Dr. Jack Wheeler
May 3, 2013
Two Boats Village, Ascension Island, South Atlantic Ocean. "This is one of the strangest places on the face of the earth," observed William Burnett, Commandant of the HMS Ascension in 1858. It remains so today.
You might ask how an island can be formally designated a ship of the British Royal Navy, which Ascension was from 1816 to 1922. Children born on the island were designated to have been born at sea, with their birth registered at the parish of Wapping, the sailors' district along the Thames' dockyards in London.
No one has ever been allowed to legally live here; there has never been an Ascension Islander. People have been residing here for close to 200 years; some 900 people reside on the island today, with many born here as were their parents and grandparents, going to school and growing up here. Yet all were or are here at the whim of the British Government.
The people here have fewer rights than any other British citizens in the world. One of the rights they don't have is private property. The British Crown owns the entire island, and no private entity may own a square foot of it.
Tourists would flock here to see hundreds of green turtles laying eggs on the beaches and vast numbers of seabirds, for world-class big game fishing and scuba diving - but the government makes it ludicrously hard to get here.
A friend of mine once gave me a t-shirt that says, "I love to sail forbidden seas and land on barbarous coasts." I'm wearing it now.
For Ascension is a barbarous coast in a forbidden sea - thanks to its government making it that way. It should be an object lesson to us, for Zero is intent on making America a barbarous government-run land, and one day it may be too late to prevent him.
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