Archive for the ‘ Politics ’ Category
Goodbye to my England, So long my old friend
Your days are numbered, being brought to an end
To be Scottish, Irish or Welsh, that’s fine
But don’t say you’re English, that’s way out of line.
The French and the Germans may call themselves such
So may Norwegians, the Swedes and the Dutch
You can say you are Russian or maybe a Dane
But don’t say you’re English ever again.
At Broadcasting House the word is taboo
In Brussels it’s scrapped, in Parliament too
Even schools are affected, staff do as they’re told
They must not teach children about England of old.
Writers like Shakespeare, Milton and Shaw
The pupils don’t learn about them anymore
How about Agincourt, Hastings, Arnhem or Mons?
When England lost hosts of her very brave sons.
We are not Europeans, how can we be?
Europe is miles away, over the sea
We’re the English from England, let’s all be proud
Stand up and be counted – Shout it out loud!
Let’s tell our Government and Brussels too
We’re proud of our heritage, the Red, White and Blue
Fly the flag of Saint George or the Union Jack
Let the world know
WE WANT OUR ENGLAND BACK!
Alex Jones aired a clip on his conspiracy web site, ‘InfoWars.com’ today, in which Charlie Sheen (Yep, the real Charlie Sheen) explains why he has written a public letter to Obama, a document about the September 11, 2001, attacks. America and the victim families, Sheen insists, deserve a full and honest investigation of the attacks. The 9-11 white wash commission report — long since discredited and revealed as a blatant fraud — will no longer stand.
Listen to the show.
via InfoWars
Here’s a great breakdown of what a statute is, in terms of why a statute can be applied with the full force of the law and how that force is obtained and imposed upon the state by the legislature. It’s not as complicated as you think – and if properly noted – the knowledge could mean the difference between a hefty fine and a reasonably event-free day in court.
This is the commonly used definition of the word ‘Statute’. It raises some questions as most of us live our lives according to the rules of our various statutes and Acts they derive from, and yet in no part of that definition does it suggest that it is a Law. Rather it is a rule. Aren’t rules made to be broken? I would certainly say so; the more rules you break, the more you have to pay to the court!
Rather than finding the precise source, let’s discover whether this much-used definition is acceptable. So, can this definition be either disproved and discarded, or confirmed and accepted?
First, let’s look at a sourced definition of the term “statute”.
statute. An act of the legislature as an organized body. Washington v Dowling, 92 Fla 601, 109 So 588.
The written will of the legislative department, expressed according to the form necessary to constitute it a law of the United States or of the state, and rendered authentic by certain prescribed forms and solemnities.
In a broader sense, inclusive of an act of the legislature, an administrative regulation, or an enactment, from whatever source originating, to which the state gives the force of law. 50 Am J1st Stat § 2. (Ballantines, 3rd edition, Page 1212)
Let’s now use this as our base to work from …
In a broader sense, inclusive of an act of the legislature, an administrative regulation, or an enactment, from whatever source originating, to which the state gives the force of law.
act,n. A thing done or established; a deed or other written instrument evidencing a contract or an obligation. A statute; a bill which has been enacted by the legislature into a law, as distinguished from a bill which is in the form of a law presented to the legislature for enactment. Anne 5 ALR 1422. (Ballantines, 3rd edition, Page 16-17)
legislature. Broadly, any body having legislative power. 49 Am J1st States § 28. (Ballantines, 3rd edition, Page 724)
regulation. Control or direction by restriction or rule of something permitted or suffered to exist. 30 Am J rev ed Intox L § 22. Any rule for the ordering of affairs, public or private, whether by statute, ordinance, or resolution. Kepner v Commonwealth, 40 Pa St 124, 129. Ballantines, 3rd edtion, Page 1081)
state. A body politic or society of men united together for the purpose of promoting their mutual safety and advantage by their combined strength, occupying a definite territory, and politically organized under one government. McLaughlin v Poucher, 127 Conn 441, 17 A2d 767. … a political community of free citizens, occupying a territory of defined boundaries, and organized under a government sanction and limited by a written constitution, and established by the consent of the governed. Coyle v Smith, 221 US 559, 55 L Ed 853, 31 S Ct 688. (Ballantines, 3rd edition, Page 1210)
Summary
An act of the legislature = legislative
An administrative regulation = a rule
The state = a political community, organized under a government, established by the consent of the governed.In a broader sense, inclusive of an act of the legislature (legislative), an administrative regulation (rule), or an enactment, from whatever source originating, to which the state (political community established by the consent of the governed) gives the force of law.
Connect the dots;
A legislative rule, given the force of law by the political community established by the consent of the governed.
You are the governed. Do you give your consent?
via TPUC
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