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To: EternalVigilance

The world is full of things and truths that are not mentioned in the Constitution. It’s a Constitution, not an encyclopedia.

All you have to do is READ the Preamble.

Point to something in the Preamble that commands anyone to DO SOMETHING.

You can’t. It’s not there.

Therefore, the Preamble is not law.


27 posted on 04/26/2015 12:13:47 AM PDT by Arthur McGowan
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To: Arthur McGowan

As required by Article VI, every officer of government in this country, in every branch, at every level, swears a sacred oath to do everything in his power to:

1. Form a more perfect Union

2. Establish Justice

3. Insure domestic Tranquility

4. Provide for the common defense

5. Promote the general Welfare

6. Secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity

“Gay marriage” and abortion both destroy every possibility of fulfilling any of that.

What sense does any oath make if our representatives are not required to fulfill any of the stated purposes of the document they are required to swear to support and defend?


29 posted on 04/26/2015 12:27:09 AM PDT by EternalVigilance (If they're not deporting them, they intend to amnesty them. Take it to the bank.)
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To: Arthur McGowan

One of the primary reasons that the Articles of Confederation failed is that they did not include any statement of purpose.

One of the primary reasons that the U.S. Constitution has worked for more than 200 years is because of the document’s statement of purpose, aka its preamble.

“We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”


30 posted on 04/26/2015 12:35:45 AM PDT by EternalVigilance (The Constitution's preamble, which is its statement of purpose, is the supreme law of the land.)
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To: Arthur McGowan
Point to something in the Preamble that commands anyone to DO SOMETHING.

"in Order to"

31 posted on 04/26/2015 12:37:10 AM PDT by EternalVigilance (The Constitution's preamble, which is its statement of purpose, is the supreme law of the land.)
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To: Arthur McGowan

order

OR’DER, n. [L. ordo.]

1. Regular disposition or methodical arrangement of things; a word of extensive application; as the order of troops or parade; the order of books in a library; the order of proceedings in a legislative assembly. Order is the life of business.

Good order is the foundation of all good things.

2. Proper state; as the muskets are all in good order. When the bodily organs are in order, a person is in health; when they are out of order, he is indisposed.

3. Adherence to the point in discussion, according to established rules of debate; as, the member is not in order, that is, he wanders from the question.

4. Established mode of proceeding. The motion is not in order.

5. Regularity; settled mode of operation.

This fact could not occur in the order of nature; it is against the natural order of things.

6. Mandate; precept; command; authoritative direction. I have received an order from the commander in chief. The general gave orders to march. There is an order of council to issue letters of marque.

7. Rule; regulation; as the rules and orders of a legislative house.

8. Regular government or discipline. It is necessary for society that good order should be observed. The meeting was turbulent; it was impossible to keep order.

9. Rank; class; division of men; as the order of nobles; the order of priests; the higher orders of society; men of the lowest order; order of knights; military orders, &c.

10. A religious fraternity; as the order of Benedictines.

11. A division of natural objects, generally intermediate between class and genus. The classes, in the Linnean artificial system, are divided into orders, which include one or more genera. Linne also arranged vegetables, in his natural system, into groups of genera, called order. In the natural system of Jussieu, orders are subdivisions of classes.

12. Measures; care. Take some order for the safety and support of the soldiers.

Provide me soldiers whilst I take order for my own affairs.

13. In rhetoric, the placing of words and members in a sentence in such a manner as to contribute to force and beauty of expression, or to the clear illustration of the subject.

14. The title of certain ancient books containing the divine office and manner of its performance.

15. In architecture, a system of several members, ornaments and proportions of columns and pilasters; or a regular arrangement of the projecting parts of a building, especially of the columns, so as to form one beautiful whole. The orders are five, the Tuscan, Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, and Composite. The order consists of two principal members, the column, and the entablature, each of which is composed of three principal parts. Those of the column are the base, the shaft, and the capital; those of the entablature are the architrave, the frize, and the cornice. The height of the Tuscan column is 14 modules or semidiameters of the shaft at the bottom, and that os the entablature 3 1/2. The height of the Doric order is 16 modules and that of the entablature 4; that of the Ionic is 18 modules, and that of the entablature 4 1/2, that of the Corinthian order is 20 modules, and that of the entablature 5. The height of the Composite order agrees with that of the Corinthian.

In orders, set apart for the performance divine service; ordained to the work of the gospel ministry.

In order, for the purpose; to the end; as means to an end. The best knowledge is that which is of the greatest use in order to our eternal happiness.

General orders, the commands or notices which a military commander in chief issues to the troops under his command.

OR’DER, v.t.

1. To regulate; to methodize; to systemize; to adjust; to subject to system in management and execution; as, to order domestic affairs with prudence.

2. To lead; to conduct; to subject to rules or laws.

To him that ordereth his conversation aright, will I show the salvation of God. Ps. 50.

3. to direct; to command. the general ordered his troops to advance.

4. To manage; to treat.

How shall we order the child? Judges 13.

5. To ordain. [Not used.]

6. To direct; to dispose in any particular manner.

Order my steps in thy word. Ps. 119.

OR’DER, v.i. to give command or direction.


32 posted on 04/26/2015 12:46:11 AM PDT by EternalVigilance (The Constitution's preamble, which is its statement of purpose, is the supreme law of the land.)
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To: Arthur McGowan
the Preamble is not law.

Many on the left argue that it is law when it comes to "welfare", something only mentioned there.  This entire issue is one of faction and not fact.  The 14th amendment says if the federal gov't allows people to do something then the states can't forbid it.   There is no federal law prohibiting murder, only state laws.   We don't consider murder to be a right; we've got to come together in understanding that our legal system has to make sense.

39 posted on 04/26/2015 4:36:33 AM PDT by expat_panama
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