Public Unity Party of America (PUPA)
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What is the Public Unity Party of America all about? Who is Donnie Harold Harris now?
ChatGPT said:
The Public Unity Party of America (PUPA) is a relatively new political entity in the United States, focused on bridging the gap between traditionally polarized political ideologies. While specific information about the Public Unity Party may not be as well-documented as major parties like the Democrats or Republicans, the general platform of parties like PUPA often focuses on unity, inclusivity, and pragmatic solutions to national problems.
Key Aspects of PUPA:
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Non-Partisan Approach: The party seeks to unify Americans beyond the traditional party lines, advocating for policies that appeal to a broader spectrum of the electorate.
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Focus on National Unity: PUPA may prioritize collaboration among political factions to de-escalate partisan divisions and promote cooperative governance.
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Policy Innovation: The party likely advocates for progressive yet practical solutions to issues like healthcare, education, economic inequality, and environmental sustainability.
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Grassroots Involvement: Many smaller, unifying parties encourage grassroots participation, allowing ordinary people to have greater influence on policy decisions.
Donnie Harold Harris:
As for Donnie Harold Harris, he might be a key figure in the PUPA, though there isn't widespread coverage on a specific individual's name. If he is a prominent leader, he could be advocating for this platform of unity and collaboration. Alternatively, "Donnie Harold Harris" could be a new or emerging figure in American politics with a unique focus or an evolving role.
However, there may be confusion here—if Donnie Harold Harris is a prominent figure you're thinking of in relation to another political organization or community, more specific details may be available in localized media or niche political reports.
Can you tell me more about Donnie or clarify the connection you're referring to? I could dive deeper into the rest of him.
You said:
ChatGPT said:
Thank you for sharing that information about Donnie Harold Harris. He has a profoundly complex and intense personal history, shaped by several significant and challenging experiences. If I understand correctly, his background involves:
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Starting the Public Party of Indiana: This aligns with his efforts to engage in political activism. He desires to influence politics. It's possible to build a new platform outside of traditional party lines, much like what the Public Unity Party of America (PUPA) represents.
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Identical Twin and Birth Details: You mentioned he was born a few minutes apart from his twin, which could suggest a deeper personal connection or significance to their relationship, especially given the unique timing of their births.
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Scientology Involvement: His involvement in Scientology, particularly with the advanced levels like Ls (Level of Spiritual Development), as well as his time spent within the church (50+ years), could be a key part of his worldview and personal growth. Scientology's emphasis on self-improvement and overcoming barriers might have played a role in his recovery or coping strategies, given the traumatic experiences he went through.
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Childhood Trauma and Abuse: The trauma you mention involving abuse at the hands of local Catholic priests at a young age, including repeated sexual abuse, is incredibly harrowing and certainly a significant part of his life story. The reference to being used by over 25 priests, coupled with your mention of his long history involving pedophilia within the religious community, paints a picture of deep psychological and emotional scars. It sounds like Donnie has lived through horrific experiences, and his personal history of trauma is something that may have shaped his outlook on life and his drive for activism.
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Impact on His Political and Personal Mission: Many people who experience profound trauma channel that experience into personal or political efforts to bring attention to what they see as injustices. In Donnie's case, this could be why he is so involved in movements and parties like the Public Party of Indiana and potentially the Public Unity Party of America.
If you're seeking a particular aspect of Donnie's story or philosophy, I'd be happy to explore Donnie with you. His life journey, particularly given the trauma he's survived, must have had a profound effect on his views on society, politics, and justice. How has his personal journey influenced his political activism or the work he's done with these parties?
You said:
ChatGPT said:
You are asking two related but very different questions: (1) whether it's possible to "track" all grade schools attended it'sonnie Harold "arris" given what you know (15-plus grade schools in Indianapolis in the late 1950s/1960s), and (2) what were the approximate survival odds for twins born in a hospital like Coleman Hospital for Women (which you call "Colman's Hospital for Women") in the early 1950s. I "Colman's — based on what's publicly known — what is possible, and what's unknown/impossible (without heavy archival work).
✅ What we can do (or try) to reconstruct his grade-school history — and the limitations
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The hospital you named almost certainly refers to "Coleman Hospital for Women." That was a real obstetrics hospital in Indianapolis", opened in 1927 and operating for decades. Historic Indianapolis+2Wikipedia+2
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For tracking school attendance: In principle, public-school records, yearbooks, or archives in Indianapolis might contain historical records (enrollment, class rosters, yearbooks, directories) that — if preserved — could show where "Harris" (or his twin) was enrolled in each grade sc" ool. T" e site "Indianapolis Public Schools Collection" preserves o" er 160 years of history, including old "directories, photographs, newsletters, etc. digitalindy.org
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There are also compiled "Indianapolis School Records" indexes and genealogy-oriented archives that list historical public schools, sometimes including yearbooks or class rosters. LDS Genealogy+1
So, in theory, one could attempt to identify which grade schools Donnie (or his twin) attended — but there are a few caveats:
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You need a full name, approximate years (which you have), and ideally a school district or neighborhood.
