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Limbo Is Real

Posted on April 7, 2014June 25, 2020 by Jeff Cassman

It used to be believed by Catholics that a place existed where souls who were destined for heaven but were prevented from the beatific vision remained, awaiting Christ’s Ascension, or in the case of those guilty only of original sin,  for some sort of divine indulgence (presumed).  Like so many other traditions of the Catholic Church this belief has been abandoned by laity and cleric alike.  But limbo IS real.  I live in limbo right now.

It is a component of the criminal “justice” system that when a convict is finished with the imposed sentence he will remain in a period of limbo for a period of time, in my case, three years.  The convict is no longer incarcerated, but is still subject to the full weight of the federal government.  Not that every living person isn’t already, but in a more particular way.  It is a quirk of the system that although I have retained my first amendment rights, and thus, I may write this post, and for the time being, practice my faith publicly, I have lost my 2nd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th and 14th amendment rights.  For the 99% of you unfamiliar with the Bill of Rights and other constitutional amendments, here’s a link.

In brief, because of my conviction for mail and securities fraud, I may not posses a firearm (or even be in close proximity to one, lest I be deemed to have potential control over it), I may not refuse any search, reasonable or not, of my being, property, or the space I may occupy in private or public, I may not move about as I wish or need, I may not seek the best possible employment, I lack the freedom to remain silent, I do not have the right to a speedy trial or to confront my accusers, I may suffer, as I have already, cruel and unusual punishments or unreasonable bail requirements, and I do not benefit from the Due Process and Equal Protection laws of the 14th amendment.  The central government refers to this condition as ‘Probation’.  Probation infers a time of testing or trial, but since this period seems to me to include also a punitive condition-the denial of certain benefits accorded to others, albeit not perfect union with God, I think limbo is more appropriate.

I am told I will remain in this state for three years.  There is nothing I can do to help myself.  There is nothing that anyone else can do to help me.  I am not truly suffering in limbo, at least, not at the moment, and if I were, I suppose that would prove purgatory rather than limbo.  It is possible that at the end of three years, my time in limbo could be extended, even indefinitely, if the court is not pleased with me.  It is very likely that if the court looked hard enough, it would definitely NOT be pleased with me, because I hold many thoughts in my mind which would likely to be offensive to God and any number of people, modernists, yankees, communists, et al, and because most of us commit a felony every day anyway.  Sometimes more than one.  So it’s merely a matter of choosing to get you, not whether they can.

Don’t get me wrong, I have no plans to commit a crime.  I do not wish to leave limbo and return to purgatory.  It is just that I am both aware of the reality of my vulnerability-unlike, probably, you-and, perhaps more importantly, I no longer live in fear.  I am not indifferent to the future or to suffering, but somewhat more accepting of realities which I cannot change, and which, while unpleasant, and perhaps even unavoidable, may actually work for my good.  You don’t need to be a Catholic, or even a Christian to believe these things, although being one for many does not lead to this truth.  You need not even be a Buddhist, who practice a form of detachment which to me seems detached also from virtue.  I’m not that fond of virtue myself, vice always being more enjoyable, but I do hold virtue in my mind as something good and desirable.  It is inescapable, however, that suffering can be good for you.

It is ironic, to me, and I do love irony even when it is the hammer and I the anvil, that I retained this most potent civil protection of the 1st Amendment.  Is it because my expression of thought and faith are not dangerous, and thus the courts have found no cause to restrict them?  That surely cannot be, because I admit freely that both my thoughts and faith are dangerous to the status quo.  (Clarification, it is not ‘my’ thoughts but rather those beliefs which I adhere to which are dangerous to tyrants and modernists and their way of life, so before you report me to the thought police, reflect carefully, please).

Is it then, that I retain these first amendment rights because the courts have recognized that, however dangerous my expressions may be to society and the government, they are so fundamental to a free society that even for me, the lowest and most dangerous of society’s members, they must remain unimpeded?  Odd, isn’t it?  The pen is mightier than the sword, and there has never been a time when this adage was more true.  Surely the war of ideas is bringing about greater consequences now than in any previous generation.

Or is it that the most helpless members of a society are always the first to suffer as rights dissolve generally, and this should be seen by the rest of you as a warning about the erosion of rights? As a convict, I am certainly in that class of the helpless, stripped of the most basic forms of self defense, for even my conscience is not safe from examination and I lack the protections seen by the founders as being most important for the promotion of individual liberty.  Does the way in which we treat the untouchables and the unwanted in a society act as prediction of the future of of our culture?

Read Animal Farm, if you haven’t lately, and then write me about your thoughts.

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