Posted on 04/01/2013 8:53:02 AM PDT by Oldpuppymax
A law repugnant to the Constitution is void. Though Chief Justice John Marshalls decision in the landmark case Marbury vs Madison has led to 2 centuries of power-abusing mischief on the part of our federal government, he did have the premise correcta law which is unconstitutional is not a law at all. What he did not add, but might have I suspect, is that such a law need not be followed and should not be enforced, especially not by those who have sworn an oath to uphold and defend that Constitution.
For months the American people have been threatened with legislation promoting gun confiscation, assault weapons bans and schemes which would lead quite inevitably to the national registration of firearms and their owners. New York and Colorado have already enacted such legislation, all in typical leftist, knee-jerk response to the Newtown killings.
Each new piece of gun control legislation proposed by the left, whether at the state or national level, has one thing in commonan utter disregard for...
(Excerpt) Read more at coachisright.com ...
“MK Ultra?
That is tinfoil hat talk....”
MK Ultra was an actual government operation, confirmed by a great many FOIA documents.
It is probably “tin foil hat talk” to say that the project was a success, and there are zombie-like, mind-controlled assassins out there waiting to be activated, but the project itself, at least, was a very real thing.
MK Ultra?
That is tinfoil hat talk....
MK Ultra was an actual government operation, confirmed by a great many FOIA documents.
It is probably tin foil hat talk to say that the project was a success, and there are zombie-like, mind-controlled assassins out there waiting to be activated, but the project itself, at least, was a very real thing.
You sound like Alex Jones.
the intrusion was made several centuries back ~ the issue was ‘intrusion’ not ‘federal’. Besides, Abe Lincoln beat you to it anyway.
The topic of that whole post, and the whole thread, is about Federal intrusion, and nothing else!
RE “That is tinfoil hat talk....”
Or so the Sheeple are expected to believe.
I could provide links but somehow don’t suppose that you’re really interested in doing any serious research into the history of mind control projects. ULTRA was only one of them, apparently.
Stalin’s henchmen were pretty adept at it way back in the 1930s, and the Nazis were working on it too. After WW-II the CIA built on what was already known, and by now they are probably pretty good at it.
郡 jùn .........canton; county; region
治安 zhì'ān.... law and order; public security
官 ...... guān official; government; organ of body;
When they are taken together they mean what sherif means ~
That 4th character in the group also means Paek in Korean ~ not Park ~ although both names/words are pronounced just about the same in English. A paek was the guy in charge of who got what allocation of land to farm on the large medieval Korean plantations so that'd be more like overseer ~ although one with the authority to just kill a slave
http://www.yellowbridge.com/chinese/chinese-dictionary.php is a good source to figure it all out!
An interesting question is: what kind of library would a man with no paper trail build?
-PJ
Pound sand, 0bamugabe! Your banana republic laws mean nothing.
Take some photos and post it online (here and elsewhere)
Paek meaning overseer in Korean is funny. The guys who wrote Lost named a ruthless Korean business mogul “Paek”, and they usually hid some kind of reference in people’s names, so that makes sense.
“You sound like Alex Jones.”
Huh? How do I sound like Alex Jones by pointing out that even the US government acknowledges that MK Ultra was a real operation that really tried to accomplish “mind control”? That’s common knowledge, you can go read the FOIA documents yourself if you are the least bit curious.
We've watched a present day comedy about what it would be like to still have a king there. Then, Dong Yi, Yi San, a short one on a king who died young giving the throne to his evil sister (the evil sisters are a recurring theme in this genre).
Most of the content of these series is HISTORIC. Some of it is just cultural 'here's what it was like then'; some is linguistic and there's actually Confucianism all over the place.
I"ve developed a better understanding of Confucianism and can now more readily separate that from the not-ever-present Buddhism. After all shamanism is still practiced there, as well as ancient Chinese medicine.
Korean reality reflects that of Big China next door as well as other non-Han societies such as Manchuria.
BTW, one of my Korean neighbor's brother in laws is a traditional doctor ~ does the herbs, spices, acupuncture ~ all that stuff. As I mentioned the traditional herbalist also has a brother who is a Western doctor. They operate a hospital.
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