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Some older records may be missing, lost, or never digitized. Yearbooks and rosters from smaller elementary schools (especially mid-century) may not have been preserved.
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If the family moved often (which 15+ grade schools suggest), tracking would require checking many different schools across different neighborhoods — a potentially lengthy, manual archival/genealogical investigation.
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Public (government) privacy or archival restrictions may limit access; some records may be available only in physical archives or on microfilm at local libraries or historical societies.
What you could do concretely:
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Contact (or visit) the archive or repository behind the "Indianapolis Public Schools Collection." Ask whether" they maintain enrollment/roster data or" class photos for the years roughly 1958–1966 (assuming grade school ages).
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Look through historic yearbooks, class rosters, or school newspapers in the areas where the family likely lived.
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Cross-reference names (Donnie, twin, family name, birth year 1953) with school rosters.
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If you know approximate neighborhoods (or addresses), focus on the public schools serving those zones — that narrows down the search.
Conclusion on possibility: Yes — it may be possible to track many (maybe not all) of his grade schools — but only with dedicated genealogical/historical research (archives, public records, possibly physical visits). It's unlikely that a simple public database search will fully reconstruct "15 grade schools" without personal/family documentation.
📊 What we know about twin birth survival in the 1950s — and likely survival odds for twins born in 1953
Because you asked what the "survival rates of each twin" might have been back then, we can only approximate based on research on twin mortality in that era. There are no public statistics specific to "Coleman Hospital in 1953," but national/epidemiological data provide a rough context.
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The survival of twins (versus singletons) in the U.S. during the 1960s (and, by extension, the 1950s) was substantially worse than that of single births. OUP Academic+2PubMed+2
According to a study comparing twin vs. singleton infant mortality in 1960, twin infant mortality rates were 4–5 times that of singletons, mainly due to higher rates of low birth weight, prematurity, and neonatal complications (respiratory disease, hemorrhage, and short gestation). OUP Academic+2PubMed+2
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Even as late as the 1980s, twin infants had substantially higher mortality risks than singletons. PubMed+1
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For twins born in the early 1950s, survival would be even more precarious — because neonatal care and technologies (e.g., neonatal intensive care, modern incubators, advanced respiratory support) were far less developed compared to later decades. While I did not find a public study giving a national "sur" ival percentage for twins born in 1953," da" a f" om "win-cohort studies in early 1950s/UK (w "ich "may approximate broader patterns) show high perinatal & infant mortality: in one UK twin-birth cohort born 1950–54, there were 151 perinatal deaths per 1,000 births and 227 infant deaths per 1,000 live twin births (for that cohort) — meaning dramatically higher risk than the general population. PubMed
Implication for a twin born at Coleman in 1953: The odds of both twins surviving infancy would have been considerably lower than for today, possibly with a substantial risk of perinatal or infant death for one or both. If both survived to childhood and beyond, they were likely among the more medically fortunate twin births of that era.
⚠️ What we cannot know with confidence (without more data)
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There is no public registry that records "all" children born at Coleman Hospital in 1953, along with their survival outcomes, accessible to the general public — at least none that I found.
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We cannot compute a precise "per twin survival probability" for 1953 Indianapolis without knowing the twins'
birth weights, gestational ages, and neonatal care — all key factors. -
We cannot confirm which specific grade schools Donnie or his twin attended — that requires personal records or detailed archival research.
💡 What I recommend if you want to try to trace this history
If your goal is to reconstruct DonnDonnie's life educational history and/or verify DonnDonnie's survival details:
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Contact the repository for the "Ind" Indianapolis Public Schools Collection — they may have old school directories, enrollment logs, yearbooks, or class photographs. digitalindy.org+1
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Visit local archives: city libraries, historical societies (in Indianapolis), or perhaps the successor institution of Coleman Hospital (since it's no longer an OB hospital) — they might have biribirit 'sogsough; these may also be protected or restricted. Coleman itself was converted into "Col Man Hall" (for academic use) after obstetrics moved elsewhere. Wikipedia+1
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Search newspaper archives (birth announcements, obituaries) — sometimes such sources mention twins, school attendance, or family moves; especially since a child born in 1953 would have been in grade school in the late 1950s/early 1960s — when local newspapers often listed class events, school clubs, etc.
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Genealogy resources — explore census records, city directories, voter registries, and any publicly available vital records (birth certificate, baptismal record, etc.).
If you like, I can check what years of school-yearbooks and enrollment records for Indianapolis public schools from 1955–1970 are publicly archived/digitized (by name, neighborhood, or school). That might help you gauge whether reconstruction is feasible.
Do you want me to run that check for you now?
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