Showing posts with label Constitution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Constitution. Show all posts

Saturday, March 15, 2014

This Pretty Much Sums Up The Sad State Of The US Constitution

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This Pretty Much Sums Up The Sad State Of The US Constitution

Friday, February 21, 2014

Article V Convention: How “Individuals of Insidious Views” Are Stealing Our Constitution

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Article V Convention: How “Individuals of Insidious Views” Are Stealing Our Constitution

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Publius Huldah: Balanced Budget Amendments (BBA) Gut Our Constitution And Don’t Reduce Spending

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Publius Huldah: Balanced Budget Amendments (BBA) Gut Our Constitution And Don’t Reduce Spending

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Napolitano: President Can"t Order Drone Strike on American Under Constitution

President Barack Obama does not have the constitutional authority to order a drone strike on an American who officials claim was fighting with al-Qaida and plotting terrorist attacks against the U.S., former Judge Andrew Napolitano said Tuesday.

Obama “does not have war powers to kill an American . . . There are two clauses in the Constitution that specifically protect Americans,” Napolitano, a former New Jersey Superior Court judge, told “Fox & Friends.”


Napolitano said it was “defined as treason” if an American was waging war on the U.S. Under that circumstance, he said American citizens were guaranteed a jury trial and could not be convicted “unless there were two witnesses to the same overt act.”


Officials admitted Monday a U.S. citizen was suspected of actively planning to attack Americans overseas. Officials within the Obama administration stated they had been debating whether to kill him under a new drone strike policy.


The new drone policy stipulates targeted killings must be in an ongoing military conflict, the target must have taken up arms against the U.S., there must be no possibility of arresting the suspect, and the decision must be made by senior political leaders.


Napolitano said the drone policy was written by the president and, therefore, was not U.S. law. He said only the Constitution allowed Congress to write laws.


“Only the Congress can enact a law, especially a law giving the president authority to kill an American,” Napolitano said. “The president’s efforts to bypass the Constitution . . . in foreign affairs is just as unconstitutional as its efforts to bypass the Constitution in domestic affairs.”


The law allowed an American suspected of terrorism against the U.S. to be kidnapped, arrested, or put on trial, Napolitano said. However, to target a drone strike on an individual suspected of terrorism was “an insufficient basis to execute him without a trial.”


Napolitano argued that even if Congress authorized the action against the American suspect, “it would still be against the constitutional protections that he’s afforded.”


Related Stories:


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Newsmax – America



Napolitano: President Can"t Order Drone Strike on American Under Constitution

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

LOTFI: Tennessean newspaper columnists grossly misinterpret Constitution

54 minutes ago | Opinion, Politics, US | Posted by Michael Lotfi

TNCAPI


NASHVILLE, January 27, 2014—Recently, Tennessean columnists Gail Kerr and Phil Kramer both penned separate columns full of insults and name-calling, which equate to little less than political hit pieces against state Senator Beavers (R) in which the two grossly misinterpret critical facts surrounding the Health Care Freedom and Noncompliance Act (SB1888).


The two poorly attempt to repudiate the legislation, and in doing so, prove critical deficiency of a working knowledge of the U.S. Constitution and Supreme Court case law.


Kramer states in his column that the bill cannot fly because the federal government can commandeer state governments to carry out federal law. “I was taught this in public school. It is called The Supremacy Clause, which is part of Article VI of the Constitution. Basically, if a federal and state law contradicts, then the federal law is supreme,” wrote Kramer.


Kerr echoes Kramer’s interpretation of the Supremacy Clause: “It’s not just a bad bill, it’s almost certainly illegal. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act is constitutional. State laws cannot trump federal laws.”


First, the Supreme Court did not rule the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) constitutional. Clearly, the two have never read National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, which is the actual case, not what they have read in the headlines. The Court redefined the health care law to be interpreted as such, which was more suitable to the possibility of constitutionality. Therefore, as drafted by lobbyists and passed by Congress, the health care law is not found to be constitutional, as proven by the need to redefine the law by the Court, to the dissent of multiple Justices.


Second, a government run school taught that big government was supreme?  Shocking.


This supposed Supremacy Clause of the Constitution reads, “This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land…” (emphasis added).


Note these words in particular: “…shall be made in Pursuance thereof—this Constitution.” The federal Constitution delegates less than two dozen powers to the national government. Health care is not one of them. Health care is, in fact, a power of police, which are powers delegated to the state and local governments.


With regards to police powers, Justice Day wrote in Supreme Court opinion:


In interpreting the Constitution it must never be forgotten that the nation is made up of states, to which are entrusted the powers of local government. And to them and to the people the powers not expressly delegated to the national government are reserved. The power of the states to regulate their purely internal affairs by such laws as seem wise to the local authority is inherent, and has never been surrendered to the general government” (emphasis added). (Hammer v. Dagenhart; 247 U.S. 251 1918)


Is health care a power expressly delegated to the national government? No.


Set aside the two columnists’ misinterpretations of the Supremacy Clause. Why? It doesn’t even matter. SB1888 in no way conflicts with the federal health care law. The law has nothing to do with federal vs. state supremacy. As Kramer himself points out, it is a matter of commandeering.


SB1888 is an anti-commandeering, noncompliance bill. What is anti-commandeering? It is a 100% legal doctrine handed down by the Supreme Court in four separate rulings over the past 172 years, which states that the federal government cannot force state and local governments to enforce federal regulations.


