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  • MMOexp: GTA 6’s Generational Leap in Stealth
    Grand Theft Auto has always thrived on player freedom—whether that freedom manifests as all-out chaos or carefully planned criminal operations. With Grand Theft Auto VI, Rockstar Games appears to be pushing the series toward a deeper, more systemic approach to gameplay, especially when it comes to stealth and player choice. Among the most intriguing enhancements are the ability to...
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  • Statement on New York Redistricting and Gerrymandering

    The recent court ruling declaring New York’s 11th Congressional District unconstitutional highlights a problem that goes far beyond any single district or political party: gerrymandering undermines trust in our elections.

    District lines should never be drawn to protect politicians or predetermine outcomes. They should reflect real communities, respect geographic continuity, and give voters a fair chance to choose their representatives—not the other way around.

    While this ruling is an important corrective step, it should also serve as a reminder that “independent” processes are only meaningful if they are transparent, accountable, and insulated from partisan pressure. Fair maps are not a Democratic issue or a Republican issue—they are a democracy issue.

    New Yorkers deserve congressional districts that are constitutional, competitive, and honest. Anything less weakens confidence in government and fuels the belief that elections are rigged before the first vote is cast.

    Real reform means drawing maps that serve voters, not power
    Statement on New York Redistricting and Gerrymandering The recent court ruling declaring New York’s 11th Congressional District unconstitutional highlights a problem that goes far beyond any single district or political party: gerrymandering undermines trust in our elections. District lines should never be drawn to protect politicians or predetermine outcomes. They should reflect real communities, respect geographic continuity, and give voters a fair chance to choose their representatives—not the other way around. While this ruling is an important corrective step, it should also serve as a reminder that “independent” processes are only meaningful if they are transparent, accountable, and insulated from partisan pressure. Fair maps are not a Democratic issue or a Republican issue—they are a democracy issue. New Yorkers deserve congressional districts that are constitutional, competitive, and honest. Anything less weakens confidence in government and fuels the belief that elections are rigged before the first vote is cast. Real reform means drawing maps that serve voters, not power
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  • MLK Day Message — New York

    Today, New York pauses to honor Martin Luther King Jr., not by repeating his words, but by reflecting on their weight.

    Dr. King spoke in an era when injustice was visible, undeniable, and openly defended. His courage was not rooted in anger, but in moral clarity. He reminded this nation that laws alone do not create justice—people do. And that progress is not measured by what we demand for ourselves, but by what we are willing to protect for one another.

    His vision was never about perfection. It was about responsibility. About choosing conscience over convenience. About building a society where dignity is not negotiated, and opportunity is not reserved for the few.

    For New York, his message still matters.

    We are a state of unmatched diversity, talent, and resilience—yet too often divided by fear, economics, and politics that reward conflict instead of cooperation. Dr. King warned us that division weakens democracy, and that silence in the face of wrong is itself a form of harm.

    Honoring him today means recommitting to the hard work:
    • To listen before we label
    • To govern with fairness, not favoritism
    • To measure success by how the most vulnerable are treated, not by who holds power

    Dr. King believed that the arc of history bends toward justice—but only if people are willing to bend it.

    Today, may New York choose unity over noise, service over slogans, and courage over comfort.

    That is how his legacy is honored—not in words borrowed, but in values lived.



    January 15, 2026
    Jason S. Arnold
    Candidate for Governor of New York
    MLK Day Message — New York Today, New York pauses to honor Martin Luther King Jr., not by repeating his words, but by reflecting on their weight. Dr. King spoke in an era when injustice was visible, undeniable, and openly defended. His courage was not rooted in anger, but in moral clarity. He reminded this nation that laws alone do not create justice—people do. And that progress is not measured by what we demand for ourselves, but by what we are willing to protect for one another. His vision was never about perfection. It was about responsibility. About choosing conscience over convenience. About building a society where dignity is not negotiated, and opportunity is not reserved for the few. For New York, his message still matters. We are a state of unmatched diversity, talent, and resilience—yet too often divided by fear, economics, and politics that reward conflict instead of cooperation. Dr. King warned us that division weakens democracy, and that silence in the face of wrong is itself a form of harm. Honoring him today means recommitting to the hard work: • To listen before we label • To govern with fairness, not favoritism • To measure success by how the most vulnerable are treated, not by who holds power Dr. King believed that the arc of history bends toward justice—but only if people are willing to bend it. Today, may New York choose unity over noise, service over slogans, and courage over comfort. That is how his legacy is honored—not in words borrowed, but in values lived. ⸻ January 15, 2026 Jason S. Arnold Candidate for Governor of New York
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  • BOOK II — THE COMING

