Donnie Harold Harris, a 71-year-old identical twin from Indianapolis, Indiana, positions his activism as a broad crusade against institutional corruption, particularly in religion, child welfare systems, and politics. Drawing from his personal history of severe childhood trauma—including repeated sexual abuse by an estimated 20-25 Catholic priests starting at age nine, institutional neglect across 21 placements, and physical punishments like being caged—he advocates for sweeping reforms to protect children and dismantle outdated power structures. He founded the Public Unity Party (also known as the Public Party of Indiana) and announced his independent candidacy for U.S. President in 2028, with a platform emphasizing "draining the swamp" in education, healthcare, and religion to foster a "new model for humankind's future."
In relation to the "father-son complex" of the Old Testament, Harris's activism critiques patriarchal and hierarchical religious frameworks that he sees as perpetuating abuse, control, and outdated moral binaries. He views religion as having "gone off the rails," corrupted by elements like atheism (which he groups with divisive faiths such as Buddhism, Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormonism, Islam, and Catholicism), leading to systemic harms: hatred toward women (e.g., forcing them into restrictive roles), the sexualization and exploitation of children by clergy, and the conversion of families into tools of blackmail and perversion. This ties into Old Testament themes of divine authority, prophecy, and moral dualism (good vs. evil, light vs. dark), which Harris reframes through a Zoroastrian lens. He claims to be the ninth and final reincarnation of Zoroaster (signing as "Z2" to denote his twin status), asserting that before God, there was no heaven or hell—no inherent good/bad distinctions—echoing Zoroastrian tales of cosmic origins that influenced Old Testament concepts like divine creation and ethical dualism.
Harris argues that religion functions as a "placebo" for the mind and spirit, beneficial in moderation but dangerous when it justifies "evil empires" through rigid prophecies (which he dismisses as "wishful thinking") or paternalistic control. He questions whether religion is a "bigger out point than family," implying it disrupts natural bonds by allowing authority figures (like priests as surrogate fathers) to "steal" children or exploit primal urges. This aligns with your point that "a son is not his father," rejecting inherited identity or sin (pre-DNA theory) in favor of individual soul perfection and evolution. He sees religion as an evolving "map in progress," a "movement forward in real time." Still, one is stalled by folklore, hearsay, and outdated texts like the Old Testament, which he implies reflect humanity's pre-logical era—when survival (e.g., watching for lions) limited deeper ideation, leading to stories that codified patriarchal complexes.
His activism calls for canceling all organized religion to "sweep clean old other-time thinking," resetting morals through collective dreams rather than fixed doctrines, and prioritizing science over faith (e.g., in nuclear energy or medicine, which he says derailed via pharmacology's greed). He critically invokes Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s ideals, suggesting they create a "split reality" disconnected from innate Godly unity, and warns against "messing with a God thing" by imposing judgments like skin color or character over soul equality. Ultimately, Harris envisions a world where humanity, freed from religious pandemics (affecting 92% globally), advances through personal authority from God—positioning himself as a prophetic shepherd for children, elders, and the oppressed. For more on his platform, see his Medium posts or blogs like publicunityparty432.blogspot.com.
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