Thursday, July 26, 2007

Wayne Fincher Contact and Support

From Wayne's daughter, Connie Fields:


TO ALL,

You can write to dad by using his new address.

Hollis Wayne Fincher
07863-010 (MUST HAVE THIS NUMBER WHEN SENDING HIM ANYTHING)
P.O. Box 9000
Forrest City, Arkansas
72336

If you want to send money(money order) the address is:

Federal Bureau of Prisons
Hollis Wayne Fincher
07863-010 (MUST
HAVE THIS NUMBER WHEN SENDING HIM ANYTHING)
P.O. Box 474701
Des Moines,
IA 50947-0001

All money must be sent to this address. The prison doesn't take any money.

Dad can have up to 25 pictures or less, 5 magazines, 5 paperback books.

NOTE: Inmates are allowed to receive magazines, soft cover books, greeting cards and photos( NO POLAROIDS). All hard cover books and newspapers must come directly from a publisher(BOOK STORE ETC.) Please note that any photos,magazines or books that show any form of nudity will be rejected by mail room staff.

When I know more I will let you know.

C.Fields

I note the "he got what he was asking for" folks are resurfacing in forums.

If every one of us did what Fincher did, there would be no more gun control laws in this country. Because we will not stand up en masse, any one of us who does will be cut down.

And Fincher did not just do this carelessly or casually, as implied. "The Silver Bullet" and other documents, as well as years of history corresponding with various public officials and the governor to notify them of their activities shows a thought-out strategy. The reason that strategy did not work is not because it was wrong in terms of founding intent and natural law, but because corrupted legal precedent is given more weight in our courts than unalienable rights--and We the People allow it through apathy, ignorance and fear.

Fincher's testimony was suppressed from the jury, as was mention of the Constitution, the 2nd Amendment...and they were instructed to obey the judge and accept his interpretation of his authority and the law.

It's true, I would not have put myself in harm's way the way he did--but that has more to do with my not trusting our "justice system" to deliver what its name promises than it does with any flaws in Fincher's legal reasoning.

Rather than belittle the fallen, we ought to be helping in his time of need. Because if we don't restore Wayne Fincher's vision of the Republic, it will be just a matter of time before we follow him to the dungeon or worse--unless we surrender not just ourselves, but our children.

[More about Wayne Fincher from WarOnGuns]

2 comments:

Stewart Rhodes said...

Excellent post, David. Reminds me of something Mark Twain once said:

"In the beginning of a change the patriot is a scarce man, and brave, and hated and scorned. When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for then it costs nothing to be a patriot."
-Mark Twain

Thank you for all of your support for Wayne, and others who are willing to fight for our Republic.

Each is but a battle in a long, long war, but each must be fought hard, to the utmost extent of our power.

Stewart

David Codrea said...

Thanks, Stewart. Twain also said man is the only creature that blushes--or needs to.

Except for the sociopaths who persecute men like Wayne--they get a sick, vengeful kick from power over the liberty of their betters.