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2680 lines
174 KiB
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<conspiracyFile>I N V I S I B L E C O N T R A C T S
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George Mercier
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BANK ACCOUNTS
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[Pages 131-193]
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[Certain conventions have been used in converting INVISIBLE CONTRACTS to an
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electronic medium. For an explanation of the conventions used, please download
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the file INCONHLP.ZIP for further illumination. Other background information as
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well is contained in INCONHLP.ZIP. It is advisable to EXIT this file right now
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and read the contents of INCONHLP.ZIP before proceeding with your study of this
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file.]
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Some years preceding his multiple prosecutions in 1984, Mr. Condo went down to
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a bank, and initiated an Equity relationship with that corporation and the
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King. Yes, Commercial contracts in effect with banks are invisible juristic
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contracts in effect with the King. In the Armen Condo Letter, I mentioned that
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banks are in a special Status with the King, and likewise so are the individual
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people who experience profit and gain from any Commercial contract they enter
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into with a bank. This relational effect of doing business in King's Commerce
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is pronounced quite clearly in the INSTRUMENTALITY DOCTRINE the Supreme Court
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initiated publicly with DAVIS VS. ELMIRA SAVINGS:
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"National banks are instrumentalities of the Federal Government,
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created for a public purpose, and as such necessarily subject to the paramount
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authority of the United States." [170]
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[170]<div> DAVIS VS.
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ELMIRA SAVINGS, 161 U.S. 275, at 283 (1896). The factual setting giving rise to
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DAVIS was a Bankruptcy proceeding. In the many quotations from the United
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States Supreme Court and other judicial forums in this Letter, sentences were
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rearranged and then quoted out of original order for enhanced logical
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continuity; and in other places I made nominal punctuation and capitalization
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changes. Therefore, please refer to the original citations before requoting.
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<div>[170]
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This Instrumentality Doctrine is very significant, and the word INSTRUMENTALITY
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means an Equity Relationship that is quite strong in American Jurisprudence. As
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nationally chartered banks are the Instrumentality of the Congress, consider
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the subordinate Party (the banks) as being the "right hand" of the Master (the
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Congress). This is a very powerful Doctrine indeed, and it needs to be
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understood for what it really means. In the Armen Condo Letter, I mentioned
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that, from a Judicial Perspective, any profit or gain experienced from a bank
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carries with it the same identical full force and effect as if the King himself
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created the gain. Consider, for a moment, the application of the
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Instrumentality Rule to corporations:
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"Under this Rule, corporate existence will be disregarded where a
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corporate subsidiary is so organized and controlled and its affairs so
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conducted as to make it only an adjunct and instrumentality of another parent
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corporation." [171]
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[171]<div> BLACK'S LAW
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DICTIONARY, under the "Instrumentality Rule [case cites deleted].
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<div>[171]
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Now think what happens if the King is substituted for the parent corporation,
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and your local bank is substituted for the subsidiary corporation. Under the
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Instrumentality Doctrine, the local bank as a Person and a legal entity fades
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away in significance as if it was transparent, and the King and the Secretary
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of the Treasury then appear as the real contracting Persons you are entering
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into Commercial agreements with. Are you beginning to see the legal
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significance of this Doctrine? Are you beginning to appreciate the deeper
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meanings of the bank account in that it is the King that you are really
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contracting into Commerce with, and the bank is just the King's local agent?
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That bank is literally the private personal property of the King. Entrepreneurs
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who go out and capitalize a new bank from scratch do not own that bank. The
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bank is owned by the King who created the corporation, and his Comptroller of
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the Currency later issued out a banking charter to; and the individual
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shareholders only hold an equitable interest in the bank's operations. [172]
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[172]<div> "The
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corporation is the legal owner of all of the property of the bank, real and
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personal; and within the powers conferred upon it by the charter, and for the
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purposes for which it was created, can deal with the corporate property as
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absolutely as a private individual can deal with his own. This is familiar law,
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and will be found in every work that may be opened in the subject of
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corporations. A striking exemplification may be seen in the case of THE QUEEN
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VS. ARMOUND, 9 Ad. & Ell. N.S. 806. The question related to the registry of a
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ship owned by a corporation. Lord Denman observed:
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"It appears to me that the British corporation is, as such, the sole
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owner of the ship. The individual members to the corporation are no doubt
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interested in one sense in the property of the corporation, as they may derive
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individual benefits from its increase, or loss from its decrease; but in no
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legal sense are the individual members the owners."
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- THE BANK TAX CASES, 70 U.S. 573, at 584 (1865).
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<div>[172]
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The shareholders are only entitled to a limited withdrawal of some of the
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bank's net earnings, under some limited circumstances. [173]
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[173]<div> "The
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interest of the shareholder entitles him to participate in the net profits
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earned by the bank in the employment of its capital, during the existence of
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its charter, in proportion to the number of his shares; and, upon its
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dissolution or termination, to his proportion of the property that may remain
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of the corporation after the payment of its debts."
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- THE BANK TAX CASES, id., at 584.
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<div>[173]
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Many incarcerated Protestors were unaware of the existence of the Commercial
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contract that they were into, and so having the strong political views that
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they do, their political feelings, skewing off on a defiant tangent, retained
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the upper hand over their better judgment -- an inquisitive judgment that would
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be searching for answers to questions. So although the Protestors was at one
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time unaware of the existence of a contract being in effect, the King was very
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much aware, and so the Protestor's defiant behavior is increasingly improvident
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when viewed from the perspective that the Commercial contract was written to
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strongly favor the King, and is interstitially dispersed throughout with penal
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clauses IN ESSE for no more than mere administrative negligence and default,
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and any outs that exist for persons in default are the unintended default
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technical errors that the King's LEX statutes can correct at the discretion of
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the Congress.
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Today, great Tax Protesting Patriots like Condo, Schiff, and Saussey -- who
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have established themselves in forward political positions -- have the strong
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advantage of learning in advance the single most important fundamental starting
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point in this Life; a starting point that most other folks won't even know of
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until it is too late; a starting point that bifurcates the Law of Judgment into
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two great subdivisions; Tort and Contract. Unknown to the world at large,
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Heavenly Father has invisible Celestial Contracts operating on us all, just
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like the King had multiple layers of Commercial and invisible political
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contracts operating on Schiff, Condo, and Saussey (I will discuss those layers
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later on). Maybe I am missing something somewhere, but I wish someone would
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explain to me the prudence of Armen Condo's MODUS OPERANDI, as I cannot find
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any; when presented with such valuable information (that invisible contracts
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were actually in effect) Armen Condo summarily rebuffed that information
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without any inquiry being made into its authenticity. I had told Armen
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something he did not want to hear in his non-teachable state of mind; and in
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ways similar to those invisible juristic contracts the King has on us that so
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few people know much about, likewise our previous existence First Estate
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Contracts with Father cast a regulatory contract jurisdiction over us all, and
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all contract jurisdictions always call for our being self damaged by our own
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mere neglectful technical default, nonchalant indifference swirling in carefree
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insouciance, and miscellaneous compliance deflection Tort Law rationalizations:
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"... yea, I lived with her for a while -- she was NICE, but there was
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no damages nowhere and everyone consented -- so Father can't hold that against
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me."
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And just as Schiff, Condo, and Saussey were given unpleasant advance
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introductions into what a contract Star Chamber is all about, so too will the
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Last Day be a Contract Star Chamber -- the worst imaginable to those who have
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used Tort Law behavioral defense arguments down here, as a well sculptured
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slice of meat was repetitively bewitched into an elevated state of enchantment
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("Gee, I didn't damage anyone"). [174]
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[174]<div> Not that
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Father is throwing us all into a LAKE OF FIRE AND BRIMSTONE to scorch us
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thoroughly (Heathens really get a good kick out of that foolish idea of being
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roasted in a scorcher by a revengeful god for a few little impish smatterings);
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but the Last Day Judgement will actually be the WORSE IMAGINABLE because of
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knowledge we will then posses of the magnitude of the lost benefits involved,
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and how stupid it was to lose it down here over some interesting feminine
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musculature, and other inappropriate adventurism into peripheral areas that are
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defined as being illicit by First Estate Covenants, but are not really illicit
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practically due to the omission of damages. The LAKE OF FIRE AND BRIMSTONE
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analogy that the Prophets of old were referring to is their characterization of
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this state of mental anguish.
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<div>[174]
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But the Last Day will also be transparent for those who entered into, and were
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successfully tried under, Father's NEW AND EVERLASTING COVENANT; for these, the
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Last Day will be a smooth procedural formality, nothing that should be of any
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impending concern. [175]
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[175]<div> The NEW AND
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EVERLASTING COVENANT has been of particular interest with all of our Patriarchs
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and Prophets of old, right back down the line, clear back to Adam: Question:
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What is this NEW AND EVERLASTING COVENANT? Answer: Without referring to
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anyone's commentary or explanation, the name of this particular Celestial
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Covenant reveals a slice of history by itself, as the words NEW AND EVERLASTING
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possibly imply that other Covenants exist that might be just the opposite: OLD
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AND TEMPORARY. Are there in fact such Covenants floating around? Yes, there
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are, but they are invisible; Father extracted them out of us in the First
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Estate before we came down here, and by their nature those temporary First
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Estate Covenants were designed to be replaced with NEW AND EVERLASTING
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COVENANTS, Covenants that would never again be replaced, Covenants that are
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EVERLASTING. The anonymous author who once wrote a Letter now known as HEBREWS
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in the New Testament, once had a few words to say about OLD Covenants and NEW
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Covenants, average Covenants and better Covenants, FIRST Covenants and SECOND
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Covenants:
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"... now he hath obtained a more excellent ministry, by how much also
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he is the mediator of a better Covenant, which was established upon better
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promises. For if that FIRST COVENANT HAD BEEN FAULTLESS, THEN SHOULD NO PLACE
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HAVE BEEN SOUGHT FOR THE SECOND [Covenant]. For finding fault with them, he
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saith, 'Behold, the days come,' saith the Lord, 'when I will make a NEW
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Covenant with the House of Israel, and with the House of Judah.' ... In that he
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saith, 'A NEW Covenant,' he hath made the first old. Now that which decayeth
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and waxeth old is ready to varnish away."
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- HEBREWS 8:6, et seq. The next chapter in HEBREWS talks about the HOLY
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OF HOLIES, Temples, the ARK OF THE COVENANT, and First and Second Covenants,
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which is advanced material I will talk about in another Letter. I do not know
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who wrote this LETTER TO THE HEBREWS; within its content the text contains
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little information about either its author, its original readers and their
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circumstances, its date, its overt purpose, or its theological background.
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HEBREWS commences immediately by laying on the heavy stuff, while the greetings
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appear at the end. Even its literary form is somewhat mysterious in the sense
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that by probing into dimensionally deep Christian doctrines, the left the other
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Commentators behind him biting the dust; words and phrases appearing in HEBREWS
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appear no where else [for example, the phrase JESUS, THE MEDIATOR OF THE NEW
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COVENANT -- (see 12:24, 9:15, and 8:6) -- does not appear anywhere else in
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either the Old or New Testaments]. Martin Luther once made the suggestion that
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Apollos of Alexandria was the writer [APOLLOS is described in ACTS 18:24-28 as
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being a caliber of a fellow who would and could write HEBREWS]. Suffice it to
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say that the doctrinal ideas and ecclesiastical commentary presented in HEBREWS
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will feel very comfortable to folks today after they have first been steeped in
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the DOCTRINES OF THE NEW COVENANT for a while, as both originated from the same
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Source (the significance of HEBREWS will be appreciated once you have an
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enlarged basis of factual knowledge on the successive organic nature of
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Covenants serving their purpose and then replacing previous Covenants, and in
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turn being replaced by still other Covenants). While calling itself a WORD OF
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EXHORTATION [13:22], the LETTER TO THE HEBREWS contains some of the most
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eloquent writings and sermons in the New Testament, and whoever its author was,
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had to be a gifted Christian thinker who probed into the deeper doctrines of
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Christianity where few others did. I will have more to say about HEBREWS in
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some other Letter. ... I said that this NEW AND EVERLASTING COVENANT has been a
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source of interest to all of the great Patriarchs back down the line -- and I
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meant what I said -- so here are the citations:
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"... and I will look upon it, that I may remember the EVERLASTING
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COVENANT between God and every living creature..."
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- GENESIS 6:18
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"... I will establish my Covenant between me and thee and thy Seed
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[SEED meaning offspring] after thee in their generation for an EVERLASTING
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COVENANT, to be a God upon thee, and to thy Seed after thee."
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- GENESIS 17:7
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"... my Covenant shall be in your flesh for an EVERLASTING COVENANT."
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- GENESIS 17:13
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"And God said 'Sarah, thy wife, shall bear thee a son indeed; and thou
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shalt call his name Isaac: And I will establish my Covenant with him for an
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EVERLASTING COVENANT, and with his Seed after him."
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- GENESIS 17:19
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"Every Sabbath he shall set it in order before the Lord continually,
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being taken from the children of Israel by an EVERLASTING COVENANT."
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- LEVITICUS 24:8
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"And he shall have it, and his Seed after him, even the Covenant of an
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EVERLASTING PRIESTHOOD..."
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- NUMBERS 25:13
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"Although my house be not so with God, yet he hath made with me an
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EVERLASTING COVENANT, ordered in all things, and sure: For this is all my
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Salvation, and all my desire..."
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- II SAMUEL 23:5
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"He is the Lord our God; His Judgements are in all the Earth; be
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mindful always of His Covenant; the word which He commanded to a thousand
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generations; even of the Covenant He made with Abraham, and of his Oath unto
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Isaac; and hath confirmed the same to Jacob for a Law, and to Israel for an
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EVERLASTING COVENANT..."
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- I CHRONICLES 16:14 et seq.
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"He is the Lord our God; His Judgments are in all the Earth; He hath
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remembered His Covenant for ever; the word which He commanded to a thousand
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generations; which Covenant He made with Abraham, and his Oath unto Isaac; and
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confirmed the same to Jacob for a Law, and to Israel for an EVERLASTING
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COVENANT..."
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- PSALM 105:7 et seq.
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"... the Earth is also defiled under the inhabitants thereof; because
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they have transgressed the Laws, changed the Ordinance, broken the EVERLASTING
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COVENANT."
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- ISAIAH 55:3
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"... everlasting joy shall be unto them.. and I will direct their work
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in Truth, and I will make an EVERLASTING COVENANT with them."
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- ISAIAH 61:8 et seq.
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"... and I will make an EVERLASTING COVENANT with them..."
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- JEREMIAH 32:40
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"... nevertheless, I will remember my Covenant with thee in the days of
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thy youth, and I will establish unto thee an EVERLASTING COVENANT."
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- EZEKIEL 16:60
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"Moreover, I will make a Covenant of peace with them; it shall be an
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EVERLASTING COVENANT with them; and I will place them, and multiply them..."
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- EZEKIEL 37:26
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"... now the God of peace... that great shepard of the sheep, through
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the blood of the EVERLASTING COVENANT."
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- HEBREWS 13:20
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"For they have strayed from mine ordinances, and have broken mine
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EVERLASTING COVENANT..."
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- DOCTRINE AND COVENANTS 1:15
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"Wherefore, I, the Lord... gave commandments to others, that they
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should proclaim these things unto the world... that mine EVERLASTING COVENANT
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might be established."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 1:17 et seq.
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"Behold, I say unto you that all old Covenants have I caused to be done
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away with in this things; and this is a NEW AND EVERLASTING COVENANT, even that
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which was from the beginning."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 22:1
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"Wherefore I say unto you that I have sent unto you mine EVERLASTING
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COVENANTS, even that which was from the beginning."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 49:9
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"Verily I say unto you, blessed are you for receiving mine EVERLASTING
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COVENANT... sent forth unto the children of men, that they might have life and
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be made partakers of the glories which are to be revealed in the last days, as
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it was written by the Prophets and Apostles in days of old."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 66:2
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"... in the telestial world... [there will be goofs;]... these are they
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who say they are some of one and some of another -- some of Christ and some of
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John, and some of Moses, and some of Elias, and some of Esaisis, and some of
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Isaiah, and some of Enoch [by being of Moses, of John, of Jack, of Pete, of
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Harry, of Bob, of Ted -- they are spiritually disorganized in that they are OF
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anyone except the right One]; but received not the Gospel, neither the
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testimony of Jesus, neither the Prophets ["... it's all the same God -- I just
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don't need me none of that Contract stuff"], neither the EVERLASTING COVENANT."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 76:98 et seq.
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"Wherefore, a commandment I give unto you, to prepare and organize
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yourselves by a bond or EVERLASTING COVENANT that cannot be broken."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 78:11
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"He that is appointed to be president, or teacher,... let him offer
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himself in prayer upon his knees before God, in token or remembrance of the
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EVERLASTING COVENANT."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 88:128 et seq.
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"I salute you in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, in token or
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remembrance of the EVERLASTING COVENANT, in which Covenant I receive you to
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fellowship, in a determination that is fixed, immovable, and unchangeable, to
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be your friend and brother through the grace of God in the bonds of love, to
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wait in all the commandments of God blameless, in thanksgiving, forever and
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ever."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 88:133
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"When men are called unto mine Everlasting Gospel, and Covenant with an
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EVERLASTING COVENANT, they are accounted as the salt of the Earth and the savor
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of men..."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 101:39
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"For behold, I reveal unto you a NEW AND EVERLASTING COVENANT, it was
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instituted for the fullness of my Glory, and he that receiveth a fullness
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thereof must and shall abide the Law, or he shall be damned, saith the Lord
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God. [Yes, those are pretty strong consequences; but where there are high
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powered benefits, there will always be found correlative high powered
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consequences]."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 132:6
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"... verily I say unto you, if a man marry a wife by my word, which is
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my Law, and by the NEW AND EVERLASTING COVENANT... ye shall inherit thrones,
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kingdoms, principalities, and powers dominions, all heights and depths... they
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shall pass by the angels, and the gods, which are set there, to the exaltation
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and Glory in all things... and the angels are subject unto them."