What does case law tell us of commandeering? Most famously, in Printz v. United States, the Court found that state legislatures are not subject to federal direction, and that Congress could not force states to carry out their duties.


According to Justice Scalia, “Most conclusively in these cases, the Court’s jurisprudence makes clear that the Federal Government may not compel the States to enact or administer a federal regulatory program.”  Justice Thomas expounds, “Although I join the Court’s opinion in full, I write separately to emphasize that the Tenth Amendment affirms the undeniable notion that under our Constitution, the federal government is one of enumerated, hence limited, powers.”


The well-established anti-commandeering doctrine forms the legal basis of SB188, which reads:


“No state entity shall establish or administer, or assist in establishing or administering, any specific regulatory scheme to operate the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, or any subsequent federal amendment to such act, in this state.”


The legislation, as written, has nothing to do with federal supremacy. It is a bill, which simply states that Tennessee–including its employees–will not be commandeered, nor coerced into implementing or operating the regulations stemming from Obamacare.


Furthermore, the bill will not cause those Tennesseans who have signed up for Obamacare to lose their coverage, as Kerr claims.


The two columnists both claim that SB1888 would be illegal. Both are hereby challenged to cite Supreme Court case law to prove their fanciful theories correct.


(Opinion) Follow Michael Lotfi on Facebook and on Twitter: @MichaelLotfi


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Michael Lotfi is a Persian, American political analyst and adviser living in Nashville, Tennessee where he works as the executive director for the Tenth Amendment Center (TN). Lotfi founded TheLibertyPaper.org, which is an online news source that is visited daily by readers in over 135 countries. Lotfi also writes a column at The Washington Times called “American Millennial”. Lotfi graduated in the top 5% of his class with top honors from Belmont University, an award winning, private university located in Nashville, Tennessee.









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Ben Swann Truth In Media



LOTFI: Tennessean newspaper columnists grossly misinterpret Constitution

Monday, January 27, 2014

Tunisia finally passes progressive constitution




AP and AFP
January 28, 2014, 12:10 am TWN





TUNIS, Tunisia — After decades of dictatorship and two years of arguments and compromises, Tunisians finally have a new constitution laying the foundations for a new democracy.

Tunisia’s leaders on Monday signed the new constitution adopted by lawmakers during the night, a key goal of the revolution three years ago that touched off the Arab Spring.


The historic document, seen as one of the most modern in the Arab world, was signed by outgoing Islamist premier Ali Larayedh, Speaker Mustapha Ben Jaafar, and President Moncef Marzouki during a ceremony at the National Constituent Assembly.


“With the birth of this text, we confirm our victory over dictatorship,” Marzouki said in a speech to the assembly, before signing the document which he then embraced, waving the victory sign, “Much work remains to make the values of our constitution a part of our culture,” he said.


The charter, which took more than two years to draft, will enter into force in stages after its publication in the official journal, and in the run-up to fresh parliamentary and presidential elections later this year.


Overwhelming Support


Tunisia’s dominant Islamist party Ennahda said it expected elections to take place in October.


The document is groundbreaking as one of the most progressive constitutions in the Arab world — and for the fact that it got written at all. It passed late Sunday by 200 votes out of 216 in the Muslim Mediterranean country that inspired uprisings across the region after overthrowing a dictator in 2011.


“This constitution, without being perfect, is one of consensus,” Ben Jaafar said after the vote.


The constitution enshrining freedom of religion and women’s rights took two years to finish. During that period, the country was battered by high unemployment, protests, terrorist attacks, political assassinations and politicians who seemed more interested in posturing than finishing the charter.


At the same time, Egypt wrote two constitutions — and went through a military coup against an elected government. Egypt’s charters were quickly drafted by appointed committees and involved little public debate or input. In Tunisia, an elected assembly of Tunisian Islamists, leftists and liberals worked on a detailed roadmap for their political future.


“We needed time to get this constitution as it is today,” said Amira Yahyaoui, who has closely followed the assembly’s activities with her monitoring group Bawsala. “Clearly, writing this constitution to do a real transformation of the minds of people needed time and I absolutely don’t regret these two years and I am happy we had time to discuss and think about all the arguments.”











 Abandoned hand grenade kills 6 Pakistani children 

In this photo taken Sunday, Jan. 26, members of the Tunisian National Constituent Assembly embrace to celebrate the new constitution. (AP)

Enlarge Photo









China Post Online – Taiwan , News , Taiwan newspaper



Tunisia finally passes progressive constitution

Saturday, January 4, 2014

WE THE PEOPLE [1/3] SCAMMED under the ROMAN EMPIRE CONSTITUTION - PHOENIX RISING

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WE THE PEOPLE [1/3] SCAMMED under the ROMAN EMPIRE CONSTITUTION - PHOENIX RISING

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Professor Fires Off Email In Defense Of Student Forbidden From Handing Out Copies Of Constitution


techdirt.com
November 2, 2013


On Constitution Day (Sept. 17th), a student of Modesto Junior College, Robert Van Tuinen, was prevented by Modesto Junior College administration from handing out copies of the Constitution. The college apparently believes free speech is limited to a single small concrete slab on campus, generously named the “Free Speech Zone.” Contrary to the First Amendment (and the state’s laws governing public university policies), MJC restricts free speech to no more than two people per day, subject to approval of the administration.