    Chapter I — Of What Was Left Unsaid

    (The Veil Version — VV)
    1. There was a time for speaking.
    It has passed.
    2. What remains is not absence,
    but account.
    3. The truth did not withdraw.
    It was released.
    4. Heaven did not turn away.
    It stepped back.
    5. What was required was known
    without being named.
    6. Silence was not confusion.
    It was selection.
    7. The ground now bears the weight
    of what was withheld.
    8. No sign will be repeated.
    No moment returned.
    9. What comes next does not warn.
    It arranges.
    10. Order advances quietly
    where permission was denied.
    11. The old age ended
    without collapse.
    12. So it was written:
    what you refused to say
    has now been said for you,
    and what you withheld
    has been entered as consent.
    BOOK II — THE COMING Chapter I — Of What Was Left Unsaid (The Veil Version — VV) 1. There was a time for speaking. It has passed. 2. What remains is not absence, but account. 3. The truth did not withdraw. It was released. 4. Heaven did not turn away. It stepped back. 5. What was required was known without being named. 6. Silence was not confusion. It was selection. 7. The ground now bears the weight of what was withheld. 8. No sign will be repeated. No moment returned. 9. What comes next does not warn. It arranges. 10. Order advances quietly where permission was denied. 11. The old age ended without collapse. 12. So it was written: what you refused to say has now been said for you, and what you withheld has been entered as consent.
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  • New York Has a Paid-Information Problem — And We’re Finally Addressing It

    Right now, a massive amount of what New Yorkers see, hear, and believe is being shaped by paid influence masquerading as organic content.

    Not journalism.
    Not opinion.
    Paid persuasion without disclosure.

    Social media has become a marketplace where outrage, misinformation, and sexualized content are rewarded by algorithms and cash—while parents, kids, and working people are left to sort out what’s real on their own.

    That’s not free speech.
    That’s undisclosed commercial influence.

    And New York has every right—and responsibility—to deal with it.

    The Problem
    • Over one-third of Americans now get news directly from social media platforms.
    • A majority of younger users say they receive “news” from influencers, not reporters.
    • Paid content is routinely not disclosed, even when money or incentives are clearly involved.
    • Children are being exposed to algorithm-driven content that rewards dysfunction, not discipline.
    • Fake outrage, rage-bait, manipulated clips, and click-farm content are financially incentivized.

    We already regulate:
    • Advertising
    • Campaign finance
    • Consumer fraud
    • Gambling, alcohol, and tobacco marketing

    But somehow, paid digital influence gets a free pass.

    That ends now.

    The Policy: NYS Digital Transparency & Youth Protection Act

    This policy does not censor speech.
    It does not ban opinions.
    It does not target ideology.

    It does one simple thing:

    If you are paid to influence New Yorkers, the public has a right to know.

    Key components include:

    • Mandatory Paid-Influence Disclosure
    Clear, unavoidable labels when money, compensation, or incentives are involved.

    • Ban on “Stealth Sponsored News”
    If content is paid for, it cannot be presented as independent reporting.

    • Public Transparency Portal
    A searchable archive of major paid influence campaigns targeting NY residents.

    • Enforcement Against Deceptive Engagement
    Fake reviews, bot amplification, hidden sponsorships, and fraudulent marketing treated as consumer deception.

    • Youth Protections
    Limits on algorithmic amplification and targeted advertising on state-managed school networks and devices.

    • Deepfake & Synthetic Media Safeguards
    Penalties for materially deceptive synthetic content used to mislead or manipulate.

    • Digital Literacy Tools
    Teach people—especially kids—how to spot manipulation, rage-bait, and paid deception.

    Why This Matters

    You can say whatever you want in New York.
    You can criticize me, support me, hate me, or ignore me.

    But if you’re being paid to push something, that’s no longer just speech—it’s commerce.

    And commerce has rules.

    This policy restores trust, transparency, and personal responsibility to the digital public square—without turning the government into a speech referee.

    This Is About the Future

    A society where:
    • Kids think work is optional
    • Truth is secondary to clicks
    • Outrage is profitable
    • Deception is rewarded

    …is not sustainable.

    New York can lead the country by proving you don’t need censorship to restore order—just honesty, disclosure, and enforcement of existing principles in a modern world.