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- DOCTRINE & COVENANTS 132:19
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<div>[175]
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To Heathens and agnostics, who spent their time playing with their own
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salvation down here by fighting and resisting what they will then view as
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something as simple as giving Father what he wanted, there will be no
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opportunity then to throw multiple exploratory defense lines at Father by going
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through multiple judgements, but much to our advantage we can have all the
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prosecutions thrown at us that we want down here, to repetitively argue our
|
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defense lines before Judges over and over again; and it is for this reason that
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incarcerated Protestors will one day look back and be ever grateful that the
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consequential significance of being in mere technical default on invisible
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contracts was driven into them, under such strong circumstances. [176]
|
||
[176]<div> "The object
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||
of our earthly existence is that we may have a fullness of joy, and that we may
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||
become the sons and daughters of God, in the fullest sense of the word, being
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heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus Christ, to be kings and priests unto
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||
God, to inherit glory, dominion, exaltation, thrones, and every power and
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attribute developed and possessed by our Heavenly Father. This is the object of
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our being on this Earth. In order to obtain unto this exalted position, it is
|
||
necessary that we go through this mortal experience, or probation, by which we
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may prove ourselves worthy, through the aid of our elder brother Jesus."
|
||
- Joseph F. Smith, in a Funeral Service delivered over the daughter of
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Daniel H. Wells, on April 11, 1878; 19 JOURNAL OF DISCOURSES 258, at 259
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[London (1878)].
|
||
<div>[176]
|
||
Yes, today, Condo, Schiff, and Saussey are either in a cage, or close to being
|
||
thrown into one, because of their default in juristic contracts; tomorrow -
|
||
after they have OPENED THEIR EYES, they will go forth and inherit, create, and
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||
preside over Thrones, Dominions, and WORLDS WITHOUT END, also by Contract.
|
||
Having known the bitter Agony, they can cleave to the Celestial Ecstasy; in
|
||
both cases, contracts were the initiating catalytic instrumentality.
|
||
This banking INSTRUMENTALITY DOCTRINE is a pretty strong relational status for
|
||
the Judiciary to take cognizance of, so when we probe back down the line to
|
||
uncover why chartered banks are in such a status, we should not be too
|
||
surprised to uncover our old friend: A contract. [177]
|
||
[177]<div> "A charter
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||
is certainly in form and substance a contract; it is a grant of powers, rights,
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||
and privileges;
|
||
"... A charter to a bank... is certainly a contract, founded on
|
||
valuable consideration."
|
||
- Joseph Story, in III COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION, at page 258
|
||
(Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1833). This Joseph Story, who I will be quoting from
|
||
throughout this Letter, was born in Marblehead, Massachusetts in September of
|
||
1779. He entered Harvard College and graduated in 1798. When leaving Cambridge,
|
||
he immediately entered into the study of Law in the office of Mr. Samuel
|
||
Sewall, then an advocate at the Essex bar. In 1801, Joseph Story was admitted
|
||
to the Massachusetts bar. He was elected to the Massachusetts Commonwealth
|
||
Legislature in 1805, and was then elected to the Congress in 1808, and was soon
|
||
Speaker of the House of Representatives. In 1810 he argued the great Georgia
|
||
case FLETCHER VS. PECK, which involved contracts, before the Supreme Court. He
|
||
edited a book called CHITTY ON BILLS OF EXCHANGE AND PROMISSORY NOTES, and
|
||
others. On November 18, 1811, Joseph Story was commissioned to be an Associate
|
||
Justice of the United States Supreme Court to fill the vacancy left by Mr.
|
||
Justice Cushing. He was then 32 years of age, the youngest man ever to be
|
||
called to such a position in either England or America, except for Justice
|
||
Buller. While on the Supreme Court, Joseph Story wrestled down questions on
|
||
Admiralty and Maritime regarding the rights and duties of ship owners,
|
||
insurance companies, and mariners. He was a major architect of, and wrote
|
||
extensively about, Patents and their role in English history [see THE INFLUENCE
|
||
OF MR. JUSTICE STORY ON AMERICAN PATENT LAW by Frank Prager in 5 American
|
||
Journal of Legal History, at 254 (January, 1961)]. He created a doctrine to
|
||
settle frictional disputes between the Federal-State layers of Government,
|
||
called the COMITY DOCTRINE, which is still quoted by the Supreme Court down to
|
||
the present day [see JOSEPH STORY'S CONTRIBUTION TO AMERICAN CONFLICTS LAW: A
|
||
COMMENT by Kurt Naddleman in 5 American Journal of Legal History, at 230
|
||
(January, 1961)]. And he also dealt with the banditry of PRIZE JURISDICTION,
|
||
which was still in vogue. Back at a time when banking in the United States was
|
||
operating under a LAISSEZ-FAIRE relational status to Government, Joseph Story
|
||
wrote that banking affects a public interest [very significant words], and that
|
||
banking involves that most ancient prerogative of national Sovereignty, THE
|
||
MONEY POWER, which our Framers never restrained or abated in the Charter they
|
||
created for our King. >namely, the U.S. Constitution< [See JUSTICE STORY AND
|
||
THE AMERICAN LAW OF BANKING by Gerald Dunne, in 5 American Journal of Legal
|
||
History, at 205 (January, 1961)]; and this is a dominant theme in American
|
||
Jurisprudence remaining in effect down to the present day with George Mercier
|
||
enlarging on what Joseph Story started. While studying his COMMENTARIES ON THE
|
||
CONSTITUTION, I have been able to uncover only a few of Justice Story's
|
||
opinions and legal statements that were later reversed or otherwise toned down
|
||
in subsequent Federal rulings, and none of the reversals were really on-point
|
||
factual settings. Down to the present day in 1985, many of Joseph Story's
|
||
statements of Law that he applied to the hypothetical factual scenarios which
|
||
he created in 1833 for his COMMENTARIES were actually made with great
|
||
foresight, as they would later be coming to pass long after he returned Home in
|
||
1845. [For detailed biographies on all of the early Supreme Court Justices, see
|
||
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES by Hampton Carson [John Huber Company,
|
||
Philadelphia (1891)]; and also worthwhile is Morgan David's JUSTICE JOSEPH
|
||
STORY: A STUDY OF THE LEGAL PHILOSOPHY OF A JEFFERSONIAN JUDGE in 18
|
||
Vanderbuilt Law Review, at 643 (March, 1965).
|
||
<div>[177]
|
||
Originally applicable only to nationally chartered banks, the INSTRUMENTALITY
|
||
DOCTRINE has since been expanded under the enlarging regulatory penumbra of the
|
||
Federal Reserve Act of 1913 to include all state and Federally chartered member
|
||
banks of the Fed. During the Depression, banks who became members of the FDIC
|
||
and FSLIC insurance programs were deemed Instrumentalities, and this doctrine
|
||
is now applied in the United States to include all financial institutions where
|
||
there is any Federal regulatory interest in them. This now includes stock
|
||
brokerage houses, credit unions, insurance companies, and pension funds. (For
|
||
example, people acquiring a Merrill Lynch Cash Management Account, which is a
|
||
negotiable withdrawal instrument, are in the same Juristic Personality Status
|
||
(in King's Commerce) with a Merrill Lynch checking account that they are with a
|
||
checking account from any conventional depository banking institution, such as
|
||
Manufacturer's Hanover.) When a person initiates such a bank account
|
||
relationship with the King, an examination of Fourth Amendment Search and
|
||
Seizure cases relating to account records that banks send to depositors reveals
|
||
that the Federal appellate judiciary considers the Fourth Amendment to be
|
||
non-applicable to Seized bank account records. [178]
|
||
[178]<div> Exemplary
|
||
perhaps would be two EXCLUSIONARY RULE based cases from the Supreme Court:
|
||
- UNITED STATES VS. MILLER, 425 U.S. 435 (1976). A criminally accused
|
||
person made a pre-Trial Motion to Suppress of copies of checks and other bank
|
||
records which federal agents had gotten a hold of. HELD: That the Motion to
|
||
Suppress was properly denied since the accused person possessed no Fourth
|
||
Amendment interest that could be vindicated by a challenge to the bank
|
||
accounts; and any infirmities or deficiencies in the bank account record
|
||
acquisition process, by way of a defective Subpoena or Search Warrant, were
|
||
irrelevant arguments since Subpoenas and Search Warrants were unnecessary
|
||
document acquisition tools to begin with; those bank account records are the
|
||
property of the Government, and they are available to the Government under
|
||
administrative devices (meaning an investigator's phone call or letter
|
||
inquiry); and
|
||
- UNITED STATES VS. PAYNER, 447 U.S. 727 (1979). A criminal defendant
|
||
had been charged with falsifying his income tax return by denying that he held
|
||
a foreign bank account. Federal agents in Florida had broken into an apartment
|
||
and then surreptitiously copied bank records that a bank manager from the
|
||
Bahamas had brought with him on a trip, under circumstances that you or I would
|
||
be incarcerated for. Later on, detective work back at the office uncovered the
|
||
fact that the poor defendant did indeed maintain foreign bank accounts, so the
|
||
Government then threw a criminal prosecution at the fellow caught in the act of
|
||
defilement. Since the Government had violated the Constitutional rights of a
|
||
third party [the bank manager from the Bahamas], and not the criminally
|
||
accused, the Fourth Amendment offered no protection to the Defendant, since the
|
||
Defendant had no rights violated. State in other words, perhaps more
|
||
explicitly, emphasizing the consequences of maintaining bank account records:
|
||
When Government obtains your bank account records, regardless of how, through
|
||
whom, when, or under any circumstances, then arguing Fourth Amendment rights
|
||
defensively will likely not produce any sympathy from Federal Appellate Forums.
|
||
<div>[178]
|
||
In those cases, the Supreme Court will talk about how Courts cannot exclude
|
||
evidence under the Fourth Amendment unless that Court finds that an unlawful
|
||
Search or Seizure violated the defendant's own Constitutional rights. But that
|
||
the Constitutional rights of criminal defendants, who are being hanged with
|
||
their own bank account statements, are violated only when the Search and
|
||
Seizure conduct violated the defendant's own legitimate expectation of privacy,
|
||
rather than that of a third party. [179]
|
||
[179]<div> Paraphrased
|
||
from UNITED STATES VS. PAYNER, id., at 731.
|
||
<div>[179]
|
||
Since the "zone of privacy" inherent in the Papers Clause of the Fourth
|
||
Amendment does not facially protect information you have deposited into the
|
||
hands of third parties, like banking institutions, [180]
|
||
[180]<div> "... no
|
||
interest legitimately protected by the Fourth Amendment is implicated by
|
||
governmental investigative activities unless there is an intrusion into a zone
|
||
of privacy, into 'the security a man relies upon when he places himself or his
|
||
property within a constitutionally protected area.'"
|
||
- HOFFA VS. UNITED STATES, 385 U.S. 293, at 301 (1966).
|
||
<div>[180]
|
||
Federal Courts find it unnecessary to probe any deeper and explicitly tell you
|
||
the real underlying reason why bank accounts fall outside the protective
|
||
penumbra of the Fourth Amendment; Because a Commercial contract is in effect,
|
||
and the Bill of Rights cannot be held to interfere with or obstruct the
|
||
contemporary execution of Commercial contracts, for either party (and properly
|
||
so). But wait, as those Supreme Court cases dealt with bank accounts Seized
|
||
from a bank itself, and banks as regulated Commercial establishments have no
|
||
Fourth Amendment rights whatever. So there are no privacy rights in any
|
||
information you deposit with those banks, and this remains true whether or not
|
||
there was a Commercial contract in effect or not. Hmmm. But what if those bank
|
||
account records were Seized from a person's home where the Fourth Amendment
|
||
does apply? Now what? The Fourth Amendment still does not apply, and properly
|
||
so. [181]
|
||
[181]<div> "Respondent
|
||
[bank account holder] urges that he has a Fourth Amendment interest in the
|
||
records kept by banks because they are merely copies of personal records that
|
||
were made available to the banks for a limited purpose and in which he has a
|
||
reasonable expectation of privacy... Even if we direct our attention to the
|
||
original checks and deposit slips [that the bank account holder kept in his
|
||
home], rather than to the microfilm copies actually viewed and obtained by
|
||
means of a subpoena, we perceive no legitimate 'expectation of privacy' in
|
||
their contents. The checks are not confidential communications but negotiable
|
||
instruments to be used in commercial transactions. The lack of ANY legitimate
|
||
expectation of privacy concerning the information kept in bank records was
|
||
assumed by Congress in enacting the BANK SECRECY ACT, the express purpose of
|
||
which is to require records to be maintained because they 'HAVE A HIGH DEGREE
|
||
OF USEFULNESS IN CRIMINAL, TAX, AND REGULATORY INVESTIGATIONS AND PROCEEDINGS'
|
||
[12 U.S.C. Section 1829b(a)(1)]."
|
||
- UNITED STATES VS. MILLER, 425 U.S. 435, at 442 (1976) The ITALICS
|
||
were added here to underscore the extreme significance of those statements; the
|
||
Law in this FOURTH AMENDMENT/BANK ACCOUNT area is well settled: COMMERCIAL
|
||
contracts are in effect, and challenging it is improvident. Notice how the
|
||
Congress is playing cutesy by calling a sequential family of statutes the BANK
|
||
SECRECY ACT, freely conveying the initially impressive image that these
|
||
statutes protect or otherwise enhance the public's secrecy in banking accounts
|
||
and related records -- but in reality the BANK SECRECY ACT is a high-powered
|
||
statutory device, as the Supreme Court here exemplifies, to promote the
|
||
usefulness of those bank records in criminal prosecutions that the Government
|
||
will one day be throwing at you. Among other things, this Act empowers the
|
||
Secretary of the Treasury to adopt broad regulations compelling banks to record
|
||
their customer's transactions and requiring that the banks, as well as private
|
||
persons using banking services, also report a broad range of financial
|
||
transactions TO THE GOVERNMENT [now where is the "Secrecy"?] Pursuant to this
|
||
grant of statutory jurisdiction, the Treasury Secretary then turned around and
|
||
created his own multiplying slice of LEX by administrative promulgations
|
||
directing that each bank report each and every single deposit, withdrawal, and
|
||
transfer that took place in domestic transactions of $10000 or more [see 31
|
||
CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS Section 103.22].
|
||
<div>[181]
|
||
This is what is really meant when the bank account evidence taken from a
|
||
patently unlawful residential Search and Seizure in a person's home is deemed
|
||
admissible, even though the Fourth Amendment's Exclusionary Rule would
|
||
otherwise attach if the property that was seized did not belong to the King
|
||
(guns, cocaine, etc.). Federal Judges will skew their Seizure of bank accounts
|
||
annulment justifications off to the side and talk about the "special facts in
|
||
this case" when annulling Fourth Amendment rights on bank account records
|
||
unlawfully Seized from a residence. [182]
|
||
[182]<div> Banking
|
||
records seized from residences merely contain the same information that other
|
||
documents located in public places contain; and so although those seized
|
||
records are "private papers," all the Government has to do is go down to the
|
||
bank [now that they know which bank to go to, and which account to sift
|
||
through], obtain duplicate copies of banking records, and then throw those
|
||
copies that were obtained directly from banks at Defendants:
|
||
"On their face, the documents [bank accounts] subpoenaed here are not
|
||
respondent's 'private papers.' Unlike claimant in BOYD VS. UNITED STATES [116
|
||
U.S. 616 (1886)], respondent [bank account holder] can assert neither ownership
|
||
nor possession. Instead, these are the business records of banks.
|
||
- UNITED STATES VS. MILLER, 425 U.S. 435, at 440 (1976).
|
||
<div>[182]
|
||
And now we are finally getting down to the one real reason why the Bill of
|
||
Rights in general, and the Fourth Amendment, in particular, means absolutely
|
||
nothing when a bank account is involved with a contested Search and Seizure;
|
||
this special reason is never talked about by law schools; and this reason is
|
||
not to be found anywhere in any law book in any library that I am acquainted
|
||
with: But the reason is, as stated, because a Commercial contract with the King
|
||
is in effect, and so as a point of beginning, the Bill of Rights is irrelevant
|
||
from the scratch, and properly so; but you will never hear that explicit
|
||
explanation from anyone else, other than George Mercier. Never in any Court
|
||
Opinion is there any blunt discussion of Commercial contracts being in effect;
|
||
rather, Judges will continue to focus distracting attention and discussions
|
||
around the Fourth Amendment, creating the potential image, in some peripheral
|
||
factual setting cases, that the Fourth Amendment is the center of gravity here,
|
||
rather than the Commercial contract itself. Yet it is very proper and correct
|
||
that the Bill of Rights should not be allowed to interfere with, obstruct,
|
||
intervene, or otherwise restrain the execution or operation of contemporary
|
||
Commercial contracts -- for either party; but getting an official admission
|
||
like that from a Federal Judge will result in a can of worms being opened up
|
||
(as they perceive it), a can of worms they don't want to talk about and deal
|
||
with in the future. [183]
|
||
[183]<div> As I
|
||
mentioned in the Armen Condo Letter, Federal Judges have been asked not to let
|
||
the "cat out of the bag" by discussion the special and very quiet relationship
|
||
between bank accounts and Income Tax statute liability (although bank accounts
|
||
are not exclusive Equity Jurisdiction attachment instruments, they are
|
||
air-tight instruments of CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE whenever the King has a burden of
|
||
proving the defendant's entrance into Interstate Commerce).
|
||
<div>[183]
|
||
Additionally, but to a lesser extent, those bank account records are the
|
||
private personal property of the King, and so it is irrational that the King
|
||
cannot reclaim his own property whenever he feels like it, all pursuant to the
|
||
terms of the bank account contract. [184]
|
||
[184]<div> "The
|
||
depositor takes the risk, in revealing his affairs to another, that the
|
||
information will be conveyed by that person to the Government... This Court has
|
||
held repeatedly that the Fourth Amendment does not prohibit the obtaining of
|
||
information revealed to a third party and conveyed by [the third party] to
|
||
Government authorities, even if the information is revealed on the assumption
|
||
that it will be used only for a limited purpose and the confidence placed in
|
||
the third party will not be betrayed."
|
||
- UNITED STATES VS. MILLER, 425 U.S. 435, at 443 (1976). If you don't
|
||
know what contract I am referring to that gives the King the right to simply
|
||
reclaim his own property, then ask a bank for a copy of their bank rules that
|
||
all depositors and borrowers have agreed to be bound by. Under normal
|
||
circumstances, banks are reluctant to give depositors copies of Bank Rules
|
||
those depositors have agreed to be bound by. Sounds irrational, doesn't it?
|
||
Withholding the terms of contracts those depositors have just taken upon
|
||
themselves criminal compliance liability for? Yet, numerous attempts by people
|
||
associated with me have attempted to obtain a copy of these Bank Rules, and all
|
||
attempts resulted in the banking officer clamming up tight, deflecting
|
||
attention over to the "irregular and unusual" nature of the request, and then
|
||
telling the requesting person to go see MR. SO AND SO at the Federal Reserve
|
||
Board, who in turn also clammed up tight. So much for domestic American bank
|
||
accounts. <div>[184]
|
||
Those are the real reasons why the Fourth and Fifth Amendments are irrelevant
|
||
in bank account Administrative Seizures and in judicial prosecutions
|
||
evidentiarily based on bank accounts. Within the same line of Fourth Amendment
|
||
cases, those Federal Judges will also refer to bank accounts as being
|
||
interstate merchant and Commercial instruments, but never is there any
|
||
discussion to be found anywhere on the special Equity Relationship in effect
|
||
between Persons entering into such Commercial contracts, and the King.
