As far back as I, or our Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great,
Grand-Mothers can remember as children while going to school, they,
and we were all told and taught, especially in school, to understand
beyond any shadow of a doubt, that if we were to use the national
education that we were acquiring in our own country or use our social
or civil stature, (elected position especially) or any combination of these
to question, declare war on, and attack the U.S. Constitution in any way,
that we would be committing treason against the People, the United
States, our Country, and the continued existence of our way of life as set
into motion by the Founding Fathers of this country. Such an act was
most assuredly considered treason by any measure of the law and the
only mercy that one might be shown was that, depending upon which
state you were from, rather than being hung by the neck until you were
dead you might instead only spend the rest of your natural born life
incarcerated with no possibility for parole.
Is using your nationally acquired education and social civil stature in
the United States of America to enter into a courtroom to attack the
U.S. Constitution—in all actuality—an act of treason; and if so, why
haven’t those who have used their education and their social civil stature,
especially U.S. Born Citizens, U.S. Attorneys, or anyone else, (to include
the elect) been arrested by the U.S. Army once they have walked out
of the courtroom, or once they have worked to have passed laws and
legislation that undermine The U.S. Constitution from an elected public
office?? Why have these people not been arrested?
“There is not a syllable in the plan under consideration which directly
empowers the national courts to construe the laws according to the spirit of
the Constitution. The fabric of American empire ought to rest on the solid
basis of the consent of the people. The streams of national power ought
to flow immediately from that pure, original fountain of all legislative
authority.”—Alexander Hamilton:—Founding Father, first United States
Secretary of the Treasury, was one of America’s first Constitutional lawyers, and
cowrote the Federalist Papers, a primary source for Constitutional interpretation.
Since the beginning of our country’s history and the founding of this
great country itself, it was through overwhelming odds and great struggle
that America has become the nation of truth, justice and freedom that
we all call home today. The men who got down on their knees and
petitioned Heaven when writing and authoring the Declaration, the
Constitution, and its Bill of Rights had good reason to fear that the
policies contained within the very documents they were building might
be attacked. Thomas Jefferson, in his own words, pointed out clearly
that the U.S. Constitution was framed to restrict future leaders from
altering or perverting the God given freedoms of the people. That this
document and its contents were resolute, that each amendment in
order of succession to the preamble were to ultimately bind the elected
government (who themselves are normal everyday people) from removing
state or national power from out of the hands of the people through
alteration and/or any later manipulation of the law(s) with the ordination
and the ratified consecrated establishment of the U.S. Constitution.
“Free government is founded in jealousy, not confidence. It is jealousy
and not confidence which prescribes limited constitutions, to bind those
we are obliged to trust with power . . . . In questions of power, then,
let no more be heard of confidence in men, but bind him down from
mischief by the chains of the Constitution.”—Thomas Jefferson, 1799
It is obvious with such a statement as that made above, that this
document was to be jealously guarded. Not ever to be altered in any
way, or form, by anyone. Especially not to favor the electoral governing
body, nor was it to be placed under the scrutiny of courtroom exhibitions
that question its political or religious references in regard to its moral
and spiritual foundation no matter what the inquiry, especially from
within the confines of the national body that it was both governed by
and that it governed to protect. This document was an outline prepared
by the people, for the people, to protect the people from having
some unfavorable individual(s) working from within the confines of
government to remove or pervert the physical and/or spiritual GOD
given free rights of the people.
“The Constitution is not an instrument for the government to
restrain the people, it is an instrument for the people to restrain the
government—lest it [the government]come to dominate our lives
and interests.”.”—Patrick Henry: United States Founding Father—
(1736—1799) served as the first and sixth post-colonial Governor of Virginia
from 1776 to 1779 and 1784 to 1786. Henry is known and remembered for
his “Give me Liberty, or give me Death!” speech. Along with Samuel Adams
and Thomas Paine, he is remembered as one of the most influential, radical
advocates of the American Revolution and republicanism, especially in his
denunciations of corruption in government officials
The Constitution was created to bind any and all of the elected
party from creating mischief in the form of laws, regulations, tariffs,
proclamations, or mandates that might otherwise compromise the
dexterity of the freedom of the people, the U.S. Constitution, the
Declaration of Independence, or the United States of America Herself.
And it was also obvious by their statements that they knew that these
sorts of oppressive trespasses would eventually come from the same
quarter as that as they had just fought their way free from.
“The two enemies of the people are criminals and government, so
let us tie the second down with the chains of the Constitution so the
second will not become the legalized version of the first.”—Thomas
Jefferson: Founding Father