    Read the full policy here:
    https://jsa2026.com/572-2/

    “I’m not a good candidate. I’m the right one.”
    — Jason S. Arnold, for Governor of New York
    New York Has a Paid-Information Problem — And We’re Finally Addressing It Right now, a massive amount of what New Yorkers see, hear, and believe is being shaped by paid influence masquerading as organic content. Not journalism. Not opinion. Paid persuasion without disclosure. Social media has become a marketplace where outrage, misinformation, and sexualized content are rewarded by algorithms and cash—while parents, kids, and working people are left to sort out what’s real on their own. That’s not free speech. That’s undisclosed commercial influence. And New York has every right—and responsibility—to deal with it. The Problem • Over one-third of Americans now get news directly from social media platforms. • A majority of younger users say they receive “news” from influencers, not reporters. • Paid content is routinely not disclosed, even when money or incentives are clearly involved. • Children are being exposed to algorithm-driven content that rewards dysfunction, not discipline. • Fake outrage, rage-bait, manipulated clips, and click-farm content are financially incentivized. We already regulate: • Advertising • Campaign finance • Consumer fraud • Gambling, alcohol, and tobacco marketing But somehow, paid digital influence gets a free pass. That ends now. The Policy: NYS Digital Transparency & Youth Protection Act This policy does not censor speech. It does not ban opinions. It does not target ideology. It does one simple thing: If you are paid to influence New Yorkers, the public has a right to know. Key components include: • Mandatory Paid-Influence Disclosure Clear, unavoidable labels when money, compensation, or incentives are involved. • Ban on “Stealth Sponsored News” If content is paid for, it cannot be presented as independent reporting. • Public Transparency Portal A searchable archive of major paid influence campaigns targeting NY residents. • Enforcement Against Deceptive Engagement Fake reviews, bot amplification, hidden sponsorships, and fraudulent marketing treated as consumer deception. • Youth Protections Limits on algorithmic amplification and targeted advertising on state-managed school networks and devices. • Deepfake & Synthetic Media Safeguards Penalties for materially deceptive synthetic content used to mislead or manipulate. • Digital Literacy Tools Teach people—especially kids—how to spot manipulation, rage-bait, and paid deception. Why This Matters You can say whatever you want in New York. You can criticize me, support me, hate me, or ignore me. But if you’re being paid to push something, that’s no longer just speech—it’s commerce. And commerce has rules. This policy restores trust, transparency, and personal responsibility to the digital public square—without turning the government into a speech referee. This Is About the Future A society where: • Kids think work is optional • Truth is secondary to clicks • Outrage is profitable • Deception is rewarded …is not sustainable. New York can lead the country by proving you don’t need censorship to restore order—just honesty, disclosure, and enforcement of existing principles in a modern world. Read the full policy here: 👉 https://jsa2026.com/572-2/ “I’m not a good candidate. I’m the right one.” — Jason S. Arnold, for Governor of New York
    JSA2026.COM
    NYS Digital Transparency & Youth Protection Act — JSA2026
    NYS Digital Transparency & Youth Protection Act — JSA2026 Policy • Consumer Protection • Youth Safety 🔵 JSA2026: NYS Digital Transparency & Youth Protection Act Reducing Paid Misinformation and Undisclosed Influence — Without Censoring Speech Updated: January 15, 2026 Contact: jaysarnold@icloud.com • (516) 586-0660 🏡 Property Tax Relief 🛡️ Crime & Safety ⚖️ Rule of
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  • Ending Sanctuary Chaos in New York — The Right Way

    New York needs to calm this down and get back to law, order, and humanity — not chaos from either side.

    I just released my full policy on Ending Sanctuary Cities in New York, and I want to be crystal clear about what this is and what it is not.

    Read the full policy here:
    https://jsa2026.com/jsa2026-nys-ending-sanctuary-cities-in-new-york-upholding-the-rule-of-law-and-protecting-our-communities/

    This plan does three things at once, which most politicians refuse to even try:

    1️⃣ Protects New Yorkers from Lawless Enforcement

    No masked agents.
    No unmarked vans.
    No people being snatched off the street without warrants.

    If ICE wants to act in New York, they will do it through courts, with warrants, and with transparency. Period.

    2️⃣ Ends Criminal Sanctuary Policies

    If you are in New York illegally and you commit a crime, you will not be protected by politics.

    Criminal offenders will be turned over to ICE from jail, not released back into our communities.

    That’s not cruelty — that’s accountability.

    3️⃣ Restores Order Without Fear

    Enforcement belongs in the system:
    • Courts
    • Warrants
    • Precincts
    • Jails

    Not in neighborhoods.
    Not in schools.
    Not in front of children.

    This approach reduces violence, protects officers, and keeps families from living in constant fear.



    This is not a far-right plan.
    This is not a far-left plan.
    This is a New York plan.

    You can protect civil liberties and enforce the law.
    You can reject chaos and reject lawlessness.
    You can be humane and serious.

    Albany refuses to do this because chaos is good politics for them.