|
||
Some folks have taken the position that if they entered into Equity with the
|
||
King by signing a bank account card under Objection on the grounds of
|
||
necessity, that Objection somehow will vitiate future liability; but there is
|
||
an inherent defect in that reasoning. Unlike signing Driver's License
|
||
applications under Objection and Notice of Duress to avoid incarceration, the
|
||
Supreme Court has ruled that the RIGHT TO TRAVEL is a Substantive and
|
||
Fundamental Right that cannot be infringed upon, absent very strong and
|
||
compelling state interests; and there are state statutes which criminalize the
|
||
act of an unlicensed driver operating a motor vehicle down the road. Taking
|
||
that Driver's License scenario as a model and applying it to justify possessing
|
||
bank accounts just does not cut it. Bank accounts are not entered into to avoid
|
||
incarceration, and banking is not a Substantive Right, and direct personal
|
||
financial profit and gain enrichment is experienced when possessing bank
|
||
accounts that is without parallel with a Driver's License. So, all factors
|
||
considered, the likelihood of escaping an Excise Tax liability by arguing bank
|
||
account possession by necessity, is remote. This remains true even though the
|
||
California Supreme Court ruled once that:
|
||
"For all practical purposes, the disclosure by individuals or business
|
||
firms of their financial affairs to a bank is not entirely volitional, since it
|
||
is impossible to participate in the economic life of contemporary society
|
||
without maintaining a bank account. In the course of such dealings, a depositor
|
||
reveals many aspects of his personal affairs, opinions, habits and
|
||
associations. Indeed, the totality of bank records provides a virtual current
|
||
biography." [185]
|
||
[185]<div> BURROWS VS.
|
||
SUPERIOR COURT, 13 Cal 3rd 238, at 247 (1974).
|
||
<div>[185]
|
||
The California Supreme Court is not a Federal Tribunal, and statements to the
|
||
effect that bank accounts are necessary for practical economic survival, and
|
||
perhaps are not purely volitional [VOLITIONAL means freely choosing or will to
|
||
do so, as in making a decision], although an interesting perception of the
|
||
passing scene, will in no wise vitiate your legal liability to the adhesive
|
||
Federal taxation reciprocity expectations resident in Title 26. Notice how the
|
||
California Supreme Court did not say that possession of bank accounts under a
|
||
documented factual setting of economic survival annuls Title 26 liability. So
|
||
let's not read out of that state court what it does not say; and even if that
|
||
state court did state inferentially that possession by necessity annuls
|
||
expectation of reciprocity liability in areas of taxation, then the California
|
||
Supreme Court is still not a Federal Judicial Forum. Federal Judges are taught
|
||
and trained certain things in those Seminars of theirs, and that BENCH BOOK of
|
||
theirs makes the Government's position sound more than reasonable, and so as a
|
||
result, Federal Judges are collectively sensitive towards certain things [such
|
||
as the significance of a Commercial contract] that State Judges are indifferent
|
||
to.
|
||
This DAVIS VS. ELMIRA SAVINGS Instrumentality Doctrine occasionally surfaces in
|
||
Supreme Court rulings, by sometimes being lightly mentioned in passing in
|
||
OBITER DICTUM, such as in ANDERSON NATIONAL BANK VS. LUCKETT, [186]
|
||
[186]<div> 321 U.S.
|
||
233, at 252 (1943).
|
||
<div>[186]
|
||
and on other occasions, this Instrumentality Doctrine is bluntly reaffirmed by
|
||
the Supreme Court, as in MARQUETTE NATIONAL BANK VS. FIRST OF OMAHA. [187]
|
||
[187]<div> 439 U.S. 308
|
||
(1978). <div>[187]
|
||
But if the Law of King's Commerce is correctly understood, there is no need for
|
||
the Supreme Court to reaffirm anything, as the circulation of paper money,
|
||
notes, or the circulation of any juristic currency, even carrying intrinsic
|
||
value, in King's Commerce (as distinguished from privately minted coins and
|
||
notes), has always been the closed private domain of the King of England. And
|
||
it has been the exclusive domain of the King ever since paper money was first
|
||
printed and circulated by King Richard II to finance an offensive war against
|
||
France that Parliament declined to levy taxes to wage. [188]
|
||
[188]<div> Gremlins
|
||
have had a few words to say about the utterly heinous issuance of paper
|
||
currency:
|
||
"Of all the contrivances for cheating the laboring classes of mankind,
|
||
none is so effectual as that which deludes them with paper money. It is the
|
||
most perfect expedient ever invented for fertilizing the rich man's fields by
|
||
the sweat of the poor man's brow. Ordinary tyranny, oppression, excessive
|
||
taxation, these bear lightly on the happiness of the community compared with
|
||
fraudulent currencies and the robberies committed by depreciated paper. Our own
|
||
history has recorded enough, and more than enough, of the demoralizing
|
||
tendency, the injustice and intolerable oppression on the virtuous and well
|
||
disposed, of a degraded paper currency, authorized by law, or in any way
|
||
countenanced by Government."
|
||
- Gremlin Nelson W. Aldrich, United States Senator, at a New York City
|
||
dinner speech on October 15, 1913 (two months before his pet Federal Reserve
|
||
System was passed by the Congress to create the very conditions he fraudulently
|
||
represented to oppose, in IV PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
|
||
#1, at 38 [Columbia University, New York (1914)].
|
||
<div>[188]
|
||
So the circulation of paper money by Gremlins through the instrumentality of
|
||
kings, was born in tortious fraud intended to damage people, and was designed
|
||
to accomplish in the practical setting (the damages of taxation by Inflation)
|
||
what was not accomplished legally on the Floor of Parliament by common consent.
|
||
[189]
|
||
[189]<div> When the
|
||
United States Congress removed the last remaining attachment of paper Federal
|
||
Reserve notes to gold reserve requirements in 1968 -- the Gremlins were there.
|
||
From out of his nest on the 17th Floor of the Chase Manhattan Bank descended
|
||
one David Rockefeller on Congress, taking his jet and making his attack sortie
|
||
on Washington with Gremlin enscrewment in mind -- whose very appearance itself
|
||
at a Committee Hearing was designed to make an important Statement: That we
|
||
Gremlins now hold the upper hand in the United States, and our grand plans for
|
||
monetary enscrewment will no longer be restrained on account of some lingering
|
||
silly little anachronistic gold ratio requirements left over from another era.
|
||
This is the modern age with computers, Congress, and you just don't need to
|
||
concern yourself none with that old medieval stuff. See the "Statement of David
|
||
Rockefeller" in the GOLD COVER HEARINGS ["Hearings Before the Committee on
|
||
Banking and Commerce of the United States Senate"], at page 141, 90th Congress,
|
||
Second Session ["Repeal of Gold Reserve Requirement"] (January, 1968)].
|
||
<div>[189]
|
||
So paper money has been designed from the outset to damage people, and the
|
||
unnecessary circulation of paper money today in the United States carries along
|
||
with it identical underlying enscrewment objectives. [190]
|
||
[190]<div> The Legal
|
||
Tender Acts, enacted during the Civil War, were billed as a war measure:
|
||
"... to handle the vast amount of means necessary for the prosecution
|
||
of this war, to enable the people to pay in and the Government to pay out, we
|
||
must have a larger and more abundant currency that we have heretofore found to
|
||
be necessary. The accustomed currency is wholly inadequate. The Government has
|
||
for many years used only gold and silver for this purpose... The business of
|
||
the Government and the business of the country require some substitute for
|
||
coin. We must therefore create a new [paper]... currency. We must therefore
|
||
create a public debt, establish a currency, and impose new taxes."
|
||
- Speech by Representative John Crisfield of Maryland, favoring
|
||
enactment of the Legal Tender Statutes [CONGRESSIONAL GLOBE, 37th Congress, 2nd
|
||
Session, Appendix, page 43 et seq. (February 5, 1862)].
|
||
<div>[190]
|
||
Back in an era when the United States was the American Colonies, the Framers to
|
||
our Constitution never abated or restricted the King's standing right to issue
|
||
out his own money or to declare that someone else's money or notes are legal
|
||
and tender for those debts existing under the King's General Commerce
|
||
Jurisdiction; and neither did the Framers ever restrict the King's right to
|
||
delegate any or all of the circulating process to a third party (as arguments
|
||
in this area of FEDERAL RESERVE UNCONSTITUTIONALITY DUE TO LACK OF COINAGE
|
||
DELEGATION JURISDICTION are in error). The Supreme Court has ruled often that
|
||
the Constitution of the United States must be applied today in light of English
|
||
Common Law then in effect at the time the Declaration of Independence was
|
||
executed, and properly so. [191]
|
||
[191]<div>
|
||
- UNITED STATES VS. WONG KIM ARK, 169 U.S. 649, at 645 (1897);
|
||
- VEAZIE BANK VS. FENNO, 75 U.S. 533 (1869);
|
||
- LOCKE VS. NEW ORLEANS, 71 U.S. 172 (1866), etc.
|
||
<div>[191]
|
||
"... Congress possesses all of the powers which existed in the States
|
||
before the adaption of the National Constitution, and which have always existed
|
||
in the Parliament in England." [192]
|
||
[192]<div> GILMAN VS.
|
||
PHILADELPHIA, 70 U.S. 713, at 725 (1865).
|
||
<div>[192]
|
||
So let us briefly examine English Common Law and see just what type of monetary
|
||
powers the King of England had. Consider the following words from a landmark
|
||
case in 1604: [193]
|
||
[193]<div> I call this
|
||
a "landmark" case because it was later cited by the Supreme Court of the United
|
||
States in the LEGAL TENDER CASES, 79 U.S. 457, at 548 (1871).
|
||
<div>[193]
|
||
"as the king by his prerogative may make money of what matter and form
|
||
he pleaseth, and establish the standard of it, so may he change his money in
|
||
substance and impression, and enhance or debase the value of it, or entirely
|
||
decry and annul it...
|
||
"And so it is manifest, that the kings of England have always had and
|
||
exercised the prerogative of coining and changing the form, and when they
|
||
found it expedient of enhancing and debasing the value of money within their
|
||
dominions; and this prerogative is allowed and approved not only by the common
|
||
law, but also by the rules of the imperial law." [194]
|
||
[194]<div> CASE OF
|
||
MIXED MONEY, Sir John Davies Reporter, at page 48 (1604).
|
||
<div>[194]
|
||
And so if the King of England had the right to invoke Sovereignty Jurisdiction
|
||
to circulate debased currency, then so also does the Congress of the United
|
||
States now have similar Sovereignty Jurisdiction, absent an explicit and blunt
|
||
jurisdictional restraining mandate to the contrary in this charter, the
|
||
Constitution -- paper currency restrainment language which does not exist.
|
||
[195]
|
||
[195]<div> Yes, the
|
||
Congress can do whatever it feels like with issuing currency, as an attribute
|
||
of its sovereignty:
|
||
"Congress, as the legislature of a sovereign nation, being expressly
|
||
empowered by the constitution to lay and collect taxes, pay the debts, and
|
||
provide for a common defense... [and also] to charter national banks, and to
|
||
provide a national currency for the whole people in the form of coin, treasury
|
||
notes, and national bank bills, and [also has] the power to make the notes of
|
||
the Government a legal tender in payment of private debts being one of the
|
||
powers belonging to sovereignty in other civilized nations, and not expressly
|
||
withheld from Congress by the Constitution..."
|
||
-JULLIARD VS. GREENMAN, 110 U.S. 421, at 466 (1884).
|
||
<div>[195]
|
||
Nowhere in our Constitution did the Framers state that "no paper currency shall
|
||
issue out of Congress," or "circulating currency is required to physically
|
||
contain gold and silver," and Patriot arguments to the effect that Article I,
|
||
Section 10 constitutes such a restrainment are defective, as I will explain
|
||
later on. Nor did the Framers state that "monetary matters reside exclusively
|
||
within the Congress, and cannot be delegated..." Are you beginning to see what
|
||
happens when some agreement is reduced into writing? With the passage of time,
|
||
oral expectations in effect at the time the agreement was executed diminish
|
||
away into nothingness, and only the exact, literal content of the agreement, as
|
||
written, means anything. [196]
|
||
[196]<div> Earlier, I
|
||
mentioned that Contracts we enter into now down here with Heavenly Father
|
||
overrule and supersede our First Estate Contracts, and that the First Estate
|
||
Contracts then fade away in significance. The Principe of Law that this is
|
||
based on is called by business lawyers in Commerce as the MERGER DOCTRINE,
|
||
contracts that we enter into today overrule and extinguish contracts entered
|
||
into in a previous era; in other words, the most recent contract absorbs
|
||
previous contracts. The application of this MERGER DOCTRINE is found in many
|
||
settings. For example, in real estate transactions, just as the old prior oral
|
||
negotiations between a Seller and a Purchaser are washed out by the Deed [23 AM
|
||
JUR Deeds Section 261], so too do oral precontract negotiations loose their
|
||
identity and existence as those negotiations later unite in the confluence of
|
||
the written contract [PRICE VS. BLOCK, 124 F.2nd 738]. This MERGER DOCTRINE is
|
||
a correct Principle of Nature I touched on in the Armen Condo Letter [that
|
||
Commercial contracts we enter into today with the King overrule the
|
||
restrainments resident in the Constitution of 1787], and this Principle now
|
||
operates, and has operated, in all factual settings. The MERGER DOCTRINE
|
||
recognizes that there are different levels of importance or priorities in
|
||
NATURE, and what is done in the past is always of less significance than what
|
||
is done in the present (which is simply reason, logic and COMMON SENSE); so
|
||
lesser important contracts from out of the past, together with their lingering
|
||
oral expectations and the like, fade away in significance as they are MERGED
|
||
into contracts of greater importance:
|
||
"Whenever a greater Estate and a less [Estate] coincide and meet in one
|
||
and the same person, without any intermediate estate, the less is immediately
|
||
annihilated; or, in the law phrase, is said to be merged, that is, sunk or
|
||
drowned in the greater."
|
||
- 2 BLACKSTONE COMMENTARIES 177. When corporations are said to MERGE,
|
||
what actually happens is that the two independent corporations lose their
|
||
existence altogether as separate entities having separate assets, liabilities,
|
||
franchises, legal rights, and powers; and are totally absorbed into the new
|
||
single corporation [see MORRIS VS. INVESTMENT LIFE INSURANCE, 272 N.E.2nd 105,
|
||
at 108]. And since NATURE, so called, merely replicates the mind, will and
|
||
intention of its great Creator, the Principle of Nature that lawyers practicing
|
||
Commercial Law call the MERGER DOCTRINE, also applies to have our great
|
||
contemporary Celestial Contracts with Father overrule and wash out our lessor
|
||
previous existence First Estate Contracts. Yes, when you know the Law in one
|
||
setting, you know the Law in all settings, as nothing changes from one factual
|
||
setting to the next.
|
||
<div>[196]
|
||
Today when we enter into contracts with one another down here, as unforeseen
|
||
circumstances surface later on, regrets are always quietly expressed about how
|
||
this or that should have been originally included into the agreement. It was
|
||
that way with Moses and the Ten Commandments, it was that way with the United
|
||
States Constitution of 1787, and this attribute of Nature [of people enlarging
|
||
their basis of factual knowledge over time, and therefore also changing their
|
||
desires] remains in full force and effect down to the present day with
|
||
Commercial contracts. An honest assessment of the Framers would suggest that
|
||
they were unable to guard against all possible evils, since they simply did not
|
||
have, then, the exposure to the magnitude of evil that we have had thrown at us
|
||
today.
|
||
But as for currency, [197]
|
||
[197]<div> When words
|
||
have several different meanings, the word is said to be an ENTENTE. In Law, the
|
||
word CURRENCY is such an ENTENTE. Over a period of time, words change meaning
|
||
as new factual circumstances surface to alter the use or perspective of
|
||
something:
|
||
"The meaning of words changes. It is curious to note how many words
|
||
wholly lose their original or etymological meaning, and from usage and change
|
||
of circumstances acquire sometimes an opposite and often a different meaning...
|
||
The common legal word INDORSE, from the Latin IN, upon, and DORSUM, the back.
|
||
It used to be applied literally and strictly to a writing upon the BACK of a
|
||
paper. It is now well settled that a good instrument may be made on the FACE of
|
||
a bill or note."
|
||
- PILMER VS. STATE BANK, 16 Iowa Reporter 321, at 329 (1864). And on
|
||
one hand, speaking like an economist, CURRENCY has been defined to be:
|
||
"Currency is capital seeking investment. While invested, it takes the
|
||
form of money, or of promises to deliver money on demand, but so soon as it is
|
||
invested, it loses its character of currency, and assumes that of stocks,
|
||
houses, or commodities."
|
||
- Hugh Carey in ANSWER TO THE CURRENCY QUESTION, at page 6 [Lea &
|
||
Blanchard, Philadelphia (1840); RARE BOOK COLLECTION, University of Rochester,
|
||
Seward Collection #410]. Before the Civil War there were actually few United
|
||
States Treasury Notes floating around the Countryside, as Currency at that
|
||
time, because the King's LEGAL TENDER ACTS had not yet been enacted, and the
|
||
King had not yet decided that the time had come to pull another grab and enact
|
||
penal statutes to create a national exclusive monopoly on currency instruments
|
||
for himself. Privately minted coins, bank notes, and mining company script, and
|
||
the like, then constituted the nation's currency. With that in mind, the
|
||
Illinois Supreme Court once defined CURRENCY as:
|
||
"By the term currency is understood bank bills, or other paper money
|
||
issued by authority, which pass as and for coin... In the case of JUDAH VS.
|
||
HAINS [19 J.R. 144], the Court decided that a note, payable in bank notes
|
||
current in the City of New York, was a valid note. The Court said they will
|
||
take notice that notes current in the City of New York are of cash value
|
||
throughout the State, and are distinguished by those words from other bank
|
||
notes, which are received at a discount, and hence it is immaterial whether the
|
||
notes of banks of other States might be tendered in payment, provided they are
|
||
current in the City of New York; in that case they are considered cash, equally
|
||
with the current bills of this State.
|
||
"From those authorities, it would seem that current bills, or currency,
|
||
are of the value of cash, and exclude the idea of depreciated money. If, then,
|
||
currency is taken as and for coin, it follows that such is its value..."
