Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: EternalVigilance

“The judicial supremacist lie is destroying the republic. I’ve been preaching that for years now, but for somebody not to see it at this point it’s pretty much got to be willful blindness.”

You have to lack the ability or inclination to follow history, read the text of the law, and pay attention to arguments. in order to know:
1: What the text actually says.
2: What was practiced for the last 200 years.
3: What the Federal Employee in black robes just did with the same text.

Most people never get past #1, although a lot of people have a vage understanding of #2(we were in fact a lot freer in the past) most are actual quite ignorant of everything about our history and even geography. #3 is known only to a minority in its results and of course is useless if you know nothing of #1 much less #2.

Like the Catholic church a thousand years ago few if anyone can/will read the bible or any other history to know the church leaders have been radically changing it to fit their own goals.

Thus the source of our problem is primary historical and textual ignorance.

An ignorance that the self-corrupted ‘legal community’ has made their carriers out of exploiting. Exploiting not only as the sole means to ‘navigate’ the otherwise indecipherable complex linguistic ‘maze’ corrupt’judges’ have created over the years to impose their own will upon the law with the help of theses same lawyers.

Frankly the contradictory and indecipherable complexity of the language they have created alone is itself a form of tyranny particularly given the high price of legal representation and the mere expectation that the common man should have to follow the law to avoid such a need for legal representation in the first place. Even police men are incapable of actually understanding and honestly enforcing the law because of the sheer scale of linguistic corruption imposed upon it by ‘judges’ over the years, and that is their profession!

This broad concept of legal entrapment by way of excessive and contradictory legal linguistic complexity that almost everyone is aware is really just a symptom of the corruption of the court as arrogated over decades if not a century of dishonest of law making. But of course few people were around to remember what the same law meant and thus have no idea the degree to which it has been changed not justly by the Congress or the people, but rather unjustly by the Federal ‘courts’ & lawyers who have paradoxically claimed as part of their profession ‘expertise’ knowlage as to denouce anyone who might question their ever more dangerously expansive power over the people.

The point is there are 3 kinds of obliterates they exploit:
1: Our ignorance of the Republican system
2: Our ignorance of the laws as written.
3: Our Ignorance of the laws as demonstrated(practiced & understood) over time.

Theses are perhaps not ironically the 3 pillars of common law jurist prudence that is now corruptly ignored by the modern Federal employee in a black robes. Instead the only aspect of common law they follow and claim to understand is what the higher court said most recently. In other words not any part of common law jurist prudence but a hierarchy.

We need to expose their corruption, and work to undermined in the minds of the willing the legitimacy of the modern Federal ‘court’ system. While respecting the unjust power of this corrupt system of magistrates we should not hesitate to criticize that corruption and sympathize with its victims. It is the opinion of the people we must arose against the corruption of the Federal ‘courts’ system. and from the people we shall find new ways to resist and restore the power of the people to govern themselves by law rather than men.


73 posted on 03/06/2015 3:20:50 PM PST by Monorprise
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 56 | View Replies ]


To: Monorprise

-— Like the Catholic church a thousand years ago few if anyone can/will read the bible or any other history to know the church leaders have been radically changing it to fit their own goals. -—

Probably because the printing press wouldn’t be invented for another 450 years.

That’s why a hand copied Bible cost the modern equivalent of $30k., and why Bibles were chained to pulpits.

It’s no coincidence that Luther’s novel doctrine of Sola Scriptura followed shortly after Gutenberg’s invention.


74 posted on 03/06/2015 3:25:08 PM PST by St_Thomas_Aquinas ( Isaiah 22:22, Matthew 16:19, Revelation 3:7)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 73 | View Replies ]

To: Monorprise

Jefferson clearly warned us about this very thing.