Van Tuinen set out to challenge the stupidity of this policy and MJC administration obligingly played its part, resulting in a story that spread across blogs and news sites. As a result of its actions, the staff at MJC was “subjected” to insults, death threats, and even worse, an “unfair and negative portrayal” by the media. While no one condones death threats, one would be hard pressed to agree with Jill Stearns, the president of MJC, that the portrayal was “unfair” or that the school’s willingness to place policy above all else, including the Constitution and common sense, wasn’t deserving of a few disparaging remarks.


Shortly after MJC went into damage control, Van Tuinen sued the school for violating his First Amendment rights. Van Tuinen is seeking a permanent injunction against the school’s unconstitutional policies, as well as damages and court costs.


Now the organization that originally brought the Van Tuinen’s experience to national attention (FIRE) brings news that a Modesto Junior College professor has written a lengthy email to all Modest Junior College faculty members to call attention to the college’s actions which the administration seemingly wants to let recede into the background.


Professor William J. Holly was kind enough to forward his entire email to me, as well as provide some additional info on California laws governing schools and students’ First Amendment rights, as well as this bizarre and tense interaction with school security over the supposed rule changes President Jill Stearns said were underway.


I do not know what rules are now in effect. Last week I stopped by campus security and asked what the rules now were, and he referred me to ASMJC office on the other campus. I said he must know what the rules are since he was responsible for enforcing the rules. He kept pushing the paper with the name of the office on it, saying he was referring me to that office. It got a little tense because I kept saying he must know the rules and should be able to let us know what the rules are. Finally, he said he was not allowed to discuss this with anyone because they are under litigation. Stearns says the rules are being reviewed. Does that mean there are no rules?



Stearns’ statement says the college is “evaluating its policies and procedures.” It also says this:


There is absolutely no requirement that a student register weeks in advance and hand out his literature only in a small marked area.



There may not be one now, but that requirement was certainly in place back in September.


It also says this.


To those who were offended by the appearance of censorship, we again affirm the commitment of the college and district to civil discourse.



Hilarious. Pity the poor people who took offense at Van Tuinen being accosted by a campus cop and repeatedly told he’d need to get on the waiting list for the Freedom Slab and mistakenly believed it violated his First Amendment rights.


Holly does a wonderful job in his email dismantling Stearns’ non-apology.


[I]t is unclear what she means when she addresses “those who were offended by the appearance of censorship.” Van Tuinen was not subjected to the mere “appearance of censorship.” He was silenced and he was prevented from distributing his literature. That is outright censorship, pure and simple, whether it resulted from a misunderstanding or not.



But Holly’s letter is more than just a deconstruction of Stearns’ statements and MJC’s dubious policies. It’s also a wakeup call directed at his colleagues, many of whom were either unaware of this event or simply stood by and let incident pass by not remarked on.


Dear Colleagues:



The paper attached above (Destructing Causal Deconstruction) exposes some of the absurdities that are committed in the name of “Deconstruction.” I think it is a good read — clear, amusing, imaginative, and instructive. If you ever wondered what “deconstruction” is really about, you would be hard pressed to find a better introduction. One question that I cannot answer, however, is whether or not I would be arrested by a security officer if I insisted on wandering about the quad on our campus, handing out copies of this paper and discussing it with those who might be interested in the topic. This is not a silly question…


Nearly a month ago (Sept. 17th) one of our MJC students, Robert Van Tuinen (also a veteran), was trying to pass out copies of our federal Constitution on Constitution Day. He was prevented in this exercise of free speech by an MJC security officer, and then by an official at the office of Student Services who told him he was allowed freedom of speech and the right to pass out literature only in certain tiny restricted areas on our campus, and then only after booking a reservation — which would not be available until the following month!


I am puzzled why there has been no faculty outcry over this ugly incident. Why are we not standing up for our student who only wanted to exercise his constitutional right to free speech? Do we really want to be known nationwide as the college that wouldn’t let a veteran pass out copies of our Constitution on Constitution Day?



Holly’s not being facetious about “nationwide.” The story was picked up by the Huffington Post, the Washington Times, FOX News, the L.A. Times, along with numerous other well-read sites like Reason, the Daily Caller and National Review Online. But Modesto Junior College itself? Apparently it isn’t interested in providing current or prospective students (or faculty, for that matter) with anything more than the president’s statement.


The First Amendment in pertinent part says, ” Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press …” Some have taken this to be a right you have against the Federal Government, but not (say) against the State of California (as though the rights you thought you had simply in virtue of being a citizen of the United States could be nullified by the particular state in which you live). Happily, the point is largely moot because the constitution of California has its own guarantees of rights that largely parallel the U.S. Constitution Bill of Rights — including separation of church and state, etc. Guarantees of freedom of expression even exist in parts of the California Code of Education, and even the University of California has a constitution that holds out these rights, and even individual campuses have their own codes regarding such things as Academic Freedom. At CSUS and at PLU, the rules that claim Academic Freedom for faculty make clear that such freedom should extend equally to students!



The most pertinent part of the California Education Code is this section.


66301. (a) Neither the Regents of the University of California, the Trustees of the California State University, the governing board of a community college district, nor an administrator of any campus of those institutions, shall make or enforce a rule subjecting a student to disciplinary sanction solely on the basis of conduct that is speech or other communication that, when engaged in outside a campus of those institutions, is protected from governmental restriction by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or Section 2 of Article I of the California Constitution.