|
||
- RICHARD SWIFT VS. JAMES WHITNEY, 20 Illinois 144, at 146 (1840). The
|
||
Supreme Court of Iowa once wrestled with a definition of CURRENCY:
|
||
"Currency is bank bills or other paper money which passes as a
|
||
circulating medium in the business community as, and for, the constitutional
|
||
coin of the country. The term 'current funds' means currency money, par funds,
|
||
or money circulating without any discount..."
|
||
"The word CURRENCY is, as we have seen, far from having a settled,
|
||
fixed and precise meaning. And even if it had such a meaning in general, it
|
||
might acquire in certain localities, or among certain classes, a different
|
||
signification."
|
||
- PILMER VS. STATE BANK, 16 Iowa Reporter 321, at 328 (1864). And in
|
||
more recent times, the King, having sealed up with his gun barrel muscle
|
||
tactics a national monopoly on circulating currency instruments, an Appellate
|
||
Court in Illinois now changed the meaning of CURRENCY once again:
|
||
"Currency has been defined as funds or money circulating in the
|
||
business community without any discount, excluding the idea of depreciated
|
||
paper money."
|
||
- JAKE LESS VS. S. ALPORT, 217 Illinois Appellate 14, at 17 (1920).
|
||
Here in the 1980's, the editors of BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY, functioning as the
|
||
Government Billboards in the sense that the focus point of everything is always
|
||
juristic: Some slice of LEX over here, or some Case over there. Continuing on
|
||
with their Government center of gravity on everything the way they do, BLACK'S
|
||
defines CURRENCY as only to include those coins, banknotes, and paper money
|
||
that the King has officially recognized in his Legal Tender LEX [as if either
|
||
we or our Fathers in the 1800's really needed the King]:
|
||
"CURRENCY: Coined money and such banknotes or other paper money as are
|
||
authorized by law and do in fact circulate from hand to hand as the medium of
|
||
exchange. See... LEGAL TENDER [no cases are cited]."
|
||
- BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY, 5th Edition. When those cases from the 1800's
|
||
stated that CURRENCY meant Notes [and NOTES are promises to pay] that are
|
||
exchanged AT PAR, what they mean is that those paper Notes carry an immediate
|
||
or CURRENT maturity date. To redeem a Note AT PAR meant to receive 100%
|
||
exchange for the Face Value that was stated on the Note; if the Note stated the
|
||
Face Value of 10 Gold Eagles, then if the Note was redeemed AT PAR 10 Gold
|
||
Eagles would then be your's; if redeemed at 90% of par, then 9 Gold Eagles
|
||
would be your's. Therefore, when the Maturity Date was current (immediate), the
|
||
Note could be exchanged for gold or silver AT PAR, if in fact you wanted the
|
||
coin instead of the Note. If the Note was exchangeable for hard coin say, one
|
||
or five years out in the future, then such a Note was not CURRENT, and would
|
||
only be exchanged for coin at below par (the percentage differential between
|
||
the par and the sub-par negotiated was the interest carrying cost the new Note
|
||
holder had to bear while he sat and waited for the Maturity Date to arrive).
|
||
But today, BLACK'S has done away with all of this, we have Legal Tender
|
||
statutes now in the modern era, and you just don't need to concern yourself
|
||
with none of that privately minted stuff.
|
||
<div>[197]
|
||
itself as we now have it, synchronous with King Richard II's unsuccessful
|
||
conquest against France in the 1300's (and long before the King of England's
|
||
chartering of the Bank of England in 1694 under Gremlin prompting and
|
||
intellectual guidance), [198]
|
||
[198]<div> The King
|
||
modeled his bank after the BANK OF AMSTERDAM. Before the Bank of England was
|
||
established, English mercantile writers such as Sir Josiah Childe and Thomas
|
||
Yaranton placed the Crown on notice that "... the Amsterdam bank was of so
|
||
immense advantage to them..." because Dutch Government Debt Instruments "... go
|
||
in Trade equal with Ready Money, yea, better in many parts of the World than
|
||
Money." [quoted by Dickerson in THE FINANCIAL REVOLUTION IN ENGLAND: A STUDY IN
|
||
THE DEVELOPMENT OF PUBLIC CREDIT, 1688-1756, at page 5 (MacMillian Company,
|
||
London, 1967)]. The Bank of Amsterdam had begun as a Warehouse for the safe
|
||
storage of gold and silver belonging largely to Merchants. A Merchant would
|
||
deposit his precious metal for safekeeping, with a receipt given in return; and
|
||
the banker charged a fee for the safekeeping. But soon a few Merchants wanted
|
||
the receipts to be divisible, because they wanted to negotiate just the receipt
|
||
itself, without having to bother making arrangements to physically arrange an
|
||
exchange of the gold or silver. While the Merchants were looking at ways to
|
||
save time here and there, the bankers themselves were developing a few ideas of
|
||
their own; the bankers noticed that only some small percentage of the gold and
|
||
silver actually came and went in and out the doors, so they started to loan out
|
||
gold that was not theirs. Now this was getting interesting -- charging both for
|
||
the storage and also collecting interest on the property of others; and its
|
||
allure attracted the attention of a Gremlin, Mr. John Law, who used this
|
||
concept as a basis for developing a Government monetary theory similar to what
|
||
Gremlin John Maynard Keynes would be writing about two centuries later:
|
||
"This theory [of John Law's] was that the economic system of that day
|
||
was being starved because of insufficient supplies of money. And using the Bank
|
||
of Amsterdam as a model, he had a scheme for producing all the money a nation
|
||
needed."
|
||
- John Flynn in MEN OF WEALTH, at 51 [Simon and Schuster, New York
|
||
(1941)]. For nearly two decades, John Law shopped his theories around European
|
||
Juristic Institutions, with his plans falling on death ears, but one day a
|
||
window opened for his intrigues to be used. After King Louis the 14th of France
|
||
had depleted his Treasury funds in 1716, he turned to John Law who he had
|
||
previously rebuffed. John Law established the BANQUE GENERALE with himself at
|
||
the top; soon it was named the ROYAL BANK with a monopoly charter granted on
|
||
the issuance of money -- and John Law issued bales of paper money, and so, not
|
||
surprisingly, prosperity was rampant.
|
||
"It is not to be wondered that for a few brief months Paris hailed the
|
||
magician who had produced all these rabbits from his hat. Crowds followed his
|
||
carriage. People struggled to get a glimpse of him. The nobles of France hung
|
||
around his anteroom, begging a word from him."
|
||
- MEN OF WEALTH, id., at 75. John Law followed the Gremlin script for
|
||
enscrewment right down the line; all gold and silver was accumulated in the
|
||
hands of his ROYAL BANK; public ownership of gold was outlawed; devaluations
|
||
transpired; inflation mounted and illiquidity was in the air as debt
|
||
instruments began to be difficult to service. John Law fled France in 1720,
|
||
with the mobs who had once hailed him for being a financial genius now calling
|
||
for his head. If this economic scenario sounds at all familiar to you, it
|
||
should, because Gremlins find it unnecessary to change, alter, modify, or
|
||
rearrange their MODUS OPERANDI with the passage of time, as they go about their
|
||
work running one civilization into the ground after another:
|
||
"As a NEW DEALER [John Law] was not greatly different in one respect
|
||
from the apostles of the mercantilist school -- the Colberts, the Roosevelts,
|
||
the Daladiers, the Hitlers and Mussolinis... who sought to create income and
|
||
work by state-fostered public works and who labored to check the flow of gold
|
||
away from their borders. He introduced something new, however, that the
|
||
Hitlers, the Mussolinis, the Roosevelts, the Daladiers and the Chamberlains
|
||
have imitated -- the creation of funds for these purposes through the
|
||
instrumentalities of the modern bank. Law is the precursor of the inflationist
|
||
redeemers."
|
||
- MEN OF WEALTH, id. So the Bank of England was modeled after the Bank
|
||
of Amsterdam which had been created early in the 1600's, and the Dutch bank in
|
||
turn had been modeled after the Bank of Venice [as reported by Charles Wilson
|
||
in THE DUTCH REPUBLIC AND THE CIVILIZATION OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY, at page
|
||
25; McGraw Hill, New York (1968)]. The Bank of England became so successful at
|
||
selling Government debt instruments that it soon became the prototype for
|
||
public banks where looters in other nations sought similar objectives of
|
||
grabbing more money for themselves without having to ask their subjects for it.
|
||
Under the direction of a series of astute financial moves, England's new Bank
|
||
quickly created investor confidence in Government funded debt instruments,
|
||
enabling the Crown to borrow large sums of money at steadily declining rates of
|
||
interest, rather than go through the nuisance and irritation of raising taxes
|
||
dramatically. Writing in THE SPECTATOR, Joseph Addison once compared Government
|
||
credit loans to:
|
||
"... a beautiful Virgin seated upon a throne of Gold possess'd of the
|
||
powers of a Croesus to convert whatever she pleas'd into that precious Metal
|
||
[CROESUS was a King of Lydia in the 6th Century, B.C., and possessed vast
|
||
wealth; hence CROESUS means any fabulously wealthy man.]
|
||
- quoted by Dickerson in THE FINANCIAL REVOLUTION IN ENGLAND: A STUDY
|
||
IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF PUBLIC CREDIT, 1688-1756, inside the front page
|
||
[MacMillian Company, London, 1967)].
|
||
<div>[198]
|
||
The special SUB ROSA relationship that was developed between the circulation in
|
||
King's Commerce of paper money by the King and a grand Tort the King intends to
|
||
work, still remains in full force and effect down to the present day in the
|
||
United States. [199]
|
||
[199]<div> "The history
|
||
of the law of money evidences a constant struggle between the customs of trade
|
||
and the doctrine of freedom of contract, on the one hand, and on the other, the
|
||
exercise of the political power for the needs of Government or the relief of
|
||
private debtors [meaning banking Gremlins]."
|
||
- Phanor J. Eder, writing in "Legal Theories of Money," 20 CORNELL LAW
|
||
QUARTERLY 52, at 53 (1934).
|
||
<div>[199]
|
||
Anglo-Saxon Kings have a long history of never bothering to stop pulling off
|
||
whatever they can get away with. [200]
|
||
[200]<div> There is
|
||
some value in turning around and looking back at the past to uncover the
|
||
movements of men in other ages, because once their behavior in that setting is
|
||
known, then the real meaning of the movements of men today are exposed:
|
||
"If we consider the shortness of human life, and our limited knowledge,
|
||
even of what passes in our own time, we must be sensible that we should be
|
||
forever children in understanding, were it not for this invention, which
|
||
extends our experience to all past ages, and to the most distant nations;
|
||
making them contribute as much to our improvement in wisdom, as they had
|
||
actually laid under our observation. A man acquainted with history may, in some
|
||
respect, be said to have lived from the beginning of the world, and to have
|
||
been making continual additions to his stock of knowledge in every country."
|
||
- David Hume in PHILOSOPHICAL WORKS ["Of the Study of History"], at
|
||
page 390; [Longmans Green, London (1898); Greene and Grosse, Editors]. But
|
||
Anglo-Saxon Kings are not the only looters to play this game. For a discussion
|
||
of Monetary Debasement being pulled off in B.C. times, see the writings of
|
||
Phanor J. Eder in THE GOLD CLAUSE CASES IN LIGHT OF HISTORY, 23 Georgetown Law
|
||
Journal 369, at page 722 (Part II) (1935).
|
||
<div>[200]
|
||
For example, in the 1500's, the King of England (actually Queen Elizabeth)
|
||
ordered a debasement of Britain's national currency for the express purpose of
|
||
working a Tort on rebels in Ireland. This carefully planned currency debasement
|
||
was explicitly designed to damage these Irish adversaries of the Crown as an
|
||
act of war. When these debased coins were issued out all over England to the
|
||
public at large, they became known as MIXED MONEY due to the novel alloy
|
||
composition in the coins, meaning a hybrid of part precious and part ordinary
|
||
metals. This degenerate mixed money was then sent by the King of England to
|
||
Ireland as a covert war military measure against the rebels there. The rebels
|
||
were buying supplies abroad, and they were making their purchases by using
|
||
valuable Britannic gold and silver coins, which always had an international
|
||
allure to them, and properly so. So the King decided that the best way to stop
|
||
the rebels from making their arms purchases would be by making their money
|
||
unattractive to their suppliers, foreign gun runners. In making their purchases
|
||
of guns and armaments, the rebels had been obtaining their gold and silver
|
||
English Crown coins from loyal British subjects in the course of ordinary
|
||
dealings, and those subjects in turn had received it from Queen Elizabeth's
|
||
soldiers and others functioning as Crown distribution agents. So the King,
|
||
knowing what he does about using both devalued coin and soft paper currency to
|
||
damage adversaries, simply reduced the value of the money the rebels were
|
||
getting, by clever debasement. Although debasing the currency to damage a rebel
|
||
out in some remote place carries the secondary consequence of damaging loyal
|
||
subjects who mean the Crown no harm; so as to not offend the Crown's subjects,
|
||
the Queen promised to redeem this debased money at face value later on [sound
|
||
familiar today?] [201]
|
||
[201]<div> The Queen
|
||
died shortly after making this promise to her subjects, but her successor
|
||
honored her commitment. See Simon, HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF IRISH COINS, at page
|
||
38 (1749). <div>[201]
|
||
But as for the rebels in Ireland, now the debased Crown coins were being
|
||
rejected by the foreign gun runners as payment for goods they had been selling
|
||
to the rebels, and so, as the supplies to the rebels were cut off at the source
|
||
in this slick and clever way, the plans for conquest by the rebels was
|
||
frustrated. [202]
|
||
[202]<div> For
|
||
additional Commentary on the use of debased currency against the Irish rebels,
|
||
see generally, John Hannigan, THE MONETARY AND LEGAL TENDER ACTS OF 1933-34 AND
|
||
THE LAW, 14 Boston University Law Review 485, at 504 (1934).
|
||
<div>[202]
|
||
The English Case of 1604 that I had quoted from above called THE MIXED MONEY
|
||
CASE was a challenge to the authority of the King of England to pull off what
|
||
he did against Irish rebels, and as you read above in a quotation from the
|
||
Case, the Judiciary has declared that it is a Sovereign prerogative of the King
|
||
to debase his own currency, whenever and however the King feels like it. [And
|
||
rather than snicker at Judges today for tossing aside your challenges to paper
|
||
money, the correct remedy lies in writing explicit and blunt restraining
|
||
language into the King's Charter (the Constitution), but our Framers in 1787
|
||
never did that; and the Framers of 1787 did not write in such explicit and
|
||
blunt restrainments for a very good reason; Because there was strong
|
||
reservations expressed on the floor of the Convention on whether such proposed
|
||
restrainments were really provident. [203]
|
||
[203]<div> "Once the
|
||
Convention was under way, proposals that the Federal Government be given the
|
||
power to coin money and fix its value and that both the Federal and State
|
||
Governments be vested with authority to emit bills of credit triggered heated
|
||
debate over the appropriate limits of governmental monetary power."
|
||
- Getman, THE RIGHT TO USE GOLD CLAUSES IN CONTRACTS, XLII Brooklyn Law
|
||
Review 479, at 489 (1976). See generally, Max Farrand, editor, THE RECORDS OF
|
||
THE FEDERAL CONVENTION OF 1787 [Yale University Press (1937)], 4 volumes. So
|
||
what we are left with today is the milktoast of Article I, Section 10.
|
||
<div>[203]
|
||
That Mixed Money Case was a sleeper, as our Framers never correctly designed
|
||
the Constitution to repel this special type of quiet SUB ROSA political
|
||
aggression; and 250 years later, that Mixed Money Case surfaced in the Supreme
|
||
Court of the United States, in the context of justifying the Civil War era
|
||
Legal Tender Acts. [204]
|
||
[204]<div> THE LEGAL
|
||
TENDER CASES, 79 U.S. 457, at 548 (1871).
|
||
<div>[204]
|
||
Down to the present day, the excitement of war is used as a justification to
|
||
either initiate or continue one more turn in Gremlin enscrewment objectives.
|
||
[205]
|
||
[205]<div> Professors
|
||
Peacock and Wiseman correctly point out that a Government's call for a spirit
|
||
of sacrifice leads to the general acceptance of a higher tax rate at the end of
|
||
a major war, rather than at the beginning of the war [see A.T. Peacock and J.
|
||
Wiseman in THE GROWTH OF PUBLIC EXPENDITURES IN THE UNITED KINGDOM (Princeton
|
||
University Press, Princeton, 1961);] but as is the caliber of collegiate
|
||
INTELLIGENTSIA, never is there any discussion of the quiet movements of
|
||
Gremlins in the shadows directing the administrative operations of their
|
||
nominees that they had previously planted and placed in political
|
||
jurisdictions; and so as a result, the true illicit nature of the LEX designed
|
||
to create Special Interest benefits and damages not related to legitimate
|
||
juristic police power operations, remains obscured. The last annulment
|
||
institution in the United States for illicit LEX, the Supreme Court, is moving
|
||
in the right direction generally, but they still need some fine tuning:
|
||
"The requirement of a legitimate public purpose guarantees that the
|
||
State is exercising its police power, rather than providing a benefit to
|
||
special interests."
|
||
- ENERGY RESERVES VS. KANSAS POWER, 459 U.S. 400, at 412 (1983).
|
||
<div>[205]
|
||
So now we should have some minimum discernment to see why contemporary
|
||
representations to the effect that gold is just too unsuitable by its heavy
|
||
bulk weight to be a modern circulating denomination of currency, as both
|
||
fraudulent and factually defective. Paper money is characterized by its
|
||
depreciating nature. [206]
|
||
[206]<div> "But the
|
||
history of paper money, without any adequate funds pledged to redeem it, and
|
||
resting merely upon the pledge of national faith, has been in all ages and in
|
||
all nations the same. It has constantly become more and more depreciated; and
|
||
in some instances has ceased from this cause to have any circulation
|
||
whatsoever, whether issued by the irresistible edict of a despot, or the more
|
||
alluring order of a republican congress."
|
||
- Joseph Story, III COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION, at page 225
|
||
["Prohibitions - Paper Money"] (Cambridge, 1833).
|
||
<div>[206]
|
||
Fraudulent because people with sinister intentions use debased currency (and
|
||
non-redeemable Federal Reserve Notes that quietly lose a little decremental
|
||
value with each passing year are debased currency) for political conquest and
|
||
to damage their adversaries. [207]
|
||
[207]<div> "... the
|
||
reader should note especially the 'striking parallels to modern times' [in
|
||
comparison to King Solon in 594 B.C., when he pulled off currency debasement
|
||
acts by]... military adventures draining treasuries, threats of national
|
||
bankruptcy, inflations, massive liquidations of debt, debasement of all
|
||
coinage, disputes over sovereign prerogatives concerning money..."
