what happens every time a civilization builds a golden statue to its leader, it falls. Uh we are living in a horrible time and it it doesn't have to be this way. And you know, unfortunately, like I said earlier in the video, my parents warned my brother and I about this, but we never thought that we would get to the point where it would actually happen within our lifetime. We didn't think that we we would it it would happen that fast, but it is. So, if you get a chance, check out Laura Case. Uh I'll leave a link for um Into the Night, too. It it's just it's just a real feel-good beautiful. It it makes you remember what love was. And when you get to watch it now, hearing it on the radio was was impressive enough, but to watch him sing this, you know, you can see the the tension and the stress as as he's singing it, it it's fascinating to watch because you know me, I love research and I love picking stuff apart. Everything is like a a science experiment, a laboratory for me.
So, I just really enjoy it. But but it it will remember remind you of what love was and and forget about the whole thing that I said about the statutory rape.
It's the three quarters of the song that that inspired me to do some research on him and to bring up uh the Americans Creed and talk with you about it. But all of this all in one because it's not like we've been taught over we're going into 32 minutes as we've been taught like over the last 30 or 40 years.
Everything has to be separated and broken up into pieces and we must consider each and every one. Yes, you can. Yes, you can. But you have to see the whole thing because once you start doing that, picking things apart, that's something you've got to do kind of quick because if you get too used to doing that, you will only focus on certain things that make you feel comfortable and safe. Well, sometimes it's better not to be comfortable and not to be safe. We got to go head first into things, people. We got to stop being feeble and simple. We've got to be stronger. Let's be more complicated. Not to be annoying. Complicated meaning we're going to ask questions. We're going to use critical thinking. And we're going to act like Americans because the time is the time has passed.
We we've got to do something. All right, everybody. I'm not going to keep you any longer. I hope you stayed to the very end. If you did stay to the very end, please comment an American's Creed and that would it would be nice to see some of that in the comments. Everybody have a great weekend and please leave your comments which whichever they may be. I would love to read them and I will talk to you later.
Bye-bye.
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