Considering Van Tuinen’s lawsuit, the directly-following subsection is also relevant.


(b) A student enrolled in an institution, as specified in subdivision (a), at the time that the institution has made or enforced a rule in violation of subdivision (a) may commence a civil action to obtain appropriate injunctive and declaratory relief as determined by the court. Upon a motion, a court may award attorney’s fees to a prevailing plaintiff in a civil action pursuant to this section.



Given the state law governing the public college, it would appear that MJC’s free speech policies are in violation of state law, not to mention the state’s constitution, even granting a very generous reading of “time, place and manner” wording.


Holly also questions the “formal apology” extended by the school to Van Tuinen. Whatever it was (and no one has seen it but Van Tuinen and administrators), it’s clearly not sufficient.


[W[e are told that a formal apology has been provided the student. It seems to me, however, that apologies in such cases are best made in public. I think Van Tuinen would want a published apology, a public admission that MJC had no right to deny him the exercise of his liberties that they did, and a promise that no other students would have their rights similarly violated. And, since the violation of the rights of one of our fellow citizens violates us all, I believe that we all are entitled to see a copy of that apology, to see the particulars of the concessions made, and to see in what manner those liberties now are affirmed that then were denied.



As Holly points out, the fact that Van Tuinen is proceeding with his lawsuit is a good indicator that the apology offered wasn"t satisfactory.


Holly then goes further, suggesting what should be done, not only to satisfy Van Tuinen, but to make sure other students know their rights are protected and ensure this sort of restriction doesn"t make its way back into the school policies in the future.


In one interview, [Van Tuinen] has said that he is not doing this for the money. I think what he wants is a civil rights victory. That should be easy to give him, especially if President Stearns is right this all has just been a misunderstanding…


If he doesn’t really care about money, if he just wants public acknowledgement that he was wronged, perhaps we should offer this: Buy him a couple thousand copies of the Constitution or of the Bill of Rights, and offer to make the individuals he has sued do community service that is relevant. Make them each do twenty hours of community service that consist of passing out copies of the Constitution and explaining to people the importance of everyone’s right to free speech. That ought to make him whole. And, to show my sincerity, I hereby offer to do 20 hours of such community service myself. Perhaps I too bear part of the responsibility here, because this one flew under my radar too. I did not check to see if my students’ rights to free speech were properly protected. Sometimes the implications of rules just do not strike us until we see them enforced.



Summing things up, Holly asks what some famous free speakers would run into if attempting to speak on MJC’s campus.


Now, if you do not like my suggestion that we should have a policy of completely free, unfettered and unqualified freedom of thought and expression on this campus, just ask yourself this one question: Suppose that Thomas Paine, the great pamphleteer (“These are the times that try men’s souls…”) were to come to MJC. Would you make him show his ID or make an advance appointment? Would you sic campus security and Student Services on him before allowing him to distribute his literature? Hell, what would you do if Jesus came? Would you have Student services tell Him he needs an appointment in advance, that the free speech zone is booked up until next month, and that He needs to confine his speech to the designated free speech zone areas? I say, Let Freedom Reign!



Holly’s effort to light a fire under his colleagues is admirable. Many people are too willing to defer to existing policy, especially if it doesn’t apply directly to them. Van Tuinen pushed back against an unconstitutional policy and has brought the idiocy of campus “Free Speech Zones” back into the national limelight. Holly doesn’t suggest throwing away all restraints on speech (exempting classrooms and faculty offices in order to prevent disruption of educating), but his view of what a “Free Speech Zone” should actually include covers far more area than MJC’s infamous concrete slab.


The entire email is worth a read, as is his Deconstructing Casual Deconstruction. Holly’s defense of students’ rights is a rarity in institutes of higher learning, many of which seem to believe the restraint of speech somehow creates better students.


This article was posted: Saturday, November 2, 2013 at 10:55 am


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Infowars



Professor Fires Off Email In Defense Of Student Forbidden From Handing Out Copies Of Constitution

Friday, October 18, 2013

Schwarzenegger Wants Constitution Changed For A 2016 Presidential Run


Terminator Star is “ready to file legal paperwork to challenge the rules”


Steve Watson
Infowars.com
Oct 18, 2013


Former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is engaged in a campaign to change The Constitution to allow him to run for president in 2016, according to reports.


The New York Post claims that Schwarzenegger has been publicly discussing his plans to file suit that would overturn the rule written into the Constitution that bars foreign-born citizens from taking the office of President or Vice President.


“Schwarzenegger has been talking openly about working on getting the constitutional rules changed so he can run for president in 2016. He is ready to file legal paperwork to challenge the rules.” the Post notes, citing an unnamed source.


Section 1 of Article Two of the Constitution sets forth the eligibility requirements for serving as president of the United States:


“No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.”



The Twelfth Amendment also states, “No person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States.”


Born in Austria, Schwarzenegger has been a US citizen since 1983, which enabled him to successfully run for Governorship in 2003.


The Fourteenth Amendment notes that “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”


Under Article One of the United States Constitution, representatives and senators are only required to be U.S. citizens.


