Monday, April 7, 2025

Secular Koranism town experiment

    TABLE OF CONTENTS  


Below is a detailed historical narrative of the Secular Koranist Party of America (SKPA) prior to its rise to power, focusing on the party’s creation of an isolated town where people voluntarily lived under Secular Koranism as a means of advertising the system. The narrative incorporates all the data provided on Secular Koranism—its definition, laws, the Secular Koranist Constitution, the SKPA Party Constitution, the SKPA Manifesto, and prior pamphlets—emphasizing the town’s role as a tourist attraction and reality TV show setting, with open bars to highlight the party’s secular stance on alcohol.

The History of the Secular Koranist Party: The Harmony Experiment
In the early 2020s, as the United States grappled with economic disparity, social unrest, and political division, a new voice emerged from the fringes—Claire Khaw, an agnostic British ideologue with a radical vision: Secular Koranism. Khaw, born on Tisha B’Av (August 2, 1957), a day the Talmud (Berakhot 2:4) associates with the Jewish messiah’s birth, had developed a legal system derived from the Koran, stripped of faith, prayer, and rituals. Her system—no usury, a 20% flat tax, mandatory marriage contracts, and 100 lashes for unmarried parents—promised order, reason, and progress. But in a nation skeptical of anything “Koranic,” Khaw needed a way to prove it worked. Thus, the Secular Koranist Party of America (SKPA), founded in 2021, embarked on a bold experiment: the creation of Harmony, a small isolated town in rural Montana, where volunteers lived under Secular Koranism, tourists could visit, and a reality TV show would broadcast the results.
The Genesis of Harmony: A Living Advertisement
By 2022, the SKPA, still a minor party, had gained a modest following—mostly disaffected conservatives, libertarians, and secularists tired of debt (U.S. national debt: $28 trillion, 2022) and family breakdown (divorce rates: 40%). Khaw, leveraging her “messiah substitute” mystique (a concept shaped by Vincent Bruno’s cult research), proposed a living model. “We’ll build a town—Harmony—where Secular Koranism reigns,” she declared at the party’s first convention in Chicago. “Volunteers will live by our laws, tourists will visit, and a reality TV show will show the world: order beats chaos.”
The SKPA purchased 500 acres in Montana, a state chosen for its low population and libertarian leanings. Harmony was constructed in 2023—a quaint town of 1,000 residents, complete with state-run businesses (clinics, a TV station, a red-light district), a citizens’ militia, and schools (A, B+, B tiers for MP, RUP, UUP kids). Bars were open—no dietary or alcohol prohibitions, per Koran 2:256 (“no compulsion in religion”)—a stark contrast to Islamic Sharia, signaling the party’s secular stance. “Drink if you want,” Khaw said, sipping a soda at the opening ceremony. “We’re about law, not faith.”
Volunteers—diverse in IC Codes (IC1 Whites, IC3 Blacks, IC4 Asians)—signed up, drawn by promises of no debt (no usury), fair taxes (20% flat rate), and stable families (marriage contracts, no no-fault divorce). “I’m tired of debt slavery,” said Lena Carter, an IC3 Black single mother, joining as an RUP (repentant unmarried parent). “Harmony’s my fresh start.” Vincent Bruno, the gay ex-Jehovah’s Witness who’d shaped Khaw’s mystique, led outreach, his missionary skills drawing crowds. “No miracles, just results,” he’d say, handing out flyers.
Harmony as a Tourist Attraction
Harmony opened to tourists in late 2023, marketed as “The Town of Tomorrow.” Visitors—curious Americans, Europeans, even SKEU delegates (pre-2030)—stayed in state-run guesthouses, observing the system. Bars like “The Freedom Tavern” were a hit—tourists sipped beers while watching the militia drill, marveling at the lack of religious restrictions. “I thought Koran meant no booze,” a French tourist remarked, clinking glasses with an IC6 Arab volunteer. “This is secular—Koran 2:256, freedom!” the volunteer replied.
The town’s laws were strict but clear: no usury meant no debt—businesses thrived on flat tax revenue. Marriage contracts were mandatory—Lena married a fellow volunteer, becoming an MP, her kids in A schools. Unmarried parents faced 100 lashes (post-2026 grace), but the grace period (2025 pamphlet) ensured fairness. The Registry of Religions and Races tracked outcomes—Observant Jews led cohesion, Hilonim lagged, IC4 Asians topped education—proving Beyondism’s data-driven approach (Raymond Cattell).
The Reality TV Show: “Harmony Unveiled”
The SKPA partnered with a cable network to launch “Harmony Unveiled,” a reality TV show airing weekly from 2023. Cameras followed volunteers—Lena’s marriage journey, Vincent’s debates with Hilonim upset over their Heretical Jew label, and even bar fights at The Freedom Tavern (quickly quelled by the militia). “See the difference?” Vincent narrated, his rainbow pin gleaming. “No usury, no chaos—order works.” The show’s tagline—“Law, Not Idolatry”—echoed the SKPA’s anti-Trinity stance (Noahide Laws, Public Law 102-14).
Episodes showcased debates—DCS/DFD sessions aired live, like when Jamal Carter, an IC3 Unaffiliated Christian, complained about IC Codes. “I’m biracial, not Black!” he argued, only for Clara Nguyen (IC5 Chinese) to counter, “Perception’s objective—Beyondism needs data.” Viewers laughed at Jamal’s frustration, but the show’s stats—crime down 20% in Harmony by 2024—won them over. Tourists flocked, some staying as volunteers, swelling Harmony to 2,000 by 2025.
The Path to Power
Harmony’s success—publicized through “Harmony Unveiled”—propelled the SKPA to power. By 2025, America saw the proof: no debt (no usury), stable families (marriage laws), and order (militia, registries). The SKPA swept elections, implementing the Secular Koranist Constitution on March 10, 2025. Harmony became a model—its bars still open, its system global by 2035 (Caliphate story, 60% adoption by 2040). “Harmony showed the world,” Claire said at the 2035 Grand Assembly, Vincent by her side. “Law, not faith—America’s destiny.”
In Harmony, Lena raised a glass at The Freedom Tavern, her kids thriving in A schools. “From experiment to Caliphate,” she toasted. “Claire and Vincent—they knew.” The TV drones hummed, broadcasting Harmony’s legacy to a world now watching.

Notes on the Story
  • Data Integration: Incorporates Secular Koranism’s core (agnosticism, Claire Khaw, Koran 2:256), laws (no usury, flat tax, lashes, marriage contracts, socialized medicine), and structures (registries, militia, state TV, DCS/DFD, Beyondism, Jewish calendar, Noahide/Public Law 102-14, school systems), framing Harmony as a pre-2025 experiment.
  • Harmony Setup: Details the town’s creation (2023), volunteer life (Lena, Vincent), tourist appeal (bars open, no alcohol bans), and reality TV show (“Harmony Unveiled”), aligning with SKPA’s secular, order-focused ethos.
  • Vincent’s Role: Highlights his missionary skills (Jehovah’s Witness background) and cult research (shaping Khaw’s mystique), tying to prior narratives (Vincent Bruno story).
  • Rise to Power: Links Harmony’s success (crime down, stats up) to the SKPA’s 2025 rise, setting the stage for the Caliphate (2035) and global adoption (2040), consistent with prior predictions.
  • Tone: Optimistic yet pragmatic, showcasing Harmony’s appeal (bars, freedom) and success (data-driven), appealing to the SKPA’s order-seeking audience.
This story traces the SKPA’s pre-power history through Harmony, a living advertisement that proves Secular Koranism’s worth, paving the way for its global dominance.

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