To: reaganaut1
“Do you think you would like living in a country where the ruler or his minions could declare what the law was, change it at will, and decide whether someone was guilty of a violation?”
Dear Mr. Leef, in the event that you haven’t noticed, we are already living in that country. ;-(
2 posted on
10/06/2014 10:43:45 AM PDT by
spel_grammer_an_punct_polise
(Why does every totalitarian political hack think that he knows how to run my life better than I do?)
To: reaganaut1
Do you think you would like living in a country where the ruler or his minions could declare what the law was, change it at will, and decide whether someone was guilty of a violation? I not only would not like living in such a country, I do not like living in such a country.
3 posted on
10/06/2014 10:45:37 AM PDT by
WayneS
(Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.)
To: reaganaut1
Do you think you would like living in a country where the ruler or his minions could declare what the law was, change it at will, and decide whether someone was guilty of a violation? He means a place like Obama's Amerika.
4 posted on
10/06/2014 2:07:44 PM PDT by
Iron Munro
(We can make it work with only one square per restroom visit -- Sheryl Crow)
To: reaganaut1
"... beginning in 1215 with Magna Carta"
I was just thinking of that very thing the other day.
Although that focused much on the rights of landed gentry type of persons, in relationship to those regarded as king or ruler, it was the cracking open of the fasci of judiciary or magisterial law to become tempered (if not near eventually, entirely replaced) with common law.
As to the heading of the article itself -- I much prefer that (the Constitution of the United States) to what we seem to have now.
5 posted on
10/07/2014 3:43:39 AM PDT by
BlueDragon
(...they murdered some of them bums...for thinking wrong thoughts)
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