|
||
- Henry Holzer, GOVERNMENT'S MONEY MONOPOLY, page 15 [Books in Focus,
|
||
New York City (1981)].
|
||
<div>[207]
|
||
And such representations are factually defective because the King's new
|
||
proposed money (which the Treasury Department has already quietly circulated
|
||
prototypes of) has thin strips of metal imbedded in between layers of paper,
|
||
and those strips of metal could just as easily have been alloyed with gold and
|
||
silver if our King wanted it -- but no, our King is not quite through with his
|
||
MAGNUM Tortfeasance, not just yet. [208]
|
||
[208]<div> Down to the
|
||
present day, pleas and petitions for a reinstatement of the Gold Standard, of
|
||
just some type, continuously falls on death ears in Congress [maybe because
|
||
that is not OUR Congress]. In December of 1981, the House Banking, Finance and
|
||
Urban Affairs Committee entertained such a petition [see GRASSROOTS HEARINGS ON
|
||
THE ECONOMY, PART III, "Petition for Hearings on HR 391 -- Rhode Islanders for
|
||
a Gold Standard," 97th Congress, First Session, starting at 499 (GPO, 1981)],
|
||
but the petition was tossed aside and ignored.
|
||
<div>[208]
|
||
And just as Patriots go right ahead and argue defective reasoning based on the
|
||
milktoast language in Article I, Section 10, so too do Patriots go right ahead
|
||
and try to argue the line, that well, since the United States has no express
|
||
grant of jurisdiction to create corporations, therefore, the Federal Reserve
|
||
Board is unConstitutional for this reason. I have concluded that if I were on
|
||
the Supreme Court, I would uphold the inherent jurisdiction of the King to
|
||
organize corporations (or any other instrumentality that had its own separate
|
||
treasury, with the King calling that instrument whatever he feels like). [209]
|
||
[209]<div> "A strange
|
||
fallacy has crept into the reasoning on this subject. It has been supposed,
|
||
that a corporation is some great, independent thing; and that the power to
|
||
erect it is a great, substantive, independent power; whereas in truth, a
|
||
corporation is but a legal capacity, quality, or means to an end; and the power
|
||
to erect it is, or may be, an implied and incidental power. A corporation is
|
||
never the end, for which other powers are exercised; but a means, by which
|
||
other objects are accomplished."
|
||
- Joseph Story, in III COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION 131, ["Powers
|
||
of Congress"] (Cambridge, 1833).
|
||
<div>[209]
|
||
That idea of a separate treasury is important to the Supreme Court, since that
|
||
is the determining logic behind their rulings making municipalities exempt from
|
||
the 11th Amendment, which otherwise operates to immunize actions against
|
||
states. [210]
|
||
[210]<div> LAKE COUNTY
|
||
ESTATES, 440 U.S. 391, at 401 (1978).
|
||
<div>[210]
|
||
My reasoning comes from a confluence of factors. First, getting a feel for the
|
||
lack of specificity in the Framer's drafting of the Constitution; for example,
|
||
no where is the King given permission to hire employees, to excavate sites for
|
||
office buildings, to sign leases, or to purchase assets or land in foreign
|
||
lands, etc. In examining those areas where the Supreme Court has ruled on
|
||
inherent meanings of Clauses, they have ruled, for example, that the "Adversary
|
||
Nature" of criminal prosecutions is inherent in the Sixth Amendment [MIRANDA
|
||
VS. ARIZONA and the counsel cases], and that Courts created by the United
|
||
States have inherent Contempt jurisdiction, regardless of the absence of the
|
||
conferment of any such jurisdiction. [211]
|
||
[211]<div> IN RE:
|
||
RUSSO, 53 Federal Rules Decisions 564 (United States District Court, 1971).
|
||
<div>[211]
|
||
And on and on. For these reasons there is very much a basis for an implied
|
||
grant of jurisdiction for the King to do something, not otherwise specifically
|
||
denominated in his Charter. The test to be applied to see if some jurisdiction
|
||
claimed operative by the King, but not exactly specified anywhere in that
|
||
Constitutional Charter of his which breathed life into the King his breath of
|
||
juristic life, lies in another strata: First, is the challenged LEX even
|
||
inferentially in conflict with any restraining mandate the Framers wrote into
|
||
the Constitution? In the limited question of creating corporations, the answer
|
||
is no, it isn't. Next, we shift into the broader question and ask: Is the
|
||
creation of corporations even out of harmony with the LEIT MOTIF of the
|
||
Constitution to restrain the King from functioning as a Tortfeasor? [212]
|
||
[212]<div> "The Bill of
|
||
Rights is the primary source of expressed information as to what is meant by
|
||
Constitutional liberty. Its safeguards secure the climate which the Law of
|
||
Freedom needs in order to exist. It is true that they were added to the
|
||
Constitution to operate solely against Federal power [BARRON VS. BALTIMORE, 32
|
||
U.S. 243, at 247 (1833)]. But the Fourteenth Amendment was added in 1868 in
|
||
response for a demand for national protection against abuses of State power. A
|
||
series of decisions over the last 25 years has held that many rights were
|
||
indeed extended against the states by that Amendment. It is indeed fair to say
|
||
that from 1962 to 1969 the very face of the Law changed. Those years witnessed
|
||
the extension to the States of nine of the specifics of the Bill of Rights,
|
||
decisions which have profound impact on American life, requiring the deep
|
||
involvement of State courts in the application of Federal Law."
|
||
- Justice William Brennan in REMARKS, 36 Rutgers Law Review 725, at 727
|
||
(1984). Patriots and Tax Protestors can carry on all they want with demanding,
|
||
and believing, that they posses some Constitutional Rights, and just like
|
||
Justice Brennan's REMARKS, there are many high, noble and lofty
|
||
characterizations of those Rights available -- but those REMARKS, together with
|
||
the Tax Protestor's demands, are all for naught when one tiny little device
|
||
surfaces in a grievance: A Commercial Contract. By the end of this Letter the
|
||
elevated priority in Nature that contracts ascend to in settling grievances
|
||
should become apparent, whenever they are in effect; a doctrinal concept if
|
||
unlearned now, Mr. May, will be learned in on uncertain terms before Father at
|
||
the Last Day.
|
||
<div>[212]
|
||
Does the challenged act of Congress (creating corporations or other political
|
||
instruments with separate treasuries), have the effect, in the practical
|
||
setting, of allowing or in any way assisting the King to function as a
|
||
Tortfeasor against us countryside folks? In other words, does the creation of
|
||
privately held corporations by the King, such as the Federal Reserve System,
|
||
provide the King with a mechanism to damage us that he would not otherwise be
|
||
privileged to do, or able to do in the practical effect with his own direct
|
||
employees? In the case of creating corporations, or in the creation of separate
|
||
juristic organizations with their own treasuries, the administrative form of
|
||
the corporation (the wording on the piece of paper that is its charter) offers
|
||
no possibility of a Tort on us that could not be otherwise worked by Executive
|
||
Agencies operating under direct Presidential administrative jurisdiction. This
|
||
is true even in the case of the Federal Reserve System. The Fed is very much a
|
||
Tortfeasor in its control over the rate of inflation, [213]
|
||
[213]<div> Inflation is
|
||
a Tort, and can be claimed as such in damage awards. See the Supreme Court in
|
||
JONES & LAUGHLIN STEEL CORPORATION VS. PFIFER, 462 U.S. 523 (1983). And
|
||
Inflation is also a tax, and is treated as income by the Treasury Department;
|
||
in the ANNUAL REPORT of the Secretary of the Treasury for 1919, on page 213,
|
||
there lies the interesting admission that the large federal deficits of 1917 to
|
||
1919, totaling then some $23000000000, were financed by money creation, and
|
||
other devices.
|
||
<div>[213]
|
||
and in its proclivities to do so; and from its being such a dominate financial
|
||
market maker and control of re-discount rates its Open Market Committee can and
|
||
will fix rates of interest at whatever level it feels like; and the Gremlins
|
||
running the Fed know very much that they posses considerable power to determine
|
||
prosperity levels. [214]
|
||
[214]<div> "The purpose
|
||
of the Federal Reserve System is to contribute, to the maximum extent that
|
||
monetary policy can contribute, to the achievement of sustained high
|
||
employment, stable values, and a rising standard of living for all Americans."
|
||
- William McChesney Martin, Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, in
|
||
THE FEDERAL RESERVE AFTER 50 YEARS ["Hearings before the Subcommittee on
|
||
Domestic Finance"], 88th Congress, 2nd Session, Volume I, page 16 [GPO
|
||
Washington (January and February, 1964)].
|
||
<div>[214]
|
||
By controlling these financial market forces, the Fed single-handedly controls
|
||
the relative level of economic prosperity or decline in the land. [215]
|
||
[215]<div> Economists
|
||
watch Fed monetary statistics quite closely, as if they were national policy
|
||
tools (which they are). Statistics generally targeted for close observation are
|
||
those two monetary velocity instruments called M-1 and M-2, as they are
|
||
indications of the direction of the future percentage advance of the GNP and
|
||
Inflation. See THE VELOCITY OF MONEY by George Garvey and Martin Blyn, [Federal
|
||
Reserve Bank, New York (1969)]. The true point of origin of all directional
|
||
changes in the economy necessarily originates with that institution that
|
||
controls the aggregate issuance of its circulating instruments; at the present
|
||
time, this is the Fed and its OPEN MARKET COMMITTEE, a fact that the Congress
|
||
collectively is well aware of but not always acknowledged publicly. See CONDUCT
|
||
OF MONETARY POLICY in Hearings before the Committee on Banking, Finance and
|
||
Urban Affairs, House of Representatives, 96th Congress, First Session, Serial
|
||
Number 96-22 (July, 1979), which discusses the cascading effect of decisions of
|
||
the OPEN MARKET COMMITTEE on multiple macroeconomic indicia.
|
||
<div>[215]
|
||
If the Fed were an administrative agency under, perhaps, the Comptroller of the
|
||
Currency, then all of the regulatory assertions it now makes over member banks
|
||
would remain in effect, and it would still control prosperity through its
|
||
regulatory mechanisms. (Incidentally, the mere absence of prosperity, under
|
||
such highly managed and tightly controlled monetary circumstances, is a Tort
|
||
against us by the Fed). [216]
|
||
[216]<div> An
|
||
INTELLIGENTSIA clown once hired by Gremlins to do some writing for them wrote a
|
||
few words to talk about the Gremlin perception of prosperity:
|
||
"An economic system does not have to be expansive -- that is,
|
||
constantly increasing its production of wealth -- and it might well be possible
|
||
for people to be completely happy in a nonexpansive economic system if they
|
||
were accustomed to it. In the twentieth century, however, the people of our
|
||
culture have been living under expansive conditions for generations. Their
|
||
minds are psychologically adjusted to expansion, and they feel deeply
|
||
frustrated unless they are better off each year than they were the previous
|
||
year. The economic system itself has become organized for expansion, and if it
|
||
does not expand it tends to collapse [and when it does collapse, it is because
|
||
the Gremlins were there]."
|
||
- Carroll Quigley in TRAGEDY AND HOPE, at 497 [MacMillian Company, New
|
||
York (1966)].
|
||
<div>[216]
|
||
If the Federal Reserve were an Article II Executive Agency under Presidential
|
||
Jurisdiction (which as a privately owned and independently managed business
|
||
entity, it is not), then every single decision made by the Federal Reserve
|
||
Board and its Open Market Committee (and its predecessor) down to the present
|
||
time, would still have been made and carried out. [217]
|
||
[217]<div> The Federal
|
||
Reserve Board is a very handy instrument to massage economies, create
|
||
depressions, and run civilizations into the ground with. For example, in the
|
||
late 1920's, there was an era of speculation in the securities markets of the
|
||
United States; after a while in any market, what appears to be SPECULATION will
|
||
always surface when rising prices and highly leveraged loans make their
|
||
institutionalized appearance on the scene. Economists, bureaucratic theorists,
|
||
and other clowns will cast SPECULATION into an illicit image, but SPECULATION,
|
||
so called, is nothing more than a manifestation of strong prosperity -- and
|
||
Gremlins do not want you and I to have sustained protracted prosperity, they
|
||
want us to experience economic starvation like they wanted physical starvation
|
||
for those millions of Ukrainians who were murdered in the great manufactured
|
||
Famine of 1932-33. Easy high percentage loans are an important ingredient to
|
||
create SPECULATION, so one of the devices used by Rothschild Gremlins to create
|
||
a balloon of American speculation was to lower the rate of interest charged by
|
||
the Federal Reserve Board to member banks:
|
||
"Nothing did more to spur the boom in stocks than the decision made by
|
||
the New York Federal Reserve Bank, in the Spring of 1927, to cut the rediscount
|
||
rate. Benjamin Strong, Governor of the bank, was chief advocate of this unwise
|
||
measure, which was taken largely at the behest of Montagu Norman of the Bank of
|
||
England [Montagu Norman was a Rothschild nominee planted in the Bank of
|
||
England]. Ostensibly, this easy money policy was designed to stop the flow of
|
||
gold out of England [as usual, DECEPTION is present when Gremlins are running
|
||
the show]. Its primary effect, however, was to cause a reevaluation of all
|
||
securities [upward], and to further inflate our already inflationary credit
|
||
system by making large sums of money available for financing stock
|
||
speculation."
|
||
- Bernard Baruch,, in his autobiography BARUCH: THE PUBLIC YEARS, at
|
||
221 [Holt Rheinhart & Winston, New York (1960)]. The well known Gremlin
|
||
economist John K. Galbraith dismisses the view that the action of the Federal
|
||
Reserve Board authorities in cutting the rediscount rate in the Spring of 1927
|
||
had much effect on the elevated speculation which followed, on the grounds that
|
||
this:
|
||
"... explanation obviously assumes that people will always speculate if
|
||
they can get the money to finance it. Nothing can be farther from the truth.
|
||
There were times before and there have been long periods since when credit was
|
||
plentiful and cheap -- far cheaper than in 1927 to 1929 -- and when speculation
|
||
was negligible. Nor, as we shall see later, was speculation out of control
|
||
after 1927, except that it was beyond the reach of men who did not want in the
|
||
least to control it."
|
||
- John K. Galbraith in THE GREAT CRASH, page 16 [Houghton Mifflin,
|
||
Boston (1955)]. SPECULATION is actually fueled by the ability to easily obtain
|
||
highly leveraged loans in a market characterized by rapidly rising prices. Your
|
||
analogy of 1927, Mr. Galbraith, to previous eras is defective because other
|
||
previous periods of cheap credit was deficient in possessing the twin important
|
||
structural SPECULATION requirements of easily obtainable highly leveraged loans
|
||
and rapidly rising prices; if both highly leveraged loans and rapidly rising
|
||
prices are not present, then cheap credit loans will not induce SPECULATION.
|
||
And so the failure of cheap and plentiful credit loans in previous eras to
|
||
trigger SPECULATION then, is not relevant and does not negate the highly
|
||
stimulating effect that such inexpensive credit loans created in the American
|
||
securities markets from 1927 to 1929, since declining rates of interest very
|
||
much act as an accelerant on markets already structurally conditioned for
|
||
SPECULATION by the twin important indicia of highly leveraged loans and rapidly
|
||
rising prices. You really are not competent to be an economist, Mr. Galbraith
|
||
-- and incidentally, managing SPECULATION, so called, was very much WITHIN the
|
||
reach of your brothers who very much wanted to control it, TOTALLY. Sorry, Mr.
|
||
Galbraith, but you don't do a very good job of covering the tracks of your
|
||
Gremlin brothers from the First Estate who, like you, are repeating the same
|
||
judgment mistakes now that you made then. Having created something ILLICIT,
|
||
having created something that just NEEDS and IS BEGGING for a corrective
|
||
solution, Gremlins acting through their instrumentality, the Federal Reserve
|
||
Board, in 1929 now had just the right medicine to fix this wicked SPECULATION,
|
||
as one visible Rothschild nominee, Mr. Montagu Norman, once again made his
|
||
descent sortie on Washington in vulture trajectory, and told Andrew Mellon what
|
||
to do next:
|
||
"... the Federal Reserve Board issued a formal statement today
|
||
declaring that it conceived it to be its duty in 'the immediate situation' to
|
||
restrain the use, either directly or indirectly, of Federal Reserve credit
|
||
facilities in aid of the froth of speculative credit...
|
||
"No information could be obtained from Mr. Norman or American officials
|
||
concerning the purpose of his visit [to Washington] other than he had come here
|
||
for a general discussion of international financial conditions with the System
|
||
and members of the [Federal Reserve] Board...
|
||
"All efforts to obtain any further interpretation of the action of the
|
||
Federal Reserve Board than that contained in its formal statement were
|
||
futile...
|
||
"The decision by the Federal Reserve Board to take so definite a stand
|
||
in connection with its attitude towards speculative activities, was made, it is
|
||
understood, only after a conference in which Secretary Mellon, as Chairman [of
|
||
the Federal Reserve] EX-OFFICIO participated [meaning that Gremlin Andrew
|
||
Mellon DIRECTED, after having received his instructions from the Rothschilds
|
||
through Montagu Norman]...
|
||
"The frankness of its announcement today therefore added to the
|
||
interest it caused in financial circles."
|
||
- THE NEW YORK TIMES ["Loan Curb Hinted by Federal Reserve Board;
|
||
States Duty in 'the Immediate Situation' is to restrain Speculative Credit"],
|
||
page 1 (February 7, 1929). Who is Montagu Norman? A Gremlin who was recognized
|
||
as being very powerful at that time [Carroll Quigley claims the WALL STREET
|
||
JOURNAL for November 11, 1927 characterized Montagu Norman as "... the currency
|
||
dictator of Europe."] Like all good hardworking Gremlins putting in their
|
||
honest days' labor, they are answerable to another person up the line [even the
|
||
Rothschilds know from whence their benefits originate]; and like a few other
|
||
WORLD CLASS Gremlins, Montagu Norman held the high honor of running an entire
|
||
civilization into the ground:
|
||
"... Norman held the position [of CHANCELLOR OF THE EXCHEQUER] for
|
||
twenty-four years (1920-1944), during which he became the chief architect of
|
||
the liquidation of Britain's global preeminence."