Schwarzenegger has said several times that he would definitely run for President, should the law be changed. Most recently he told Jay Leno in 2010 that he would jump at the opportunity “Without any doubt.”


Any amendment to the Constitution must be approved by two-thirds majority in the House and the Senate, then must be ratified by at least 38 of the 50 states.


As we have previously reported, Schwarzenegger has, over the years, made several disturbing comments to the effect that it is his dream to reach a position of power akin to a dictator.


In 1976, Arnie told Rolling Stone: “I feel you only can have a few leaders… and then the rest is followers. I feel that I am the born leader and that I’ve always impressed with being the leader. I hate to be the follower. I had this when I was a little boy… I didn’t think about money. I thought about the fame, about just being the greatest. I was dreaming about being some dictator of a country or some savior like Jesus.”


His Nazi ties are also well documented. Gustav Schwarzenegger, the actor’s father, was a member of the Sturmabteilung, or SA, the Nazi party’s paramilitary wing. News reports about the elder Schwarzenegger’s Nazi links first surfaced in 1990.


Film producer George Butler, who chronicled Schwarzenegger’s rise to fame as a champion bodybuilder in the 1970′s, circulated a book proposal in the late 90s that quoted the young Schwarzenegger expressing admiration for Hitler.


The producer wrote in his book proposal that in the 1970′s, he considered Mr. Schwarzenegger a “flagrant, outspoken admirer of Hitler.,” the New York Times reported in 2003. In the proposal, Mr. Butler also said he had witnessed Schwarzenegger playing “Nazi marching songs from long-playing records in his collection at home” and said that the actor “frequently clicked his heels and pretended to be an S.S. officer.”


Schwarzenegger was also best buddies with Kurt Waldheim, the former secretary general of the United Nations who had a past as a Nazi who participated in atrocities during World War II.


Alex Jones and Infowars have been covering Arnold’s quest to run for president for close to a decade now. In 2003 Jones set up the website Arnold Exposed.com as a hub to expose the abundance of decidedly seedy, shady and downright disturbing material associated with Schwarzenegger,  his checkered past, and his obsession with seeking the US presidency.


Here is Alex breaking down the information in an archived 2004 broadcast:



—————————————————————-


Steve Watson is the London based writer and editor for Alex Jones’ Infowars.com, and Prisonplanet.com. He has a Masters Degree in International Relations from the School of Politics at The University of Nottingham, and a Bachelor Of Arts Degree in Literature and Creative Writing from Nottingham Trent University.


This article was posted: Friday, October 18, 2013 at 9:41 am


Tags:










Infowars



Schwarzenegger Wants Constitution Changed For A 2016 Presidential Run

Schwarzenegger Wants Constitution Changed For A 2016 Presidential Run


Terminator Star is “ready to file legal paperwork to challenge the rules”


Steve Watson
Infowars.com
Oct 18, 2013


Former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is engaged in a campaign to change The Constitution to allow him to run for president in 2016, according to reports.


The New York Post claims that Schwarzenegger has been publicly discussing his plans to file suit that would overturn the rule written into the Constitution that bars foreign-born citizens from taking the office of President or Vice President.


“Schwarzenegger has been talking openly about working on getting the constitutional rules changed so he can run for president in 2016. He is ready to file legal paperwork to challenge the rules.” the Post notes, citing an unnamed source.


Section 1 of Article Two of the Constitution sets forth the eligibility requirements for serving as president of the United States:


“No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.”



The Twelfth Amendment also states, “No person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States.”


Born in Austria, Schwarzenegger has been a US citizen since 1983, which enabled him to successfully run for Governorship in 2003.


The Fourteenth Amendment notes that “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”


Under Article One of the United States Constitution, representatives and senators are only required to be U.S. citizens.


Schwarzenegger has said several times that he would definitely run for President, should the law be changed. Most recently he told Jay Leno in 2010 that he would jump at the opportunity “Without any doubt.”


Any amendment to the Constitution must be approved by two-thirds majority in the House and the Senate, then must be ratified by at least 38 of the 50 states.


As we have previously reported, Schwarzenegger has, over the years, made several disturbing comments to the effect that it is his dream to reach a position of power akin to a dictator.


In 1976, Arnie told Rolling Stone: “I feel you only can have a few leaders… and then the rest is followers. I feel that I am the born leader and that I’ve always impressed with being the leader. I hate to be the follower. I had this when I was a little boy… I didn’t think about money. I thought about the fame, about just being the greatest. I was dreaming about being some dictator of a country or some savior like Jesus.”


His Nazi ties are also well documented. Gustav Schwarzenegger, the actor’s father, was a member of the Sturmabteilung, or SA, the Nazi party’s paramilitary wing. News reports about the elder Schwarzenegger’s Nazi links first surfaced in 1990.


Film producer George Butler, who chronicled Schwarzenegger’s rise to fame as a champion bodybuilder in the 1970′s, circulated a book proposal in the late 90s that quoted the young Schwarzenegger expressing admiration for Hitler.


The producer wrote in his book proposal that in the 1970′s, he considered Mr. Schwarzenegger a “flagrant, outspoken admirer of Hitler.,” the New York Times reported in 2003. In the proposal, Mr. Butler also said he had witnessed Schwarzenegger playing “Nazi marching songs from long-playing records in his collection at home” and said that the actor “frequently clicked his heels and pretended to be an S.S. officer.”