“Over the Judiciary department, the Constitution [has] deprived [the nation] of their control.” —Thomas Jefferson to Spencer Roane, 1819. ME 15:212

“The original error [was in] establishing a judiciary independent of the nation, and which, from the citadel of the law, can turn its guns on those they were meant to defend, and control and fashion their proceedings to its own will.” —Thomas Jefferson to John Wayles Eppes, 1807. FE 9:68

“The principal [leaders of the political opposition] have retreated into the judiciary as a stronghold, the tenure of which renders it difficult to dislodge them.” —Thomas Jefferson to Joel Barlow, 1801. ME 10:223

“It is a misnomer to call a government republican in which a branch of the supreme power is independent of the nation.” —Thomas Jefferson to James Pleasants, 1821. FE 10:198

“It is not enough that honest men are appointed judges. All know the influence of interest on the mind of man, and how unconsciously his judgment is warped by that influence. To this bias add that of the esprit de corps, of their peculiar maxim and creed that ‘it is the office of a good judge to enlarge his jurisdiction,’ and the absence of responsibility, and how can we expect impartial decision between the General government, of which they are themselves so eminent a part, and an individual state from which they have nothing to hope or fear?” —Thomas Jefferson: Autobiography, 1821. ME 1:121

“We have... [required] a vote of two-thirds in one of the Houses for removing a judge; a vote so impossible where any defense is made before men of ordinary prejudices and passions, that our judges are effectually independent of the nation. But this ought not to be. I would not indeed make them dependent on the Executive authority, as they formerly were in England; but I deem it indispensable to the continuance of this government that they should be submitted to some practical and impartial control, and that this, to be impartial, must be compounded of a mixture of state and federal authorities.” —Thomas Jefferson: Autobiography, 1821. ME 1:120

“Having found from experience that impeachment is an impracticable thing, a mere scarecrow, [the Judiciary] consider themselves secure for life.” —Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Ritchie, 1820. ME 15:297

“Impeachment is a farce which will not be tried again.” —Thomas Jefferson to William B. Giles, 1807. ME 11:191

“Contrary to all correct example, [the Federal judiciary] are in the habit of going out of the question before them, to throw an anchor ahead and grapple further hold for future advances of power. They are then in fact the corps of sappers and miners, steadily working to undermine the independent rights of the States and to consolidate all power in the hands of that government in which they have so important a freehold estate.” —Thomas Jefferson: Autobiography, 1821. ME 1:121

“The judges... are practicing on the Constitution by inferences, analogies, and sophisms, as they would on an ordinary law. They do not seem aware that it is not even a Constitution formed by a single authority and subject to a single superintendence and control, but that it is a compact of many independent powers, every single one of which claims an equal right to understand it and to require its observance.” —Thomas Jefferson to Edward Livingston, 1825. ME 16:113

“[The] practice of Judge Marshall of travelling out of his case to prescribe what the law would be in a moot case not before the court, is very irregular and very censurable.” —Thomas Jefferson to William Johnson, 1823. ME 15:447

“The great object of my fear is the Federal Judiciary. That body, like gravity, ever acting with noiseless foot and unalarming advance, gaining ground step by step and holding what it gains, is engulfing insidiously the special governments into the jaws of that which feeds them.” —Thomas Jefferson to Spencer Roane, 1821. ME 15:326

“The judiciary of the United States is the subtle corps of sappers and miners constantly working under ground to undermine the foundations of our confederated fabric. They are construing our Constitution from a co-ordination of a general and special government to a general and supreme one alone. This will lay all things at their feet, and they are too well versed in English law to forget the maxim, ‘boni judicis est ampliare jurisdictionem.’” —Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Ritchie, 1820. ME 15:297

“It has long been my opinion, and I have never shrunk from its expression,... that the germ of dissolution of our Federal Government is in the constitution of the Federal Judiciary—an irresponsible body (for impeachment is scarcely a scare-crow), working like gravity by night and by day, gaining a little today and a little tomorrow, and advancing its noiseless step like a thief over the field of jurisdiction until all shall be usurped from the States and the government be consolidated into one. To this I am opposed.” —Thomas Jefferson to Charles Hammond, 1821. ME 15:331


75 posted on 03/06/2015 3:36:40 PM PST by EternalVigilance
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 73 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson