Chapter Twenty Four: The Illustrator's Betrayal
He was that same Illustrator, the one who sent out the Columbusian to do the most gruesome charges of felony involving the killing of a life. Whether these lives taken abruptly are fruitful or not, there is nothing moral that hinders his state of mind to stop him from committing more murders in ultimately satisfying his need for retribution. He have an axe to grind, obviously, and it is as sharp as ever.
It occurs to him like it was just yesterday; the pain left a very deep scar inside him, a fibrosis so visible that it affected his own manner of thinking, his characteristics, demeanor, personality, and the way he decides when given practical choices. He have changed so much that he needed to be introduced again to his acquaintances.
The See of Color has wronged him so well that he is now a vigilante fugitive on a mission. The system was so rotten that its unfairness glow like a faulty bulb that distracts the whole room rather than to give a steady illumination to the prevailing conditions of the said era.
He has taken no personal offense from the Anti-Plagiarists, though. There is nothing wrong between them. In fact, he was very greatful to the endless efforts of the episcopal authority in trying to prosper the Boondocks Scientific Trust, which for him, is truly noble and just. There is nothing wrong with the system per se, although the hypocritical agents are the ones who are actually corrupting them.
But there is no conflict with the judgments promulgated by the courts, too; at least not all of them. There are times when the opinion of the courts will uphold the very ideals of what constitutes the efficacious existence of the judiciary, along with the many rules that run the operation of judicial processes.
More than anything, it is the justiciable questions and their respective treatments are what ultimately become the barriers for achieving the more perfect order that is the main goal that the Renaissance Society is striving for. All the ugliness and weaknesses of the prevailing conditions have been continually exposed and thoroughly criticized, a true slander in all deeds and purposes that has been associated with the constitutional right to practice free speech.
Of course, biases are everywhere and racism is tolerated as an open secret. But to whom shall the responsible citizens appeal to the court judgments of unfair disposition? The problem is more systemic in nature than to blame the intricate criticisms of the moral decay of identified political actors who have been the ones staining the proper implementation of laws.
As more discussions are embraced to look for more workable solutions, the perfect order seems to be very elusive, and a total impossibility to achieve. But there they are, looking for ways to govern as practically as possible by strengthening the judicial processes from the ideas proposed of those with real grievances.
The hypocrites are looking for the perfect order by manufacturing the pretext of its circumstances.
Nobody from these fools can make him regret his choices.
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The Chapter is sponsored by Gucci.
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