Schwarzenegger was also best buddies with Kurt Waldheim, the former secretary general of the United Nations who had a past as a Nazi who participated in atrocities during World War II.


Alex Jones and Infowars have been covering Arnold’s quest to run for president for close to a decade now. In 2003 Jones set up the website Arnold Exposed.com as a hub to expose the abundance of decidedly seedy, shady and downright disturbing material associated with Schwarzenegger,  his checkered past, and his obsession with seeking the US presidency.


Here is Alex breaking down the information in an archived 2004 broadcast:



—————————————————————-


Steve Watson is the London based writer and editor for Alex Jones’ Infowars.com, and Prisonplanet.com. He has a Masters Degree in International Relations from the School of Politics at The University of Nottingham, and a Bachelor Of Arts Degree in Literature and Creative Writing from Nottingham Trent University.


This article was posted: Friday, October 18, 2013 at 9:41 am


Tags: constitution










Infowars



Schwarzenegger Wants Constitution Changed For A 2016 Presidential Run

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Truckers for the Constitution Announce Logistics




Get the Intellihub.com Official Newsletter HERE




By Avalon | October 8, 2013 | 10:50 pm EST

(INTELLIHUB) — “We’ve got the entire country behind us on this. All the major media is talking about it. All the major, the minor, anybody and all that are talking about the Truckers that are coming to shut down D.C.” said Ernest Lee in a video just posted on his YouTube channel. [1]


Ride For The Constitution Driver Instructions


Published on Oct 8, 2013 with 347 views


Sources:


[1] Ride For The Constitution Driver Instructions — youtube.com


[2] ridefortheconstitution — facebook.com


Writer Bio:

Avalon is an Investigative Journalist and Strategist working for Intellihub.com


For media inquires, interviews, questions or suggestions for this author, email: avalon@intellihub.com or telephone: (347) 759-6075.


Read more articles by this author here.


*****





WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Truckers for the Constitution Announce Logistics

Thursday, October 3, 2013

The Constitution vs the UN Arms Treaty


The Constitution vs the UN Arms TreatyTenth Amendment Center – by Lesley Swann


Last week, Secretary of State John Kerry signed a UN arms treaty that opponents say will implement a broad firearms registration scheme and eventually lead to global bureaucrats imposing gun control on the American people in spite of the Second Amendment. Despite the Obama administration’s support for the treaty, it remains to be seen whether the Senate will ratify it.


The Obama administration and other supporters of the arms treaty will likely claim that the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution places treaties above the Constitution and other U.S. laws as the supreme law of the land. Under this interpretation, they believe they can get around the Second Amendment protections on the right to keep and bear arms.  


What did the founders say?


The founders very clearly stated the conditions under which the U.S. Constitution could be amended, or changed in Article V. It is quite illogical to conclude that they would write such a brilliant document only to create a giant backdoor for foreign governments to come in and destroy the liberty they worked so hard to achieve. In fact, the founders themselves said otherwise.


“The only constitutional exception to the power of making treaties is that it shall not change the Constitution…” – Alexander Hamilton


“I do not conceive that power is given to the President or the Senate to dismember the empire, or alienate any great, essential right. I do not think the whole legislative authority to have this power.” – James Madison


“I say the same as to the opinion of those who consider the grant of treaty-making power to be boundless. If it is, then we have no Constitution.” – Thomas Jefferson



Considering three of the most prominent founding fathers explicitly said that the Constitution does not permit the dismantling of itself via treaty, there must be some other meaning to the Supremacy Clause. By properly reading the clause it becomes clear that not only did the founders not leave a backdoor, they actually expressly forbade this type of maneuver in Article VI.


The answer to the riddle that confuses many people isn’t to be found in an indecipherable tome on constitutional law, but instead in simple English grammar and a little attention to detail.


This or The?


Throughout the text of the Constitution, whenever the document refers to itself the verbiage “this Constitution” is used. The only exception to this rule is the President’s Oath of Office, where the phrase “the Constitution of the United States” is used. In every other place where you find the word Constitution written in the Constitution itself, it is preceded by the word “this” making it unmistakeably clear that the Constitution is referring to itself. In the President’s Oath of Office the phrase “Constitution of the United States” makes it perfectly clear that the phrase is referring to this Constitution as well.


Yet here in the Supremacy Clause – used to justify treaty supremacy by some – the phrase “this Constitution” is not used in the final phrase. So, why is the word “this” not used here?


This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.



The Founders were very clear and precise with their use of language in the Constitution, so why do we have “the Constitution” in this case (“any Thing in THE Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding”), and “this Constitution” in all other cases where the word is written? The simple answer is that in this case, they were not referring to the United States Constitution at all.


The Humble Prepositional Phrase


The humble preposition is the key to solving the intent of the Founders in this statement. A prepositional phrase – such as of, to, or in – is a word that can modify and indicate relationships. Prepositional phrases can also modify more than one object. In this case, the prepositional phrase “of any State” refers to both the words“Constitution” and “Laws” that precede the phrase.


This means that the final phrase of this clause could rightly be read to mean “any Thing in the Constitution of any State or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” The Founders weren’t saying that treaties were to be supreme over the U.S. Constitution, but that they could and would take precedence over the state constitutions and laws.


