Posted on 04/29/2010 10:24:32 AM PDT by AuntB
The State of Arizona passed a law to uphold federal law and to protect their citizens but the liberal DC establishment, instead of supporting the right of Arizona to enact the legislation is acting full bore against them.
First, lets get the media and open border politician's spin corrected.
There is nothing in the Arizona law contrary to Federal Law. The State of Arizona is acting in concert and protection of the the US Constitution and law.
Today, an article in David Horowitzs blog describes it.
Tragically, the very powers that are Constitutionally supposed to protect America from foreign invasion are lined up to ruin her. It is already a felony to be in this country illegally, but the federal government, from the administrations of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and now Barack Obama, have obstinately refused to protect and secure our borders.
Its not the first time a president and his regime of these United States sided against a sovereign state, refusing to enforce federal law.
Its not the first time a president acted outside of federal authority to distribute to his supporters the wealth and property of other Americans. Like Andrew Jackson, Obama the Democrat, is seeking his place at the bottom of the presidential history heap by disregarding the rule of law.
The question is, will the State of Arizona survive and and be allowed to protect its citizens, its culture, it's history, its laws.
Law, Law understood, and Law executed
This is the simple principle adopted by the Cherokee Nation, located in the NE corner within the State of Georgia, by 1819.
First was the Law. Then law must be understood by the people being ruled by it. But with no execution the law is empty and invites anarchy. When it becomes so complicated, no one understands it.
Seems simple enough, right? Not when special interests are regarded above the rule of law.
These Cherokee, many of them the half breed off spring of Scottish immigrants who fought for the Revolution, and members of the Ridge Party, named for Cherokee leader Major Ridge, had a Constitution copied after our US. Constitution, a legislature and courts. They were prosperous, Christian, independent, modern, and relied on nothing from the Federal government for their care. They had a Newspaper, the Cherokee Phoenix, distributed world wide, in the Queens English as well as the Cherokee Language. They named their children after founding fathers they regarded with the utmost respect: James Madison Bell, Benjamin Franklin Adair, and so on.
Home of Elias (Buck Watee) Boudinot, editor of the Cherokee Phoenix, c. 1830, New Echota, Cherokee Nation.
After his election, Jackson pushed and signed the Indian Removal Act into law in 1830. The Act authorized the President to negotiate treaties to buy tribal lands in the east in exchange for lands further west, outside of existing U.S. state borders.
While not popular in the North, and opposed by Americans like Congressman David Crockett and Ralph Waldo Emerson , Jacksons Indian Removal Act was popular in the South, where population growth and the discovery of gold on Cherokee land had increased pressure for removal of the Cherokee. The state of Georgia became involved in a contentious jurisdictional dispute with the Cherokees, culminating in the 1832 U.S. Supreme Court decision Worcester v. Georgia, which ruled that Georgia could not impose its laws upon Cherokee tribal lands.
Their own New England educated Cherokee attorneys fought and won the decision in the Supreme Court, which held the Cherokee Nation was indeed a sovereign state, who, as long as they held to Constitutional guidelines of federal law, could not be invaded or removed.
Jackson is often quoted regarding this decision, as having said, "John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it!"
Of course, Jackson knew the Supreme Court has no power of enforcement; he as the top executive is responsible for that. He refused. Jackson was the peoples president, or so its said, representing American pioneers of simple means in the South and the movement west. The citizens of Georgia, aided by their Militia, continued to move into modern, European styled Cherokee homes and productive plantations unimpeded by the Federal government. Those who objected, white and Cherokee within their territory, were jailed or killed.
The rule of law was ignored in favor of lining the pockets of the people who put Jackson in office and invaded the Cherokee Nation. The result was the forced removal on the Trail of Tears of tens of thousands of Cherokee, other tribes, slaves and the white men who stood with them.
The Cherokee State was cleansed in favor of the invaders and stands as a stark historical reminder of the fragility of any state sovereignty.
No, there is no formal movement to replace Jackson with Obama on the $20 bill, that we know of. But there is a concerted effort by Obama and his squatter support squad of liberal socialists, some of them republicans, to destroy the right of any state to protect its citizens from invasion.
History does indeed repeat itself, if we allow it. Where will the good people of Arizona or any state, of all races, go if they are not allowed to enforce their laws?
_____________________________________
"All Nations have their rises & their falls. This has been the case with us.
Within the orbit the U. States move the States & within these we move in a little circle, dependent on the great center.
We may live this way fifty years and then we shall by Natural Causes merge in & mingle with the U. States.......
Cherokee blood, if not destroyed, will win its courses in beings of fair complexions, who will read that their ancestors became civilized under the frowns of misfortune & the causes of their enemies." -
John Ridge , son of Major Ridge, letter to Albert Gallatin, member of Thomas Jefferson's staff - February 27, 1826
_________________
“Just out of curiosity, how do you think Old Hickory would handle the illegal aliens invading out nation?”
LOL. Now that thought puts a smile on my face, cause I know the illegals would no longer be in the country.
A.) Beck’s NOT an idiot, though sometimes you can’t actually PROVE that; and
B.) YOU are not addressing the substance of my post; which means:
C.) YOU LOSE.
Sorry, but thanks for (not) playing.
A.) Beck’s NOT an idiot, though sometimes you can’t actually PROVE that; and
B.) YOU are not addressing the substance of my post; which means:
C.) YOU LOSE.
Sorry, but thanks for (not) playing.
You want to argue TR sometime, I’m game. He was quite the patriot and effective President. Like all Presidents, he had his shortcomings and moments of stupidity. But basing TR’s career evaluation on his boneheaded BullMoose years (all two of them) as Beck likes to do, is as much a disservice to TR as basing Churchill’s career on his mistakes (Which including joining Labour, amongst other things).
I could care less about his “Bullmoose” years. I base my loathing for him on the Interstate Commerce Commission, the “Trust Busters” and all the other ways he grew government and government regulation of business when he WAS in office. Now, granted there may have been some abuses by a few businesses, but I would far rather have had THAT than the strangling tentacles of big government, which is what TR was spinning during his Whitehouse years.
“The question is, will the State of Arizona survive and and be allowed to protect its citizens, its culture, it’s history, its laws.”
It won’t if Obama and his GOP Treason Lobby comrades have any say in it.
Jackson definately had his many flaws. Unlike Zero, he really knew who our enemies were!
So busting up AT&T’s monopoly was a bad thing?
When was it busted up? I don’t recall the year, but it was in the 80’s after the MCI lawsuit. Had nothing to do with Teddy “big government” Roosevelt.
That’s true. It was During Reagan’s time. To foster competition instead of monopolies. That is also what Roosevelt was known for. Though progressive old Teddy did far fewer than ‘conservative’ Taft.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.