
Today’s post is a little lesson in lawfare for those trying to shut me up, including a former friend who thought establishing a fake religious organization would protect the “artists” who perform free music at the XXXXs from harassment by law enforcement.

This deceptive layer of contrived legal protection didn’t work, which a few people found out the hard way last summer when cops descended on the XXXXs and handed out tickets for violating Missoula’s noise ordinance. Did our saxophone player get ticketed? No, he fled, because people on probation are actually very cop-averse, no matter how tough they talk.
Back in January, when an actual friend told me that accusations were circulating that I had vandalized cars, I went straight to the cop shop to address these false claims directly. Five months later those same false claims, with a few new ones added to the pile, were referenced in civil processes that don’t require proof “beyond a reasonable doubt” because the legal “preponderance” standard for civil processes is different.
What does this mean? It means that a video supposedly depicting me vandalizing multiple cars can be cited as evidence in a restraining order hearing WITHOUT any opportunity for me to get what’s called “discovery”, which, in this case, would have meant allowing me to see this supposed evidence being used against me in the civil process to compel a district judge to formally restrain my behavior, both in physical meat space and online.
Without a lawyer to help me navigate the legal gauntlet I’m in, I attempted to see this video evidence by formally filing a request with the CIVIL side of Missoula’s City Attorney Office. I also filed an order for a later hearing in District Court, citing my effort to obtain and view the evidence being used against me in a coordinated restraining order campaign. The district judge denied that request.
Earlier this week, I finally got the formal response from the Missoula City Attorney Office that I cannot see the video because the investigation into me is NOT active. Did anyone think to tell the people claiming I’m stalking them that the investigation was inactive?

One of the most critically important things to do when fighting back against lawfare is also the most difficult: don’t get angry.
Getting angry might be one of the most natural emotions to experience when inside the judicial bowels of deceivers and paid manipulators, but, if you allow it to take over, then you will derail any chance of thinking clearly about what you’re up against, which usually includes false narratives that exhibiting anger will then seem to justify to the casual observer.
If a target of lawfare can prioritize understanding over righteous indignation at the experience of being targeted, then accusers can become the best teachers, like Mr. Saxophone, who’s absolute favorite book in my extensive library is this one:

One of the things people need to understand about where we’re at on this “Fourth Turning” timeline is that those who were willing to do the things that better people weren’t willing to do in order to get ahead have done just that, and no institution, organization, or private entity is immune from the result.
When you PERSIST in refusing to stoop to their level, or react in the ways they want, their tactics will escalate. This is happening on an individual level, with people, and it’s happening on the societal level, with a general attitude of get yours while the getting is good and fuck everyone else!
One of my strategies to avoid the local mud pit is to look at the historical arc of meta-narrative control, which I’ll pick up doing Sunday or Monday with a component of the Cold War I don’t think Ken Robison is hip to.

Thanks for reading!





















































