A Farewell Address to an Extraordinary Party

Day 632, 15:53 Published in USA South Africa by Matthew Casey

We stand here a month after my election to the Party Presidency. A lot had changed since the day I became Party President of the United States Capitalist Party. We have established ties with other major political parties including America’s Advancement Party, the Federalist Party, the Socialist Freedom Party, the United Independent Party, the United States Workers Party, the Green Party, the Left Alliance, and a contributing commentary to mainstream politics as is today in the United States.

Our party membership reached an apex of 46 at one point, and has since suffered drawbacks from the war against PEACE, lack of funding, and other political suspensions or delays as caused by the invasion of PEACE.

You and I live in a much different eWorld today than we did those 30 days ago. We face new challenges and a more immediate need to confront those challenges. We are presented with a set of circumstances which are singing the freedom with flames scorching on the very blanket of our safety provided by the US government. How will we respond to such adversity and pending defeat? What paths will we elect to take? May we take the Abandoned Road, the High Road, or the Road Less Traveled?

There is little doubt placed to the severity of the decisions to be placed in the coming days which will certainly shape not only the unraveling complexion of today’s America, but the future America which waits in the wings of tomorrow’s horizon where thousands more eAmericans will be born into a society without its own dominion, but rather that of a foreign power.

Unfortunately for this eCitizen, I will not choose to experience the campaign of ruin and tyranny placed on our regions.

No, instead, I will be choosing to spend my time in an area of the world which chooses to embrace the ideas of its new citizens, not chastise them. A country which utilizes the two ears they contain to listen, not block out the voice of curiosity and well intention. A country which seeks neutrality in a world of aggression and a country which chooses the option of liberty, the pursuit of choice, and an investment in the power of the individual and not necessarily the collective – yes, the industry of my mind and effort will indeed be placed in South Africa.

A clean slate, a welcoming people, and a tablet yearning to be chiseled with some of the greatest minds in the world who wish not to orchestrate and puppeteer the wonderfully complex workings of a nation, but rather provide an environment for such organized chaos to reign supreme and carry through as wind to sails for a better tomorrow.

I wish the best to my American brethren. If an American is struggling to afford food, I should ask that you would provide him with his need. If an American suffers from frustration of missing coordination or information as to what he should do, I plead that you would provide him with it. If a citizen pines for community, direction, and value – I should only expect that you would be ready to answer his call.

It is the people which make this game great. The creativity garnered and harvested for practicality within the borders of the game. The relationships forged and conversation exercised. Never stop that conversation. Invest in time. Invest in people. Invest in lives.

It is my hope that the hope and plan for a better tomorrow should squash any act of attrition of harmful intention. It is my hope that friendships and aide can transcend a nation’s borders. And it is my hope that we would find unity behind the common cause and seek to see it through to its optimum result.

It is my undying gratitude to the people who elected me Party President, sought my council, and made me better in a multitude of ways, that I leave untainted and tested to the sands of time in my departure from the United States and the Party Presidency. May you work for a better tomorrow, and may you be here long enough to see your efforts blossom to heights you never dreamed possible.

Strength and honor.