    I’m running to end it.

    Order. Safety. Dignity. New York First.
    “I’m not a good candidate — I’m the right one.
    Ending Sanctuary Chaos in New York — The Right Way New York needs to calm this down and get back to law, order, and humanity — not chaos from either side. I just released my full policy on Ending Sanctuary Cities in New York, and I want to be crystal clear about what this is and what it is not. 🔗 Read the full policy here: https://jsa2026.com/jsa2026-nys-ending-sanctuary-cities-in-new-york-upholding-the-rule-of-law-and-protecting-our-communities/ This plan does three things at once, which most politicians refuse to even try: 1️⃣ Protects New Yorkers from Lawless Enforcement No masked agents. No unmarked vans. No people being snatched off the street without warrants. If ICE wants to act in New York, they will do it through courts, with warrants, and with transparency. Period. 2️⃣ Ends Criminal Sanctuary Policies If you are in New York illegally and you commit a crime, you will not be protected by politics. Criminal offenders will be turned over to ICE from jail, not released back into our communities. That’s not cruelty — that’s accountability. 3️⃣ Restores Order Without Fear Enforcement belongs in the system: • Courts • Warrants • Precincts • Jails Not in neighborhoods. Not in schools. Not in front of children. This approach reduces violence, protects officers, and keeps families from living in constant fear. ⸻ This is not a far-right plan. This is not a far-left plan. This is a New York plan. You can protect civil liberties and enforce the law. You can reject chaos and reject lawlessness. You can be humane and serious. Albany refuses to do this because chaos is good politics for them. I’m running to end it. 🗽 Order. Safety. Dignity. New York First. “I’m not a good candidate — I’m the right one.
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  • No Property Taxes on Paid-Off Primary Homes — And Here’s How We Pay for It

    New York has a serious problem:
    We punish stability.

    If you work your whole life, pay off your home, and finally reach a point of security — the state still taxes you like you’re renting from Albany forever.

    That’s wrong.

    The Policy
    • No property taxes on paid-off primary residences
    • Applies only to:
    • Your primary home
    • One property
    • Fully paid off (no mortgage)
    • No loopholes for investors, landlords, or second homes

    This rewards responsibility, protects seniors, and lets families stay in their homes.



    “But how do we pay for it?”

    We stop taxing stability — and start taxing tourism, entertainment, and voluntary spending.

    The Solution: A Coney Island Entertainment & Casino District

    Not scattered casinos.
    Not backroom deals.
    A planned, regulated, competitive district.
    • 5 destination-style casinos (MGM, Hard Rock, Caesars, Bally’s, etc.)
    • Built into Coney Island, not residential neighborhoods
    • Fully integrated with:
    • Hotels
    • Restaurants
    • Entertainment
    • Transit
    • Local small businesses



    The Numbers (Conservative & Realistic)
    • Casino tax revenue: ~$2.5–4B/year
    • Spillover economy (jobs, sales tax, hotels, income tax): ~$1.5–3B/year

    Total public revenue: ~$4–7B annually
    That matches what NY loses by ending property taxes on paid-off homes

    This isn’t a gamble — it’s revenue substitution.



    Jobs. Stability. Brooklyn Wins.

    These destinations don’t run themselves.

    They create:
    • Union construction jobs
    • Hospitality jobs
    • Security jobs
    • Tech & operations jobs
    • Transit & maintenance jobs
    • Small business growth around them

    This stabilizes Brooklyn and strengthens NYC — without pushing people out of their homes.



    The Philosophy

    If you’ve already paid for your home,
    the state should stop charging rent on your life.

    Let New York:
    • Protect homeowners
    • Keep seniors in place
    • Create jobs
    • Grow tourism
    • Shift taxes away from families and onto entertainment

