I'm feeling a little less grouchy today because I had a good sleep last night. I sleep well because I have nothing weighing on my conscience. I might have jumped to some paranoid conclusions yesterday, but that is a normal side effect of being pursued by stalkers for years and years. Whatever happened to that library computer system was no accident. I've had to stand alone against whole gangs of creeps like this for such a long time that it affects my morale. People seem to take their crimes against me lightly, and I just know that the TV is to blame for it. I've had a great new song in my head for the last couple of weeks. I wonder if it's a hit that could generate millions of dollars. Judging by how the business has treated every other original thought I have shared online in the last sixteen years, if my new idea is a hit, I'd better just keep it to myself. And while I'm doing that, you can read their billboards about how they're so brilliant at making money. I was thinking of how psychopathic these offenders are, wanting worship for stealing my songs and stories. Why did the corporate media love them so much? Maybe it's because they think that a psychopathic fraud is a good example for young people to follow now. Hell, if you're nice like I was, telling everyone how much you loved the Simpsons and the Stones and Saturday Night Live, you just end up getting trampled by your heroes with your own music and comedy. But they showed by their behavior how they were able to get so far ahead in our world. The musical monsters that the business wanted you to worship with songs they stole from me bear a close resemblance to certain other mental patients who went straight from the loony bin to cushy jobs as corporate spokespersons. I learned about these guys in a documentary. Corporations actively seek out psychopaths to work as spokespersons because they know that a psychopath will tell people anything. That's the kind of commitment they need from their spokespersons. Corporations actually are psychopaths. In the documentary the Corporation, corporations prove to match all of the classic characteristics of a psychopath on a standard checklist. Perhaps this may make you chuckle at first glance, but it is a very serious problem. Other psychopaths include Ted Bundy and Paul Bernardo. Notice, too, how these men were clean cut and well groomed, just like those evil reporters on TV. You can't judge a book by its cover, as they say. But corporations need stars who will promote their own superficial wisdom: the clothes make the man; it's not what you know but who you know, etc, etc. You can follow this philosophy all the way from their theft of my first hit song to my current withholding of my newest musical creation. |
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© 2016. Statements by David Skerkowski. All rights reserved. |
Sunday, January 31, 2016
The Path to Psychosis
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