|
||
- Carroll Quigley in TRAGEDY AND HOPE, at 325 [MacMillian Company, New
|
||
York (1966)]. He had brilliance, he had genius, he had SAVIOR-FAIRE, and
|
||
Montagu Norman tied it all together with slick Gremlin FINESSE when he so
|
||
smoothly ran Great Britain into the ground with so very few people even knowing
|
||
that he had done so; and so when Montagu Norman brought his conquests to other
|
||
continents, for and on behalf of his Rothschild sponsors, he would also be
|
||
leaving the ruins of those once majestic civilizations with little indication
|
||
that he had been there. The year 1929 started out to be a great year, and
|
||
American businessmen had positive expectations [see the many businessmen quoted
|
||
through the WALL STREET JOURNAL for January 1, 1929]; but the world's Gremlins
|
||
had a few ideas of their own:
|
||
"On February 15, 1929, the Federal Advisory Council adopted the
|
||
following resolution:
|
||
"The Council believes that every effort should be made to correct the
|
||
present situation in the speculative markets before resorting to an advance in
|
||
rates.
|
||
"The Council in reviewing present conditions finds that in spite of the
|
||
cooperation of member banks, the measures so far adopted have not been
|
||
effective in correcting the present situation of the money market. The Council,
|
||
therefore, recommends that the Federal Reserve Board permit the Federal Reserve
|
||
banks to raise their rediscount rate immediately and maintain a rate consistent
|
||
with the cost of commercial credit."
|
||
- Transcript of the minutes of the 3:10pm Meeting of the FEDERAL
|
||
ADVISORY COUNCIL in the Federal Reserve Board Room (April 19, 1929) {National
|
||
Archives ["Federal Reserve Board File"], Washington, D.C.}. The Federal Reserve
|
||
Board's FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL was abolished in the 1930's. The FEDERAL
|
||
ADVISORY COUNCIL had also met twice earlier that day, at 10:05am and at
|
||
12:10pm. There had been an ominous atmosphere of excitement in the air that
|
||
day:
|
||
"The prospect of further developments of importance in regard to the
|
||
Government's attitude on the credit situation appeared today when members of
|
||
the Federal Advisory Council... met in a special session and later held a joint
|
||
conference with the Board [the 12:10pm meeting]. Resolutions were adopted by
|
||
the Council and transmitted to the Board, but their purport was closely
|
||
guarded. ...An atmosphere of deep mystery was thrown about the proceedings both
|
||
by the Board and the Council. No advance announcement had been made that an
|
||
extraordinary session of the Council was contemplated, and in fact that the
|
||
members were in the city became known only when newspaper correspondents
|
||
happened to see some of them entering the Treasury Department building. Even
|
||
after that evasive replies were given, until it became apparent that such
|
||
tactics were futile... While the joint meeting was in progress at the Treasury
|
||
Department, every effort was made to guard the proceedings and a group of
|
||
newspaper correspondents were asked to leave the corridor. The meeting of the
|
||
Council attracted particular attention in view of the fact that it had met here
|
||
in regular session on February 14th, a week following the Reserve Board's
|
||
warning statement against the excessive use of Reserve System credit in
|
||
speculative operations on the stock market."
|
||
- THE NEW YORK TIMES ["Reserve Council Confers in Haste: Atmosphere of
|
||
Mystery is Thrown About Its Meeting in Washington"], page 9 (April 20, 1929). A
|
||
month later, one more Gremlin turn of the screws was administered to the
|
||
economy:
|
||
"The Federal Advisory Council has reviewed carefully the credit
|
||
situation. It continues to agree with the view of the Federal Reserve Board as
|
||
expressed in its statement of February 5, 1929 that 'an excessive amount of the
|
||
country's credit has been absorbed in speculative security loans.' The policy
|
||
pursued by the Federal Reserve Board has had a beneficial effect due largely to
|
||
the loyal cooperation of the banks of the country. The efforts in this
|
||
direction should be continued, but the Council notes that while the total
|
||
amount of Federal Reserve credit being used has been reduced, 'the amount of
|
||
the country's credit absorbed in speculative security loans' has not been
|
||
substantially lowered.
|
||
"Therefore, the Council recommends to the Federal Reserve Board that
|
||
the time has come to grant permission to raise the rediscount rates to six
|
||
percent to those Federal Reserve Banks requesting it, thus bringing the
|
||
rediscount rates into closer relation with generally prevailing commercial
|
||
money rates. The Council believes that improvement in financial conditions and
|
||
a consequent reduction of the rate structure will thereby be brought about more
|
||
quickly, thus best safeguarding commerce, industry, and agriculture."
|
||
- Resolution approved by the FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL, in its 2:30pm
|
||
Meeting on May 21, 1929 {National Archives ["Federal Reserve Board File"],
|
||
Washington, D.C.}. While the Gremlins controlling the Federal Reserve were busy
|
||
raising interest rates, the analytical staff of the Federal Reserve was
|
||
cognizant of the extreme economic damages such an elevated rate of interest was
|
||
doing to Commerce, Industry, and Agriculture [directly contrary to the
|
||
beneficial effect claimed by the Federal Advisory Council]:
|
||
"The higher money rates do not appear to have restricted short term
|
||
commercial borrowings, but in a number of ways the present high level of money
|
||
rates is beginning to have a detrimental effect upon business.
|
||
"1. The volume of building operations has been declining largely
|
||
because of difficulty in obtaining second mortgage money and loans for building
|
||
operations and also difficulty in selling real estate bonds. Stock financing
|
||
which has been resorted to in some cases has only partly met the requirements.
|
||
"2. A good many state, municipal, railway and other projects,
|
||
ordinarily financed through bonds and notes, have been postponed because of
|
||
difficulty in securing at reasonable prices...
|
||
"3. Reduced foreign financing in the United States... are diminishing
|
||
the purchasing power of those countries for our products, a tendency which is
|
||
likely to be reflected sooner or later in reduced exports.
|
||
"It thus seems reasonably certain that present money conditions, if
|
||
long continued, will have a seriously detrimental effect upon business
|
||
conditions, and the longer they are continued the more serious will be the
|
||
effect. The volume of business now appears to be sustained in part by the
|
||
production of automobiles considerably in excess of retail purchases with a
|
||
consequent stimulating effect upon the steel industry..."
|
||
- PRELIMINARY MEMORANDUM FOR THE OPEN MARKET INVESTMENT COMMITTEE
|
||
["Effects on Business"]; Prepared for the 5:00pm Meeting of the Fed's Open
|
||
Market Investment Committee on April 1, 1929 {National Archives ["Federal
|
||
Reserve Board File"], Washington, D.C.}. In September of 1929, the OPEN MARKET
|
||
COMMITTEE would be warning that:
|
||
"... there are some indications of a possible impending recession." Six
|
||
months earlier in April, the economy was still experiencing the stimulating
|
||
effect of surplus automobile production, but by September, now automobile
|
||
manufacturing was going to the dogs:
|
||
"Building activity has been reduced still further; automobile
|
||
production has been receding, and steel production has reflected these
|
||
tendencies." And as for the claimed STIMULATING effect high rates of interest
|
||
would be having on agriculture, in fact Gremlin enscrewment was beginning to
|
||
produce its desired objective of damages:
|
||
"The size of the year's crops is expected to be generally smaller than
|
||
a year ago. With higher prices the total return to the farmer may be not short
|
||
of a year ago... The continued pressure on the credit situation has also been
|
||
reflected by increasing reports from some localities of difficulties of
|
||
agriculture in securing an adequate supply of credit."
|
||
- All three quotations are from the MINUTES OF THE OPEN MARKET
|
||
INVESTMENT COMMITTEE, September 24, 1929 {National Archives ["Federal Reserve
|
||
Board File"], Washington, D.C.}. That greasy little Gremlin, Paul Warburg, very
|
||
much had his nose in all of this. He slipped into a FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
|
||
Meeting that was held on May 21, 1929, as the alternate for W.C. Potter, and he
|
||
made a Statement and engaged in conversation that Walter Lichtenstein, Council
|
||
Secretary, did not feel like recording [see MINUTES OF FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
|
||
for May 21, 1929]. The combined effect of the many manipulative devices pulled
|
||
by Gremlins in the Fed in the latter 1920's was a great contraction in the
|
||
economy [see generally a protracted chapter called "The Great Contraction" in A
|
||
MONETARY HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, 1867-1960 by Milton Friedman [Princeton
|
||
University Press, Princeton (1963)].
|
||
<div>[217]
|
||
The only existential reason for the Fed's corporate organizational legal
|
||
structure lies in the fact that the Fed was sponsored, as you know, by a
|
||
Special Interest Group for their own private enrichment: [218]
|
||
[218]<div> "Experience
|
||
should teach us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the
|
||
Government's purposes are beneficent. Men born to freedom are naturally alert
|
||
to repel invasion of the liberty by evil-minded rulers. The greatest dangers to
|
||
liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well meaning but without
|
||
understanding."
|
||
- Justice Louis Brandeis in OLMSTEAD VS. UNITED STATES, 277 U.S. 438,
|
||
at 479 (1927). Although the Gremlins who sneaked the FEDERAL RESERVE ACT
|
||
through Congress were by no means well meaning, they did try to convey the
|
||
image that this piece of legislation was so oriented.
|
||
<div>[218]
|
||
A network of Gremlins operating under the intellectual aegis of Rothschild
|
||
nominee Paul Warburg and associates, who prodded and tricked an otherwise
|
||
reticent and naive Congress into enacting the initiating legislation in 1913.
|
||
[219]
|
||
[219]<div> Greasy
|
||
little Gremlins like Paul Warburg are steeped in the strategic use of deception
|
||
as a tool to accomplish their objectives; and like the mentor from the First
|
||
Estate, Lucifer, they find many circumstances come to pass where the use of
|
||
such deception has yielded impressive immediate benefits -- yet Father
|
||
continues to warn against it. This deceptive intellectual orientation of
|
||
Gremlins has been so ingrained in them from the First Estate, that Gremlins
|
||
find the accurate presentation of facts now to be very difficult to construct.
|
||
This deception surfaced, for example, when one Gremlin was speaking highly of
|
||
another Gremlin:
|
||
"... it is known only to a very few exactly how great is the
|
||
indebtedness of the United States to Mr. Warburg. For it may be stated without
|
||
fear of contradiction that in its fundamental features the Federal Reserve Act
|
||
is the work of Mr. Warburg more than any other man in the country... the
|
||
Federal Reserve Act has frankly accepted the principles of the Aldrich bill;
|
||
and these principles... were the creation of Mr. Warburg and Mr. Warburg
|
||
alone... But having set out on the task [to create the Federal Reserve], there
|
||
was no stopping [Paul Warburg], and from year to year essay upon essay flowed
|
||
from his facile pen, giving more precision and point to his fundamental
|
||
principles until he was recognized as the real leader in the new movement. The
|
||
Federal Reserve Act will be associated in history with the name of Paul
|
||
Warburg..."
|
||
- Gremlin Edwin Seligman offering introductory remarks in IV
|
||
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE #4, at 387 [Columbia
|
||
University, New York (April, 1914)]; there then follows numerous essays written
|
||
by Paul Warburg praising the circulation of paper currency and the Federal
|
||
Reserve System. Yet Paul Warburg did not intellectually create the Federal
|
||
Reserve System -- the Rothschilds did, but the Rothschilds wanted to stay in
|
||
the background and blend themselves into the shadowy corners of Europe; Paul
|
||
Warburg was hired by them to take all the flack among those who could be
|
||
expected to probe a little deeper in searching for the Fed's Gremlin sponsors.
|
||
"Paul Warburg is the man who got the Federal Reserve Act together after
|
||
the Aldrich Plan aroused such nationwide resentment and opposition. The
|
||
mastermind of both plans was Baron Alfred Rothschild of London."
|
||
- Elisha Garrison in ROOSEVELT, WILSON AND THE FEDERAL RESERVE LAW
|
||
[Christopher Publishing Housing, Boston (1931)].
|
||
<div>[219]
|
||
Designed by Gremlins the way it was, [220]
|
||
[220]<div> The illicit
|
||
statutory sponsorship of the Federal Reserve Board is often disputed by
|
||
collegiate INTELLIGENTSIA clowns who, without possessing any factual elements
|
||
to countermand the background workings of determined Gremlins, continue to
|
||
point to Congress itself as the institution responsible for the creation of the
|
||
Federal Reserve. Gremlin Paul Warburg himself has had a few words to say about
|
||
just where the true origin of statutes is to be found:
|
||
"I am told that Congress and the State Legislatures make the laws...
|
||
Instead of saying that legislators make the laws, it would be far more correct
|
||
to say that legislatures merely put the finishing touches on the law. To say
|
||
that they "make the laws" is like saying that the books are made by
|
||
bookbinders, forgetting that there are authors, printers, and proofreaders too.
|
||
"... The motive power in lawmaking is all supplied from somewhere
|
||
outside the legislative halls... Some intellect outside the realm of active
|
||
politics first conceives an idea. It spreads to the minds of other individuals,
|
||
slowly at first, but gradually gaining momentum. Presently there is an
|
||
organized movement in its favor; then comes the deluge of propaganda, until the
|
||
proposal becomes an issue and the politicians begin to take note of it. A law
|
||
is half made, and more than half made, when a large body of aggressive support
|
||
has been mobilized among the voters; yet during this part of the process the
|
||
legislative bodies have nothing whatever to do with it."
|
||
- Gremlin Paul Warburg explaining himself in Volume I THE FEDERAL
|
||
RESERVE SYSTEM: ITS ORIGINS AND GROWTH, at 3 [MacMillian Company, New York
|
||
(1930)]. <div>[220]
|
||
and because of its private corporate ownership and lack of public
|
||
accountability to the Congress and to the public. [221]
|
||
[221]<div> General
|
||
Public accountability of the Fed is appropriate to the extent that the Fed has
|
||
been endowed by its creator with a limited juristic mission in monetary areas
|
||
touching a general public interest; and one of the most important instruments
|
||
of Federal Reserve power lies in the OPEN MARKET COMMITTEE. Numerous attempts
|
||
just to get some minimal public dissemination on transcripts of the Federal
|
||
Open Market Committee meetings has fallen on death ears; shrouding their daily
|
||
maneuverings behind a veil of secrecy -- a veil they would like to maintain
|
||
erected for as long as possible (time has a way of greatly diminishing the
|
||
possible adverse reaction that unfavorable information triggers). The Congress
|
||
was once propositioned with the idea of requiring the FOMC to publish publicly,
|
||
detailed minutes of their meetings. In trying to disable the Congress from
|
||
doing this, an old Gremlin stratagem was relied upon: Agree with the necessity
|
||
for the idea being expounded (so now your adversary is off guard), but create
|
||
impediments to the idea by raising technical reservations that appear to be
|
||
difficult to overcome and otherwise discredit the idea as being infeasible for
|
||
some technical reason. And in overcoming HR 4478, this is just what Gremlins in
|
||
the Fed did (Gremlins do not want Government in the sunshine) [see the
|
||
testimony of imp bureaucrat Fredrick Schultz as he said he agreed with the
|
||
objectives, but then turned around and threw technical reservations at the idea
|
||
to try and discredit the idea on its merits, in A BILL TO AMEND THE FEDERAL
|
||
RESERVE ACT ["Hearings Before a Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy on HR
|
||
4478 of the House Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs"], 97th
|
||
Congress, First Session (September, 1981)].
|
||
<div>[221]
|
||
The Fed has never been audited by the GAO, [222]
|
||
[222]<div> "It is no
|
||
secret that I have long been concerned about the aloofness of the Federal
|
||
Reserve from both the executive branch and the Congress. Although the Federal
|
||
Reserve System is a creature of Congress, it is not subject to any of the usual
|
||
Government budgetary, auditing and appropriations procedures."
|
||
- Wright Patman, Chairman of the House Committee on Domestic Finance,
|
||
in THE FEDERAL RESERVE AFTER 50 YEARS ["Hearings before the Subcommittee on
|
||
Domestic Finance"], 88th Congress, 2nd Session, Volume 1, page 8 [GPO,
|
||
Washington, D.C. (January and February, 1964)].
|
||
<div>[222]
|
||
the Fed as a privately owned corporation is able to provide its European owners
|
||
with an exceptionally lush American gold mine they would not otherwise
|
||
experience if title to Federal Reserve stock were ever to be reclaimed by the
|
||
Congress under EMINENT DOMAIN JURISDICTION, or simple repeal, or repurchased
|
||
under a reservation in its charter. [223]
|
||
[223]<div> But don't
|
||
expect such a repurchase to ever take place; the Federal Reserve Board gives
|
||
the Congress all profits from certain selected trading activities. In the
|
||
latter 1970's, this was amounting to approximately $10000000000 a year; not an
|
||
easy loss of revenue for a greedy fat Congress to go without. So the Congress
|
||
does not want to disturb the Fed, and your letters to them, encouraging them to
|
||
do so, will continue to fall on death ears.
|
||
<div>[223]
|
||
So the Fed exists as a private independent corporation because it was created
|
||
to act as a financial enrichment velocity accelerant for its owners [I have a
|
||
hunch that it is also the single most profitable wealth institution in the
|
||
world, outdancing and outdazzling the top Fortune 100, as well as the Vatican
|
||
and several "for profit" political jurisdictions]. The Status of the Federal
|
||
Reserve System as a Tortfeasor is not related to its legal charter organization
|
||
as a corporation, and neither would its Tortfeasance be changed, either
|
||
negative or positive at all, if it ever were to be absorbed into the Executive
|
||
Presidential bureaucracy of Article II. As an Executive Article II agency, then
|
||
it would still control inflation since it would still be controlled by
|
||
Gremlins; and it would continue to control interest rates and relative levels
|
||
of prosperity through its regulatory mechanisms. [224]
|
||
[224]<div> Those
|
||
Rothschild Gremlins never stop with their conquests. After mentioning the
|
||
dominance of the Rothschilds in European financial affairs, a United States
|
||
Senator once wrote:
|
||
"... it might be... possible for 20 or 30 individuals if they
|
||
controlled the United States Federal Reserve Board, the Bank of England, the
|
||
Bank of France, and the Bank of Germany, to enter into a conspiracy to regulate
|
||
the volume of the world's currency, thereby resultantly controlling the prices
|
||
of the world's commodities, so vitally affecting the happiness, contentment,
|
||
occupation, and prosperity of the world's population. If successful in
|
||
effecting such a control, by expanding the world's currency they could inflate
|
||
prices of all the world's commodities and then distribute at fictitious values
|
||
the securities which they had accumulated. After such accomplishments the could
|
||
then decrease the volume of money thus resultantly deflating or diminishing the
|
||
prices of all the world's commodities with resultant greatly diminished prices
|
||
in securities and then buy back at bargain prices the securities that they had
|
||
distributed previously at inflated prices. If such a conspiracy existed and
|
||
continued unchecked this expansion of the volume of money with increased prices
|
||
and distribution of securities held by the few followed by a period of
|
||
decreased volume of money with resultant decreased prices of all the world's
|
||
commodities with reaccumulation of securities at bargain prices would
|
||
ultimately result in all the people outside of the few conspirators becoming
|
||
practically vassals and peons with the inevitable result that the people
|
||
themselves would rise up in their wrath and take from the conspirators their
|
||
wealth and probably their lives."
