Over 13,000 Veterans to March on the GOP Convention in Support of Dr Paul

As Caesar entered Rome with his loyal Legions...

Cesar overthrew a corrupt republic. The empire of Rome flourished under Julius Caesar. He had good intentions for his empire unlike the corrupt republic. He would be consider a tyrant by today's terms but his rule was far from tyrannical. Under his rule he kicked out the republic noble men that owned almost all the land in the empire. During this time in Rome you were a slave for a nobleman or poor, starving & homeless on the city streets. He freed all roman blooded slaves and began building public utilities paid for by the plundering of northern Europe and Macedonia.

All the poor now had jobs and the freed slaves also had jobs.Building houses in such away that the workers building the "apartments" had enough money to buy it once it was finished. Started this cycle that eventually built a house for everyone. Along with building roads, longer aqueducts, bathhouses & public housing he also constructed what would be the center of trade and politics for many years to come.


Forum Romanum
7833.jpg

forum_of_trajan.jpg


Basilica Julia
forum11.jpg


Forum Iulium
03.jpg
 

Attachments

  • forum_of_trajan.jpg
    forum_of_trajan.jpg
    105.9 KB · Views: 1
ive always felt free markets can leave the corruption up to the class in society with more money.

until the people being abused revolt and hang the bastard. now that they have their hands clamped on the governments balls when the mobs start picking up pitchforks they squeeze hard and watch the government piss all over the assembly with violent force.
 
In Flordia there is a march planned on the GOP convention where over 13,000 veterans and active duty military will be a holding a march in support of Dr Paul. See you there maybe?


[video=youtube;dRtPAIo2uz8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=dRtPAIo2uz8#![/video]

LIKE!! here is your ten word minimum
 
Cesar overthrew a corrupt republic. The empire of Rome flourished under Julius Caesar. He had good intentions for his empire unlike the corrupt republic. He would be consider a tyrant by today's terms but his rule was far from tyrannical. Under his rule he kicked out the republic noble men that owned almost all the land in the empire. During this time in Rome you were a slave for a nobleman or poor, starving & homeless on the city streets. He freed all roman blooded slaves and began building public utilities paid for by the plundering of northern Europe and Macedonia.

All the poor now had jobs and the freed slaves also had jobs.Building houses in such away that the workers building the "apartments" had enough money to buy it once it was finished. Started this cycle that eventually built a house for everyone. Along with building roads, longer aqueducts, bathhouses & public housing he also constructed what would be the center of trade and politics for many years to come.


Forum Romanum
7833.jpg

forum_of_trajan.jpg


Basilica Julia
forum11.jpg


Forum Iulium
03.jpg

LIKE CHAVEZ is doing and the USA Media has smeared his intentions because Exxon got the business end of his dick?
 
Cesar overthrew a corrupt republic. The empire of Rome flourished under Julius Caesar. He had good intentions for his empire unlike the corrupt republic. He would be consider a tyrant by today's terms but his rule was far from tyrannical. Under his rule he kicked out the republic noble men that owned almost all the land in the empire. During this time in Rome you were a slave for a nobleman or poor, starving & homeless on the city streets. He freed all roman blooded slaves and began building public utilities paid for by the plundering of northern Europe and Macedonia.

All the poor now had jobs and the freed slaves also had jobs.Building houses in such away that the workers building the "apartments" had enough money to buy it once it was finished. Started this cycle that eventually built a house for everyone. Along with building roads, longer aqueducts, bathhouses & public housing he also constructed what would be the center of trade and politics for many years to come.


Forum Romanum
7833.jpg

forum_of_trajan.jpg


Basilica Julia
forum11.jpg


Forum Iulium
03.jpg

Sounds almost like Proletarian Revolution, Nice pics.
 
Julius Caesar was a populares.


Populares ("favoring the people", singular popularis) were aristocratic leaders in the late Roman Republic who relied on the people's assemblies and tribunate to acquire political power. They are regarded in modern scholarship as in opposition to the optimates, who are identified with the conservative interests of a senatorial elite


sounds like small government to me, opposed to
a senatorial elite.




Hold up what and you made fun of his big eyebrows?
JuliusCaesar.jpg
Ron-Paul-460x307.jpg
 

Attachments

  • Rp2012.jpg
    Rp2012.jpg
    22.6 KB · Views: 1
Back
Top