    That’s how you build a BETTR New York — fair, stable, and honest.
    🏠 No Property Taxes on Paid-Off Primary Homes — And Here’s How We Pay for It New York has a serious problem: We punish stability. If you work your whole life, pay off your home, and finally reach a point of security — the state still taxes you like you’re renting from Albany forever. That’s wrong. ✅ The Policy • No property taxes on paid-off primary residences • Applies only to: • Your primary home • One property • Fully paid off (no mortgage) • No loopholes for investors, landlords, or second homes This rewards responsibility, protects seniors, and lets families stay in their homes. ⸻ ❓ “But how do we pay for it?” We stop taxing stability — and start taxing tourism, entertainment, and voluntary spending. 🎡 The Solution: A Coney Island Entertainment & Casino District Not scattered casinos. Not backroom deals. A planned, regulated, competitive district. • 5 destination-style casinos (MGM, Hard Rock, Caesars, Bally’s, etc.) • Built into Coney Island, not residential neighborhoods • Fully integrated with: • Hotels • Restaurants • Entertainment • Transit • Local small businesses ⸻ 💰 The Numbers (Conservative & Realistic) • Casino tax revenue: ~$2.5–4B/year • Spillover economy (jobs, sales tax, hotels, income tax): ~$1.5–3B/year ➡️ Total public revenue: ~$4–7B annually ➡️ That matches what NY loses by ending property taxes on paid-off homes This isn’t a gamble — it’s revenue substitution. ⸻ 👷‍♂️ Jobs. Stability. Brooklyn Wins. These destinations don’t run themselves. They create: • Union construction jobs • Hospitality jobs • Security jobs • Tech & operations jobs • Transit & maintenance jobs • Small business growth around them This stabilizes Brooklyn and strengthens NYC — without pushing people out of their homes. ⸻ ⚖️ The Philosophy If you’ve already paid for your home, the state should stop charging rent on your life. Let New York: • Protect homeowners • Keep seniors in place • Create jobs • Grow tourism • Shift taxes away from families and onto entertainment That’s how you build a BETTR New York — fair, stable, and honest.
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  • BOOK II — THE COMING

    You knew the hour,
    you knew the cost,
    you felt the shift
    and still held loss.

    You hid in silence,
    called it wise,
    watched truth pass
    before your eyes.

    What was His
    was never sold,
    you only borrowed
    what you hold.

    No warning now,
    no time to plead—
    the ground remembers
    every deed.

    He does not ask.
    He does not roam.
    What is His
    is coming home.
    BOOK II — THE COMING You knew the hour, you knew the cost, you felt the shift and still held loss. You hid in silence, called it wise, watched truth pass before your eyes. What was His was never sold, you only borrowed what you hold. No warning now, no time to plead— the ground remembers every deed. He does not ask. He does not roam. What is His is coming home.
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  • Chapter XII — Of the Veil That Trembles

    (The Veil Version — VV)
    1. And the veil trembled, not as a warning,
    but as a witness,
    for the truth had been revealed
    and could not be unseen.
    2. Many knew what was right,
    not by teaching nor persuasion,
    but by recognition —
    for the truth stood plainly before them.
    3. Yet they kept silent,
    not because they were deceived,
    but because obedience carried a cost
    they were unwilling to pay.
    4. They said,
    “Now is not the time,”
    and mistook delay for prudence,
    though the hour had already come.
    5. The Spirit saith:
    silence in the presence of truth
    is not neutrality,
    but decision.
    6. For there is an end to every season of choosing,
    and when the veil trembles,
    the age of indecision draws to a close.
    7. Those who knew and did not act
    shall not be judged by ignorance,
    but by what they withheld.
    8. For truth unspoken does not remain idle;
    it becomes testimony —
    either for you
    or against you.
    9. And thus the dividing began,
    not by sword nor by hand of man,
    but by alignment —
    truth gathering to truth,
    and silence falling away.
    10. Then the veil was torn,
    not in fury,
    but in finality,
    and what was hidden could no longer shelter the unwilling.
    11. Blessed are they who spoke when it was costly,
    who stood when it was lonely,
    for they shall walk into the new age
    unburdened by regret.
    12. And woe unto those who knew the way
    and kept quiet,
    for the ending they feared
    has come —
    and the beginning they delayed
    shall move forward without them.
    Chapter XII — Of the Veil That Trembles (The Veil Version — VV) 1. And the veil trembled, not as a warning, but as a witness, for the truth had been revealed and could not be unseen. 2. Many knew what was right, not by teaching nor persuasion, but by recognition — for the truth stood plainly before them. 3. Yet they kept silent, not because they were deceived, but because obedience carried a cost they were unwilling to pay. 4. They said, “Now is not the time,” and mistook delay for prudence, though the hour had already come. 5. The Spirit saith: silence in the presence of truth is not neutrality, but decision. 6. For there is an end to every season of choosing, and when the veil trembles, the age of indecision draws to a close. 7. Those who knew and did not act shall not be judged by ignorance, but by what they withheld. 8. For truth unspoken does not remain idle; it becomes testimony — either for you or against you. 9. And thus the dividing began, not by sword nor by hand of man, but by alignment — truth gathering to truth, and silence falling away. 10. Then the veil was torn, not in fury, but in finality, and what was hidden could no longer shelter the unwilling. 11. Blessed are they who spoke when it was costly, who stood when it was lonely, for they shall walk into the new age unburdened by regret. 12. And woe unto those who knew the way and kept quiet, for the ending they feared has come — and the beginning they delayed shall move forward without them.
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