|
||
- Senator Jonathan Bourne, Jr. of Oregon, expressing comments on the
|
||
Wheeler Bill (S. 2487), in Senate Document #109 entitled INDEPENDENT
|
||
BIMETALLISM OR BOLSHEVISM, 72nd Congress, First Session, pages 8 and 9 [GPO
|
||
(June 15, 1932)]. Senate Bill 2487 provided for the free coinage of silver and
|
||
gold at a ratio of 16-to-1.
|
||
<div>[224]
|
||
That this Tortfeasance is transparent to its organized form is true because all
|
||
Torts originate with people, and at the Fed, there is now a man as chairman who
|
||
is uniquely qualified to operate as a joint Tortfeasor with the Rothschilds and
|
||
work MAGNUM OPUS Torts on us all: Gremlin Paul Volcker. [225]
|
||
[225]<div> After
|
||
characterizing Gremlin Volcker's politics as being something of an enigma, the
|
||
NEW YORK TIMES went on to say that Paul Volcker:
|
||
"... recognizes 'that Gold and the fates have put him in a unique
|
||
position,' a role for which he believes... that he is singularly well
|
||
equipped."
|
||
- THE NEW YORK TIMES ["Sacrificial Way of Life for Reserve Chairman"],
|
||
page 26 (Sunday, June 19, 1983). Yes, Mr. Volcker is VERY well equipped for his
|
||
mission -- but not to usher in a generation of prosperity; neither is his
|
||
Federal Reserve position attributable to "God and the fates," but actually to
|
||
his brother from the First Estate, Lucifer, whom Paul Volcker once betrayed --
|
||
and now Lucifer is going to get even at Father's Last Day.
|
||
<div>[225]
|
||
This is the same Treasury Department staff member Paul Volcker who played a
|
||
supporting role in the theft of American gold bullion deposits from Fort Knox
|
||
in the 1960's, [226]
|
||
[226]<div> The theft of
|
||
American gold bullion deposits from the Fort Knox Depository in Kentucky by the
|
||
Four Rockefeller Brothers, in which Paul Volcker participated, was a smooth
|
||
inside job -- a job which only duplicated a previous inside Treasury job that
|
||
was pulled off earlier in 1943:
|
||
"... 14000 tons of silver from the Treasury reserve of American paper
|
||
money was secretly taken from the Treasury vaults (although still carried
|
||
publicly on the Treasury balance sheets)..."
|
||
- Carroll Quigley in TRAGEDY AND HOPE, at 855 [MacMillian Company, New
|
||
York (1974)]. [Mr. Quigley wants us to believe that the 14000 tons of silver
|
||
in its entirety went into an Oak Ridge Government building for electrical
|
||
wiring]. <div>[226]
|
||
and the same Paul Volcker who now holds a controlling executive position in the
|
||
Fed, a position that when he campaigned for it in 1978, he openly called for
|
||
the "controlled disintegration" of the United States. [227]
|
||
[227]<div> During a
|
||
speech at a FRED HIRSCH MEMORIAL LECTURE at Warwick University, Coventry,
|
||
England, on November 9, 1978.
|
||
<div>[227]
|
||
Since the corporate structure of the King's peripheral Commercial interests, of
|
||
and by themselves, do not provide the King with a mechanism to work Torts on us
|
||
he would be otherwise restrained from doing through executive agencies, I have
|
||
no objection to the King creating corporations, and I would suggest that
|
||
arguments to the contrary will likely be rebuffed by the Supreme Court. [228]
|
||
[228]<div> During
|
||
Constitutional ratification discussions, our Founding Fathers did not want to
|
||
even talk about the possibility that a National Bank might be created someday,
|
||
due to the possible rejection the draft Constitution might encounter as it went
|
||
from one State to the next for Ratification:
|
||
"The power to incorporate a bank is not among those enumerated in the
|
||
constitution. It is known, that the very power, thus proposed, as a means, was
|
||
rejected, as an end, by the convention [of 1787], which formed the
|
||
Constitution. A proposition was made in that body, to authorize Congress to
|
||
open canals, and an amendatory one to empower them to create corporations. But
|
||
the whole was rejected; and one of the reasons of the rejection urged in debate
|
||
was, that they then would have a power to create a bank, which would render the
|
||
great cities, where there was prejudices and jealousies on that subject,
|
||
adverse to the adoption of the Constitution [Volume 4, Jefferson's
|
||
Correspondence, pages 523 and 524]."
|
||
- Joseph Story in III COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION, at 128 ["Powers
|
||
of Congress"] (Cambridge, 1833). However, just because the CREATION OF
|
||
CORPORATIONS CLAUSE never made it into the final draft of the Constitution,
|
||
does not disable the United States today from creating corporations, since many
|
||
other enabling acts were written into the Constitution that, although sounding
|
||
nice and making the Constitution look complete in appearances, were actually
|
||
jurisdictionally unnecessary.
|
||
<div>[228]
|
||
If at all you question the legal authenticity of my conclusory statements, then
|
||
please read M'CULLOCH VS. MARYLAND, [229]
|
||
[229]<div> 17 U.S. 316
|
||
(1819). <div>[229]
|
||
and tell me that the Congress cannot create corporations or nationally
|
||
chartered banks. In that case, the Supreme Court specifically talks, at length,
|
||
about the Constitutionality of creating corporations, and the implied powers of
|
||
Congress to do so. [230]
|
||
[230]<div> "That a
|
||
national bank is an appropriate means to carry into effect some of the
|
||
enumerated powers of the Government, and that this can be best done by erecting
|
||
it into a corporation, may be established by the most satisfactory reasoning.
|
||
It has a relationship, more or less direct, to the power of collecting taxes,
|
||
to that of borrowing money, to that of regulating trade between the states, and
|
||
to those raising and maintaining fleets and armies. And it may be added, that
|
||
it has a most important bearing upon the regulation of currency between the
|
||
states. It is an instrument, which has been usually applied by Governments in
|
||
the administration of their fiscal and financial operations."
|
||
- Joseph Story in III COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION 134, ["Powers of
|
||
Congress"] (Cambridge, 1833).
|
||
<div>[230]
|
||
Also foolish is the line that I hear that no tax could possibly be due to the
|
||
King, because the IRS is not an Article II Executive Agency and functions as a
|
||
private contracting corporation. [231]
|
||
[231]<div> The IRS is
|
||
not a Federal Agency; see:
|
||
- Title 5, Section 903 [PRESIDENTIAL REORGANIZATION JURISDICTION];
|
||
- GOVERNMENT REORGANIZATION ORDER Number 26 (1952);
|
||
- GOVERNMENT REORGANIZATION ORDER Number 1 (1950);
|
||
- 39 THE FEDERAL REGISTER, Number 62 (26 March 1974), Section 1111.4,
|
||
et seq. <div>[231]
|
||
I see no general impediment to the King hiring private contractors to assist
|
||
him in tax collections. [232]
|
||
[232]<div>
|
||
Responsibility for the administration and enforcement of the Revenue Laws is
|
||
vested in the Secretary of the Treasury, pursuant to Title 26, Section 7801(a).
|
||
In turn, by one more layer of delegation, the Internal Revenue Service is
|
||
vested with the tax collection responsibilities for the Secretary. See
|
||
DONALDSON VS. UNITED STATES, 400 U.S. 517, at 534 (1970), and 39 THE FEDERAL
|
||
REGISTER 2417, et seq. (1970).
|
||
<div>[232]
|
||
Private contract bounty hunters have been used to find criminal fugitives for
|
||
centuries, so why aren't you Protestors objecting to that? Incidentally, in the
|
||
old days of our Mother England in the 1700's, there was a practice going around
|
||
Europe called PRIVATEERING, which is when small privately owned armed navies
|
||
would roam the High Seas in search of prizes to steal for themselves. A
|
||
PRIVATEER, then, is an armed vessel, owned, fitted out, and manned by private
|
||
parties with a legal commission from a political jurisdiction authorizing it to
|
||
capture the vessels and cargo's of the enemy. This legal commission, called a
|
||
LETTER OF MARQUE, impressed upon the PRIVATEER'S banditry an aura of legitimacy
|
||
in International Law, without which Privateers would be hung as pirates by any
|
||
nation's ships fast enough to capture one. But back safely at home, the LETTER
|
||
OF MARQUE also served as a legal basis for an Admiralty Court to condemn the
|
||
captured property, the Prize, and assign it over to the Privateers themselves
|
||
who stole it (this was also called PRIZE JURISDICTION). [233]
|
||
[233]<div> PRIVATEERING
|
||
and all of its associated intrigue of smuggling, thievery, and pirates, was
|
||
once quite active on the High Seas from the 1600's up until the American Civil
|
||
War. On the North Coast of Africa there was once numerous occasions in the
|
||
early 1800's when American hostages were grabbed and military engagements were
|
||
entered into against those little hoodlums called the BARBARY CORSAIRS. [See
|
||
THE BARBARY CORSAIRS by S. Lane-Poole, State Mutual Books and Periodical
|
||
Service, New York (1985)]. PRIVATEERING was somewhat abolished, or perhaps
|
||
toned down, by the DECLARATION OF PARIS in 1856; but PRIVATEERING was extensive
|
||
during the Civil War, and the United States Congress soon would be giving
|
||
President Abraham Lincoln a grant of jurisdiction to commission Privateers.
|
||
[See THE BARBARY COAST by Henry Field, C. Scribner's Sons, New York (1893); and
|
||
THE BARBARY SLAVES by Stephen Clissold, P. Elek Publishers, London (1977)]. For
|
||
a short story on PRIVATEERS during the Civil War, see the NEW YORK TIMES for
|
||
Tuesday, September 29, 1863, page 1, in an article entitled "Another Privateer
|
||
Fitting Out," discussing how the Confederate ship THE FLORIDA was offered
|
||
French police protection from seizure from Union ships by France while she was
|
||
parking at Brest shipyards for repairs. Yet, a variation on PRIVATEERING
|
||
continued into the 1900's, as Russian volunteer vessels once seized neutral
|
||
commerce in the Red Sea [see Edwin Moxen in RUSSIAN RAIDS ON NEUTRAL COMMERCE,
|
||
3 Michigan Law Review 1 (1904)]. For a discussion from a legal perspective on
|
||
Privateering and LETTERS OF MARQUE, see THE FIRST FEDERAL COURT by Henry J.
|
||
Bourguignon, page 3 [American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia (1977)].
|
||
Today, PRIVATEERING is a crime for American Citizens [see Title 18, Section
|
||
1654 "Arming or Serving as Privateers"].
|
||
<div>[233]
|
||
[In remarkably similar ways today in the United States, private
|
||
contracting Privateers are at work in the IRS, acting under a legal commission,
|
||
which largely precludes the imposition of Civil Rights damages because of their
|
||
operating under the recourse protective umbrella (color) of Governmental
|
||
authority; and like the Privateers of old, today's tax loot is also handed over
|
||
to a private party: To the owners of the Federal Reserve System, for payment on
|
||
the King's National Debt. And even more astounding in parallel, today's IRS
|
||
collection of loot and banditry is also governed under a Federal Court acting
|
||
under the rules of Admiralty Jurisdiction, as I will explain later on.]
|
||
That analogy between the PRIVATEERS of old out on the High Seas, and of today's
|
||
private contracting termites inside the IRS sounds pretty good, doesn't it? The
|
||
requisite blend of comparative background elements of thievery are present, an
|
||
underlying tone of IRS illegitimacy runs throughout the analogy, and that,
|
||
generally is the kind of talk Tax Protestors like to hear... "looters,"
|
||
"theft," "banditry" and the like. Yes, analogies like that are music to the
|
||
ears of Tax Protestors EXTRAORDINAIRE like Irwin Schiff, [234]
|
||
[234]<div> HOW ANYONE
|
||
CAN STOP PAYING INCOME TAXES [Freedom Books, Hamden, Connecticut (1982)].
|
||
<div>[234]
|
||
and Representative George Hansen. [235]
|
||
[235]<div> TO HARASS
|
||
OUR PEOPLE: THE IRS AND GOVERNMENT ABUSE OF POWER [Positive Publications,
|
||
Washington, D.C. (1984)].
|
||
<div>[235]
|
||
But just one tiny little problem surfaces here which makes the PRIVATEERS TO
|
||
IRS TERMITES analogy fall apart and collapse, a tiny little problem Irwin
|
||
Schiff and George Hansen do not want to talk about -- a tiny little problem
|
||
most folks had better start to talk about, NOW, before getting in front of
|
||
Father at the Last Day: An invisible Contract. Today, the Protestor has entered
|
||
into a series of invisible contracts with the King, numerous contracts which
|
||
are invisible to the Protestors, as I will explain later on, so now all of
|
||
those termites in the IRS are merely collecting monies rightfully due the King
|
||
by contract, whereas in contrast the PRIVATEERS of old had no such contract in
|
||
effect to grab the property belonging to others. Therefore, if I was a Federal
|
||
Magistrate, I don't know if I would be as patient as some of the State and
|
||
Federal Magistrates I have seen in hearings and trials in trying to explain
|
||
error to a Constitutionalist, so called, but whose words were falling on death
|
||
ears. One prime example of how the carefully chosen words of a Federal Judge
|
||
falls on death ears, occurs when a petitioner is being rebuffed when throwing a
|
||
challenge to the Constitutionality of either the Federal Reserve System or
|
||
Federal Reserve Notes at the Judge. One of the reasons why Federal Magistrates
|
||
and the United States Supreme Court are so reluctant to declare the Fed or its
|
||
Notes as being unConstitutional [aside from the fact that many Federal Judges
|
||
find the idea to be philosophically uncomfortable and ideologically irritating]
|
||
is because, as a matter of Law, the use and recirculation of Federal Reserve
|
||
Notes falls under the governing doctrine applicable to Commercial Contract Law
|
||
Jurisprudence, so the Constitution is largely irrelevant right from the
|
||
beginning, as the entire closed private domain of King's Commerce is a
|
||
benefit/privilege created by the Congress, and there is nothing in the
|
||
Constitution to restrain it. [236]
|
||
[236]<div> Federal
|
||
Judges took their cue long ago to lay off legislative prerogatives in this area
|
||
of circulating paper money:
|
||
"The case of TREVETT VS. WELDON, in 1786, in Rhode Island, is an
|
||
instance of this sort... The judges in that case decided, that a law making
|
||
paper money a tender in payment of debts was unconstitutional and against the
|
||
principles of magna carta. They were compelled to appear before the legislature
|
||
to vindicate themselves; and the next year... they were left out of office for
|
||
having questioned the legislative power."
|
||
- Joseph Story in III COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION, at 469,
|
||
footnote 1 (Cambridge, 1833).
|
||
<div>[236]
|
||
Assuming for a moment, ARGUENDO, that the interposition of Contract Law was
|
||
irrelevant, then aside from that there are a large number of separate and
|
||
distinct sources of jurisdiction the King can claim as authority to issue out
|
||
debased paper currency. But before listing those sources, we need to back up a
|
||
step. An examination of the Federal Reserve's Charter also reveals that, in
|
||
Warburg's devilishly brilliant cleverness, the Congress never recited any
|
||
specific sources of Constitutional Jurisdiction when it created the Fed.
|
||
Nowhere in its Charter does it say something like "... the powers of Article I,
|
||
Section 10 are hereby invoked..." An examination of numerous other statutory
|
||
programs reveals that the Congress rarely ever bothers to recite its claimed
|
||
sources of Constitutional Jurisdiction for those programs either (in those Acts
|
||
that I have searched through). Since the Congress did not recite any
|
||
Constitutional sources of authority when it allegedly passed the Federal
|
||
Reserve Act, [237]
|
||
[237]<div> Whether or
|
||
not there was a legal minimum quorum in the United States Senate on that
|
||
pre-Christmas December day of 1913, is disputed.
|
||
<div>[237]
|
||
this now means that whenever a Protestor comes forward today and throws a Case
|
||
at a Federal Judge where the Constitutionality of the Federal Reserve is being
|
||
challenged, the United States Attorney General is thereby free to throw any set
|
||
of defensive arguments back at the Protestor that the Attorney General feels
|
||
like, in order to justify the Constitutionality of the challenged Act of
|
||
Congress. The bottom line is that the Attorney General can and will claim
|
||
sources of Constitutional Jurisdiction at some future date that the Congress
|
||
never really contemplated when it originally created the program (if a quorum
|
||
ever really did exist to create the Fed). However unfair this appears to be,
|
||
would someone please show me where the Constitution requires the Congress to
|
||
recite its enabling Jurisdiction on each Act it passes? The Framers were also
|
||
negligent in this respect, and so there is no such recital requirement, and so
|
||
now the Attorney General is free to come up with a long list of claimed sources
|
||
of Constitutional Jurisdiction that the Protestor never ever dreamed of; a list
|
||
that the Congress never really considered at the time of possible enactment; a
|
||
list that Federal Judges are well acquainted with; a list that I will be
|
||
showing you later on.
|
||
But first, we need to cover some background material so the concepts I am about
|
||
to explain can be understood easily. Remember that correct Principles of Nature
|
||
operate across all factual settings; if the Principle is correct, what works in
|
||
one factual setting will work for similar reasons in another setting. So with
|
||
that in mind, if we had a power boat built for us, and that boat had say, 12
|
||
gas tanks built into it (perhaps distributed throughout the hull as ballast to
|
||
achieve some desired weight and loading balancing effects), or if we were
|
||
piloting an L-1011 jet aircraft with the numerous bladder, wing, and fuselage
|
||
fuel tanks that it has located throughout its body, then in order for the boat
|
||
or jet to be stopped dead cold, all fuel tanks individually need to be empty,
|
||
first. If so much as one fuel tank has any fuel in it at all, then the boat or
|
||
jet will continue forward at maximum cruising velocity, without any letup,
|
||
until all tanks are completely empty. Only the complete exhaustion of all fuel
|
||
from all of the separate fuel tanks, without any exceptions, will return the
|
||
jet or boat into that quiescent state of rest that it once came from. The fact
|
||
that one or several of the fuel tanks may be vacant of fuel will offer no
|
||
propulsion impairment or reduction in velocity -- NONE WHATSOEVER.
