ronaldstokes
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Beale pamphlet written to express anger and frustration over Jefferson's hypocrisy
As others have noted, the code broken in the pamphlet using the Declaration of Independence contains many counting errors. When correctly understood, the errors in encoding that message are not errors at all but the means of expressing the anger and frustration of the author.
Each sequence containing a counting error identifies a sequence of words which are significant to the author. However, the most compelling revelation is uncovered after the counting errors are corrected.
After the counting errors are omitted, four highly significant counting errors remain. These errors occur when the author chose one word when the adjacent word was needed to correctly encode his message. This type of error identifies two words, the one intended and the one identified instead. These four errors created a sequence of eight words. That sequence is "created equal, respect to, created equal, unalienable rights." This is the heart of the Declaration of Independence. The Declaration does not argue that all men are created equal in every respect. Even identical twins differ in some way. No, the Declaration argues that we are created equal in one respect only, that God has granted each of us an equal set of rights. The probability that such errors could have been created at random are almost nonexistent. Those errors were placed there purposefully by the author.
I hypothesize that the author was Beverly Hemings who was forced to change his name when he ran away from Monticello. The arguments are contained in my books "The Jefferson Mysteries, Slave Life" and "The Jefferson Mysteries, Declaration of Independence" available on Amazon. Details of the error analysis along with other indicators pointing to Beverly Hemings and his reason for writing the pamphlet are contained in the appendix to the second volume.
As others have noted, the code broken in the pamphlet using the Declaration of Independence contains many counting errors. When correctly understood, the errors in encoding that message are not errors at all but the means of expressing the anger and frustration of the author.
Each sequence containing a counting error identifies a sequence of words which are significant to the author. However, the most compelling revelation is uncovered after the counting errors are corrected.
After the counting errors are omitted, four highly significant counting errors remain. These errors occur when the author chose one word when the adjacent word was needed to correctly encode his message. This type of error identifies two words, the one intended and the one identified instead. These four errors created a sequence of eight words. That sequence is "created equal, respect to, created equal, unalienable rights." This is the heart of the Declaration of Independence. The Declaration does not argue that all men are created equal in every respect. Even identical twins differ in some way. No, the Declaration argues that we are created equal in one respect only, that God has granted each of us an equal set of rights. The probability that such errors could have been created at random are almost nonexistent. Those errors were placed there purposefully by the author.
I hypothesize that the author was Beverly Hemings who was forced to change his name when he ran away from Monticello. The arguments are contained in my books "The Jefferson Mysteries, Slave Life" and "The Jefferson Mysteries, Declaration of Independence" available on Amazon. Details of the error analysis along with other indicators pointing to Beverly Hemings and his reason for writing the pamphlet are contained in the appendix to the second volume.