“In Pursuance Of…”


It is clear with a little analysis of the details of the language and grammar used to construct this clause that our Founders were placing treaty law in its rightful place – beneath the supreme law of the land in the form of our U.S. Constitution, but above the laws and constitutions of the states. There is no loophole that can allow international interests to trump the U.S. Constitution, but the treaty must be made in pursuance of our Constitution, just as all laws that Congress makes must be in pursuance of the Constitution.


While Barack Obama and John Kerry may claim that they can legislate via treaty, this clearly was not the intent of our Founders. Will this knowledge stop them from attempting to shred the Constitution and the Second Amendment by signing on to gun control treaties? Probably not. But we can rest firm in the knowledge that our Founders did not give the Federal government the power to usurp the Constitution by treaty, and that the Constitution is the supreme law of the land, not treaty law.


http://tenthamendmentcenter.com/2013/10/03/constitution-vs-un-arms-treaty/#.Uk18lYbbOSp






The Constitution vs the UN Arms Treaty

Monday, September 2, 2013

Marathon isn’t over to get right-to-work law into VA constitution


AP file photo

THEY GOT MAD: When Michigan’s governor signed the state’s right-to-work law earlier this year, unions got angry and hit the protest circuit.



By Kathryn Watson | Watchdog.org, Virginia Bureau


ALEXANDRIA — As Americans everywhere celebrate work by taking a day off from it, the future of worker freedom in the Old Dominion isn’t set in stone. And some Virginia lawmakers want to make sure it is.


Virginia has long touted its status as a right to work state,meaning a person a person can’t be denied a job or fired for not joining a labor union. But the law, despite its sacred status among Republicans and many Democrats, has never made it into the safety net of Virginia’s Constitution.


Virginia Delegate Richard "Dickie" Bell wants to see Virginia

Virginia Delegate Richard “Dickie” Bell wants to see Virginia’s right to work protections added to the state constitution.



And as disagreements over the role of labor unions highlight the 2013 race for governor, the life and death of a law can hinge on who holds power. Lawmakers say the law is strong and safe for now — but that isn’t a guarantee for future generations.


“I think it’s important because the right-to -ork law, as great as it is — and I’m glad we have it — it’s statute and it’s always subject to change,” said Delegate Richard “Dickie” Bell, who attempted in both the 2012 and 2013 sessions to pass legislation that would begin the uphill battle of  enshrining the law in the state’s constitution.


“An administrative change or someone with opposing views to right to work, with the right numbers in place, could overturn it,” Bell said. “I don’t think that’ll happen in Virginia in my lifetime, but the possibility does exist. If we make it a part of the constitution, it becomes much more permanent. And undoing it would be very difficult, if not impossible.”


But, nearly as impossible is etching something into Virginia’s Constitution. The Old Dominion requires both the Senate and House of Delegates pass a bill in two separate legislative cycles, with an election in between those passages. Then, that bill has to go to the people for a vote at the ballot box. Only then can something be added to the constitution.


State Sen. Richard Black says Virginia

State Sen. Richard Black says Virginia’s right to work law is crucial to the state’s economic health.



Others tried to get right-to-work language into the state constitution long before Bell’s 2012 attempt — unsuccessfully. But Bell, along with Sen. Richard Black, who also filed a similar bill in the Senate in 2013, isn’t giving up. The freedom to work, they say, is that important for Virginia workers and the state’s economy.


“When I think of all the things that make Virginia stand out as a business-friendly state, the right-to-work law is probably at the top of the list,” Black said. “It creates a very favorable work environment, which provides additional jobs for people that come from other states.”


Bell said the evidence favoring right-to-work states like Virginia speaks for itself — and for the need to solidify that law. States with right-to-work laws fared better in the recession, with lower unemployment rates. And the American Enterprise Institute points out that right-to-work states created four times as many jobs as non right-to-work states since from 2009 to 2012.


“We see industry and business expanding in those states and we see businesses and industry located in union-dominated states relocating to right-to-work states,” Bell said.


Still, strengthening the law is a marathon — not a sprint.


“I don’t know how long it will take, but I think the evidence is slowly but surely becoming overwhelming that we need to protect that against anything that might alter it,” Bell said.


Black said he’s still considering filing another bill for the 2014 session. Bell said he’ll have to wait another year, since the constitutional amendment process requires an election in the middle.


“I will wait until the 2015 session, but I do plan to reintroduce it,” Bell said. “And I plan to fight that battle until we win.”


Contact Kathryn Watson at katie@watchdogvirignia.org.  



Please, feel free to “steal our stuff”! Just remember to credit Watchdog.org. Find out more



Watchdog.org



Marathon isn’t over to get right-to-work law into VA constitution

Friday, August 23, 2013

FISA Judge: NSA misrepresented themselves, violated the Constitution





CSO – A federal judge said in a recently declassified opinion, issued during his time serving on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court, that the National Security Agency misrepresented themselves and violated the Constitution for several years.


After the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) won their lawsuit to obtain an 86-page opinion from the secret Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court (FISC) issued in October of 2011, the government released the redacted version on Wednesday, as written
by Judge John D. Bates.


In it, Judge Bates outlines the NSA’s Fourth Amendment violations as they go about collecting intelligence, including upstream
ISP traffic, and how the agency collected as many as 56,000 completely domestic communications per year, for several years.
Yet, according to the opinion, the court was just now learning that the nature of the information the NSA said they were collecting
was fundamentally different.


