Commentaries

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And this dislike of law is quite often of the lower middle classes, who do not have the volitional capabilities of money as does the upper classes, and thus resent laws that restrict what little Volition they have, like off-roading in environmentally sensitive areas or littering the countryside with old junk cars.

Convention, rules and laws are anti-volitional. Gravity is anti-volitional as is the solidity of non-walk-thru walls and airlessness. Fascism is volitional for the fascists and anti-volitional for everyone else. Volition is Can and anti-volitional matter is Can'ts. One's ratio of Cans to Can'ts is one's psychological profile. If very poor everything one looks and sees is a Can't. For the rich, much of what one might see is a can. Encased in block-house of Can'ts. Flying on the wind-wings of Cans.

The ability of unfettered Volition is not necessarily a good thing, as too much to smoke, eat or to drink. Volition is not all it is cracked up to be. The ease of too much is unappreciative. Little to work with can be more imaginative. Constriction can be a thorough testing of what little one has. Scatter-shot can be of little depth. Limitation may be of a more intensive focus.

Volition is in the mind. The greater the power of Volition the greater the ability to associate substitutions and alternatives to any given thought or action, as six ways to get out of debt. Of course one may not be able to act on most associative alternatives as an understanding of what one can and cannot do, the Cans and Can'ts of any given circumstance, as if One may think they can't when they can and can when they can't. Volition is usually called freedom and most everyone wants to be free.

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