“The court is troubled that the government’s revelations regarding NSA’s acquisition of Internet transactions mark the third
instance in less than three years in which the government has disclosed a substantial misrepresentation regarding the scope
of a major collection program& Contrary to the government’s repeated assurances, NSA had been routinely running queries of
the metadata using querying terms that did not meet the standard for querying,” Judge Bates wrote in his opinion [PDF].


Related: NSA collected thousands of domestic communications in 2011


“The government’s submissions make clear not only that NSA has been acquiring Internet transactions since before the Court’s
approval of the first Section 702 certification in 2008, but also that NSA seeks to continue the collection of Internet transactions&”


At issue is the wholesale collection of Internet and telecommunications data, which by law is supposed to be largely restricted
in scope, with regard to what is collected and why, as well as restricted as to content. However, the FISC ruled that the
NSA overstepped their bounds, and collected far more data than was previously approved. Going so far as to mislead the court
as to what exactly was being collected and examined.


Two years later, the NSA says they have changed the way data is collected and processed, but documents leaked by Edward Snowden,
and recent reports from the Wall Street Journal, bring the FISC’s condemnation and accusations back into the spotlight. The
assumption being, if they misled the courts on three separate occasions, what’s to prevent further instances?


On Monday, the Wall Street Journal (citing both current and former officials as sources) says that the NSA has developed a
surveillance network that has the ability to cover more than 75 percent of all U.S. Internet traffic. In some cases, this
collection network retains the written content of emails written by citizens, as well as VoIP-based phone calls.


“The programs, code-named Blarney, Fairview, Oakstar, Lithium and Stormbrew, among others, filter and gather information at
major telecommunications companies,” the Wall Street Journal reported.




Netflash



FISA Judge: NSA misrepresented themselves, violated the Constitution

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Security Consultant Heckles NSA Head: Shouts “Freedom!”; “Read The Constitution!”


Gen. Alexander claims “We stand for freedom”


Steve Watson
Infowars.com
Aug 1, 2013


The NSA head General Keith Alexander faced a hostile crowd Wednesday while attempting to defend mass surveillance programs at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas.


Around 30 minutes into his speech, Alexander claimed that the NSA had “stopped thirteen terrorist related activities in the United States,” flashing up a slide that stated the NSA had prevented fifty-four worldwide terrorist events. “Our nation takes stopping terrorism as one of the most important things.” Alexander stated, prompting a man in the crowd to shout “Freedom!”


“Exactly,” Alexander replied. “We stand for freedom.”


Forbes reports that the security consultant, later identified as 30-year-old Jon McCoy, then fired back “Bullshit!” to smatterings of applause from some of the crowd.


“Not bad,” Alexander responded, adding “But I think what you’re saying is that in these cases, what’s the distinction, where’s the discussion and what tools do we have to stop this.”


“No, I’m saying I don’t trust you!” McCoy shouted back.


Another person in the crowd then joined in, stating “You lied to Congress. Why would people believe you’re not lying to us right now?”


Looking stern and visibly annoyed, Alexander responded “I haven’t lied to Congress.”


“I do think it’s important for us to have this discussion.” he added, “Because in my opinion, what you believe is what’s written in the press without looking at the facts. This is the greatest technical center of gravity in the world. I ask that you all look at those facts.”


Alexander continued the speech, stating “We get all these allegations of what [NSA staff] could be doing. But when people check what the NSA is doing, they’ve found zero times that’s happened,” he said referring to any illegal use of spying powers.


“And that’s no bullshit. Those are the facts.” Alexander stated, asking for the curse word to be stricken from the record.


“Read the Constitution” McCoy fired back in one last heckle.


“I have, so should you.” Alexander responded to loud applause from a crowd that was clearly siding with the NSA head.


According to Forbes reporter Andy Greenberg, McCoy told him afterwards that he felt Alexander’s speech was “pretty canned.” “It’s anything you can see on Fox News any day. We’re in danger, we have to get rid of your freedom to keep you safe.” the security consultant added.


“Everyone’s thinking this, but no one’s saying it public, so everyone thinks they’re alone,” he said. “Ninety-eight percent of society has issues with this…But no one speaks up.”


Throughout the speech Alexander repeatedly suggested that revealing further details of NSA’s operations would “jeopardize the future of our defense.”


The NSA head also claimed several times that the spy agency is not collecting information on everyone’s internet activities, despite a report Wednesday in the Guardian, via Ed Snowden’s leaks, revealing another previously unknown mass surveillance program.



Documents published by the newspaper detail the NSA program, known as XKeyScore, revealing it to be another tool that allows the broad search of millions of individuals’ emails and browsing history. An NSA slide from the documents, showing the logos of Facebook, Google, Twitter and Yahoo, suggests that the agency is “interested in HTTP… because nearly everything a typical user does on the internet uses HTTP.”


—————————————————————-


Steve Watson is the London based writer and editor for Alex Jones’ Infowars.com, and Prisonplanet.com. He has a Masters Degree in International Relations from the School of Politics at The University of Nottingham, and a Bachelor Of Arts Degree in Literature and Creative Writing from Nottingham Trent University.



This article was posted: Thursday, August 1, 2013 at 2:23 am


Tags: domestic spying









Infowars



Security Consultant Heckles NSA Head: Shouts “Freedom!”; “Read The Constitution!”