|
||
As we turn from a high-powered machine or aviation setting where a manufactured
|
||
product is under propulsion from multiple and independent sources of fuel, as
|
||
we turn from that setting to a setting where a legal product was also
|
||
manufactured by men, like the Federal Reserve Board (Incorporated), we found
|
||
out that its propulsion also originates from multiple sources of jurisdictional
|
||
fuel. And so in order to return the Federal Reserve Board to its quiescent
|
||
STATUS QUO ANTE state of non-existence, of pre-December, 1913, then a large
|
||
number of separate and distinct sources of Constitutional fuel need to be
|
||
individually voided. If so much as one single source of Constitutional fuel is
|
||
left remaining -- just so much as one single Clause -- by having survived the
|
||
blows of a Protestor in adversary judicial proceedings, then the Federal
|
||
Reserve Board will carry on at maximum cruising velocity with the same
|
||
identical full force and effect as if the Protestor had never thrown anything
|
||
at the Fed. Mindful of this background information, now we can discuss the
|
||
multiple sources of jurisdictional fuel that the King has got up his sleeve to
|
||
retortionally throw back at pesky little Protestors.
|
||
While examining the main Legal Tender and National bank related cases in the
|
||
Supreme Court, [238]
|
||
[238]<div>
|
||
- M'CULLOCH VS. MARYLAND, 17 U.S. 316 (1819);
|
||
- HEPBURN VS. GRISWOLD, 75 U.S. 603 (1870);
|
||
- KNOX VS. LEE, 79 U.S. 457 (1871);
|
||
- JULLIARD VS. GREENMAN, 110 U.S. 421 (1884).
|
||
<div>[238]
|
||
we see that the right of the Congress to create a bank and have that bank issue
|
||
out national currency, as well the right of Congress to designate anything it
|
||
wants as Legal Tender, is a power directly related to the right of the
|
||
Congress, by both express and incidental powers:
|
||
1. To declare war; [239]
|
||
2. To suppress insurrection;
|
||
3. To raise and support armies; [240]
|
||
4. To provide and maintain a navy (notice the words "maintain" and
|
||
"support," as they mean financially through taxes and money);
|
||
5. To regulate Interstate Commerce; [241]
|
||
6. To facilitate the laying and collecting of taxes; [242]
|
||
7. Existing as an attribute of Sovereignty; [243]
|
||
8. To coin and circulate money pursuant to Article I, Section 8;
|
||
9. To pay debts and facilitate the borrowing of money on the credit of
|
||
the United States (Article I, Section 8); [244]
|
||
10. To provide for the common defense and general welfare.
|
||
[239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244]<div>
|
||
[239] The Legal Tender statutes were enacted in the Civil War era, when
|
||
national resources were stretched thin:
|
||
"... to handle the vast amount of means necessary for the prosecution
|
||
of this war, to enable the people to pay in and the Government to pay out, we
|
||
must have a larger and more abundant currency that we have heretofore found to
|
||
be necessary. The accustomed currency [of hard gold and silver] is wholly
|
||
inadequate. The Government has for many years used only gold and silver for
|
||
this purpose, and it is deeply lamented that it is obliged to depart from this
|
||
desirable standard. But we are left with no option."
|
||
- Representative John Crisfield of Maryland, in a speech before
|
||
Congress on February 5, 1862 [CONGRESSIONAL GLOBE, 37th Congress, 2nd Session,
|
||
Appendix, page 48 et seq.].
|
||
[240] "... the National Government [can] exercise... its powers to establish
|
||
and maintain a bank, implied as an incident to the borrowing, taxing, war, and
|
||
other powers specifically granted to the National Government by Article I,
|
||
Section 8 of the Constitution."
|
||
- HELVERING VS. GERHARDT, 304 U.S. 405, at 411 (1937).
|
||
[241] "The power to regulate commerce is general and unlimited in its terms.
|
||
The full power to regulate a particular subject implies the whole power, and
|
||
leaves no residium."
|
||
- Joseph Story in III COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION, at 513 ["Powers
|
||
of Congress -- Commerce"] (Cambridge, 1833).
|
||
[242] "Here the substantive power to tax was allowed to be employed for
|
||
improving the currency."
|
||
- KNOX VS. LEE, 79 U.S. 457, at 544 (1871).
|
||
[243] "The power to coin money is one of the ordinary prerogatives of
|
||
Sovereignty, and is almost universally exercised in order to preserve a proper
|
||
circulation of good coin of a known value in the home market... In England,
|
||
this prerogative belongs to the Crown; and in former ages, it was greatly
|
||
abused; for base coin was often coined and circulated by its authority, at a
|
||
value far above its intrinsic worth; and thus taxes of a burdensome nature were
|
||
indirectly laid upon the people."
|
||
- Joseph Story in III COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION, at 17 ["Powers
|
||
of Congress -- Coinage"] (Cambridge, 1833).
|
||
[244] "A bank has a direct relation to the power of borrowing money, because it
|
||
is an unusual, and in sudden emergencies, an essential instrument, in the
|
||
obtaining of loans to Government. A nation is threatened with a war; large sums
|
||
are wanted on a sudden [basis] to make the requisite preparations; taxes are
|
||
laid for this purpose; but it requires time to obtain the benefit of them;
|
||
anticipation is indispensable. If there is a bank, the supply can at once be
|
||
had; if there be none, loans from individuals must be sought. The progress of
|
||
these is often too slow for the exigency; in some situations they are not
|
||
practical at all."
|
||
- Joseph Story in III COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION, at 139
|
||
[footnote -- "Powers of Congress -- Bank"] (Cambridge, 1833).
|
||
<div>[239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244]
|
||
all of which were involved, to a lessor and greater extent, at the time the
|
||
LEGAL TENDER ACTS were enacted by the Congress in the Civil War era of the
|
||
1800's. [245]
|
||
[245]<div> "We do not
|
||
propose to dilate at length upon the circumstances i which the country was
|
||
placed when Congress attempted to make Treasury Notes a Legal Tender. They are
|
||
of too recent occurrence to justify enlarged description. Suffice it to say
|
||
that a Civil War was then raging which seriously threatened the overthrow of
|
||
the Government and the destruction of the Constitution itself. It demanded the
|
||
equipment and support of large armies and navies, and the employment of money
|
||
to an extent beyond the capacity of all ordinary sources of supply. Meanwhile,
|
||
the public Treasury was nearly empty, and the credit of the Government, if not
|
||
stretched to its utmost tension, had become nearly exhausted. Moneyed
|
||
institutions had advanced largely of their means, and more could not be
|
||
expected of them. They had been compelled to suspend specie payments. Taxation
|
||
was inadequate to pay even the interest on the debt already incurred, and it
|
||
was impossible to await the income of additional taxes. The necessity was
|
||
immediate and pressing. The army was unpaid. There was then due to the soldiers
|
||
in the field nearly a score of millions of dollars. The requisition from the
|
||
War and Navy Departments for supplies exceeded fifty millions, and the current
|
||
expenditure was over one million per day. The entire amount of coin in the
|
||
country, including that in private hands, as well as that in banking
|
||
institutions, was insufficient to supply the need of the Government for three
|
||
months, had it all poured into the Treasury. Foreign credit we had none. We say
|
||
nothing of the overhanging paralysis of trade, and of business generally, which
|
||
threatened loss of confidence in the ability of the Government to maintain its
|
||
continued existence, and therewith the complete destruction of all remaining
|
||
national credit.
|
||
"It was at this time and in such circumstances that Congress was called
|
||
upon to devise means for maintaining the army and navy, for securing the large
|
||
supplies of money needed and, indeed, for the preservation of the Government
|
||
created by the Constitution. It was at such a time and in such an emergency
|
||
that nothing else would have supplied the absolute necessities of the Treasury,
|
||
that nothing else would have enabled the Government to maintain its armies and
|
||
navies, that nothing else would have saved the Government and the Constitution
|
||
from destruction, while the Legal Tender Acts would, could any one be bold
|
||
enough to assert that Congress transgressed its powers? Or if these enactments
|
||
did not work these results, can it be maintained now that they were not for a
|
||
legitimate end, or 'appropriate and adapted to that end?' in the language of
|
||
Chief Justice Marshall? That they did work such results is not to be doubted.
|
||
Something revived the drooping faith of the people; something brought
|
||
immediately to the Government's aid the resources of the nation, and something
|
||
enabled the successful prosecution of the war, and the preservation of national
|
||
life. What was it, if not the Legal Tender enactments?"
|
||
- KNOX VS. LEE, 79 U.S. 457, at 539 (1871).
|
||
<div>[245]
|
||
And the correlation in effect between the right to enact Legal Tender Statutes
|
||
and the various War Powers of the Congress applies both in times of war, [246]
|
||
[246]<div>
|
||
- KNOX VS. LEE, 79 U.S. 457 (1871).
|
||
<div>[246]
|
||
and also in times of peace. [247]
|
||
[247]<div> JULLIARD VS.
|
||
GREENMAN, 110 U.S. 421 (1884).
|
||
<div>[247]
|
||
So what is important for Tax Protestors to understand is that when they attack
|
||
either the Federal Reserve in whole or part, or the designation of its
|
||
CIRCULATING EVIDENCES OF DEBT at Legal Tender -- and the Protestor goes through
|
||
all of the Supreme Court rulings on the MONEY COIN CLAUSE in Article I, Section
|
||
8, [248]
|
||
[248]<div> As a point
|
||
of beginning, Article I, Section 10 limits itself to the STATES ["No State
|
||
shall..."], and not to the Congress.
|
||
"The states can no longer declare what shall be money, or regulate its
|
||
value."
|
||
- KNOX VS. LEE, 79 U.S. 457, at 545 (1871). Protestors trying to argue
|
||
now that Article I, Section 10 restrains the Congress -- meaning something
|
||
directly contrary to what is written, is considerable foolishness.
|
||
<div>[248]
|
||
and all the Constitutional Convention debates on the MONEY COIN CLAUSE, and the
|
||
material discussed in secret Convention meetings back in 1787, and all of the
|
||
Legislation enacted pursuant thereto, and all of the quotations from the
|
||
Founding Fathers, such as in Max Farrand's works [249]
|
||
[249]<div> THE RECORDS
|
||
OF THE FEDERAL CONVENTION OF 1787 [Yale University Press, New Haven (1937); 4
|
||
volumes]. <div>[249]
|
||
or "The Federalist," and numerous other private correspondence, and all the
|
||
lower court opinions on CHOSES IN ACTION and coins and debasement theories, and
|
||
of their citations on the monetary disabilities of the United States; after the
|
||
Tax Protestor goes through all that work and effort, he has only told the
|
||
Supreme Court about 10% of what the Supreme Court needs to hear in order to
|
||
invalidate the Status of Federal Reserve Notes as Legal Tender instruments:
|
||
Because the right to create banks and let that bank circulate Legal Tender is
|
||
also related to WAR POWERS and the SUPPRESSION OF DOMESTIC INSURRECTIONS, to
|
||
RAISING TAXES, [250]
|
||
[250]<div> See THE
|
||
FEDERAL TAXING POWER AS A MEANS OF ESTABLISHING A UNIFIED BANKING SYSTEM, Notes
|
||
["Legislation"], 46 Harvard Law Review 143 (1932).
|
||
<div>[250]
|
||
the INTERSTATE COMMERCE CLAUSE, the Article I, Section 8 MONEY COIN CLAUSE, and
|
||
the RAISING AND FINANCING ARMIES AND NAVIES CLAUSES, and of course SOVEREIGNTY
|
||
itself -- and they are independent stand-alone sources of jurisdiction that
|
||
have to be attacked individually, just like a jet or boat with several fuel
|
||
tanks needs to have each separate tank vacated before the vehicle will come to
|
||
a stationary state. [251]
|
||
[251]<div> "It is
|
||
absolutely essential to independent national existence that Government should
|
||
have a firm hold on the two great Sovereign instrumentalities of the sword and
|
||
the purse, and the right to wield them without restriction on occasions of
|
||
national peril. In certain emergencies Government must have at its command, not
|
||
only the personal services -- the bodies and lives -- of its Citizens, but the
|
||
lessor, though not less essential, power of absolute control over the resources
|
||
of the country. Its armies must be filled, and its navies manned, by the
|
||
Citizens in person. Its materials of war, its munitions, equipment, and
|
||
commissary stores must come from the industry of the country. This can only be
|
||
stimulated into activity by a proper financial system, especially as regards
|
||
the currency."
|
||
- KNOX VS. LEE, 79 U.S. 457 [Justice Bradley, concurring] (1871).
|
||
<div>[251]
|
||
Will someone please tell me how to challenge the Fed based on the INTERSTATE
|
||
COMMERCE CLAUSE? [252]
|
||
[252]<div> "The power
|
||
of Congress over interstate commerce is 'complete in itself, may be executed to
|
||
its utmost extent, and acknowledges no limitations other than are prescribed in
|
||
the Constitution'."
|
||
- UNITED STATES VS. DARBY, 312 U.S. 100, at 114 (1940).
|
||
<div>[252]
|
||
What grant of intervening and manipulative power is more broad than the
|
||
Interstate Commerce Clause? With that Clause, anything goes. How are you going
|
||
to attack Federal Reserve Notes as being a defective use of the RAISING AND
|
||
FINANCING OR ARMIES AND NAVIES CLAUSES? [253]
|
||
[253]<div> Remember the
|
||
Legal Tender statutes were born in the fires of the Civil War, when there was a
|
||
great exigency and importance associated with the idea of raising a lot of
|
||
money very quickly; yet, there were also disagreements on the floor of the
|
||
Congress, and reservations were expressed then as to the Constitutionality of
|
||
the proposed paper money that would be circulating:
|
||
"The sum of the whole argument has been made in favor of the
|
||
Constitutionality of the power of Congress to declare the Treasury notes
|
||
contemplated by this bill a legal tender in payment of all debts, public and
|
||
private, may be stated in these three propositions:
|
||
"First, Congress may declare these notes a legal tender because
|
||
it is not inhibited;
|
||
"Secondly, the Government must maintain itself, and Congress
|
||
may exercise all the power and adopt any measure it judges necessary for that
|
||
object;
|
||
"Thirdly, that the power to declare these notes a legal tender
|
||
is a means necessary and proper to the full execution of the power to regulate
|
||
commerce.
|
||
"This provision is as inexpedient as it is unconstitutional. It is a
|
||
legislative declaration of national bankruptcy. It is saying to the world that
|
||
this Government is unable to meet its obligations at their real value; and must
|
||
compound with its creditors at a discount...
|
||
"This provision attempts the impossible thing of giving to paper the
|
||
value of gold..."
|
||
- Representative John Crisfield of Maryland, in a speech in Congress on
|
||
February 5, 1862 [CONGRESSIONAL GLOBE, 37th Congress, 2nd Session, Appendix,
|
||
page 48 et seq.]
|
||
<div>[253]
|
||
The answer is that you are not going to. There are some sharp attorneys like
|
||
Edwin Vieira (Mr. Solyom's attorney), [254]
|
||
[254]<div> Edwin Vieira
|
||
represented Richard Solyom in a Stated related EMINENT DOMAIN PROCEEDING, and
|
||
challenged the right of a State to force the acceptance of Federal Reserve
|
||
Notes as the QUID PRO QUO for his land that the State wanted to grab. Edwin
|
||
Vieira argued the monetary disabilities of Article I, Section 10 in an action
|
||
against a STATE, which at least is a correct point of beginning -- a lot more
|
||
than what I can say for Tax Protestors throwing Article I, Section 10 arguments
|
||
at THE CONGRESS. Edwin Vieira also wrote a book discussing the monetary powers
|
||
and disabilities of the United States Constitution; see PIECES OF EIGHT by
|
||
Edwin Vieira, Jr. [Devin-Adair, Old Greenwich, Connecticut (1983)].
|
||
<div>[254]
|
||
and on the other hand there are some INTELLIGENTSIA clowns; and any judicial
|
||
rebuffment experienced by attorneys throwing Protestor caliber arguments at
|
||
Federal Judges is a FULLY EARNED ACCOUNT >phrase originated by Ayn Rand<, as
|
||
any flaky arguments centered singularly around just the GOLD AND SILVER COIN
|
||
CLAUSE of Article I, Section 10 are just plain stupid: You are misleading your
|
||
readers, delivering naught to your clients for your fees, and as attorneys you
|
||
should know better. [255]
|
||
[255]<div> You lawyers
|
||
use that license of your's as a tool to impress and intellectually intimidate
|
||
people, and since that is your standard, I would then hold you to it and order
|
||
your disbarment if I had any supervisory jurisdictional interest in your
|
||
license, just like Jerome Daly from Minnesota was once suspended from the
|
||
Practice of Law for his flaky money arguments. In the JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
|
||
COURT for Credit River, Minnesota, on December 7, 1968, Jerome Daly once scored
|
||
an impressive victory before a jury, on what was largely a stipulated factual
|
||
setting of FAILURE OF CONSIDERATION on a $14000 mortgage that Jerome Daly had
|
||
defaulted on. Seemingly, he was off to a good start, but a continuing series of
|
||
rebuffments later on before judges cast his money arguments off on an illicit
|
||
tangent, and when he refused to back off, his license was suspended.
|
||
<div>[255]
|
||
Other rulings also affirm the broad application of monetary powers. Later on in
|
||
VEAZIE BANK VS. FENNO, [256]
|
||
[256]<div> 75 U.S. 533
|
||
(1869). <div>[256]
|
||
the Chief Justice, speaking for the Supreme Court, ruled that it is the
|
||
Constitutional right of the Congress to provide a currency for the whole
|
||
country; and that this might be done with coin, or by United States Notes, or
|
||
by notes of banks chartered by the Congress. Other cases replicate the same
|
||
line. For example:
|
||
"In VEAZIE BANK VS. FENNO [75 U.S. 533 (1869)], decided at the present
|
||
term, this court held, after full consideration, that it was the privilege of
|
||
Congress to furnish this country with the currency to be used by it in the
|
||
transaction of business, whether this was done by means of coin, of notes of
|
||
the United States, or of banks created by Congress." [257]
|
||
[257]<div> HEPBURN VS.
|
||
GRISWOLD, 75 U.S. 603 (1870).
|
||
<div>[257]
|
||
So asking a Federal Judge to declare the Federal Reserve System or its Notes as
|
||
being unConstitutional based on the MONETARY CLAUSE of Article I, Section 8 is
|
||
facially only a small slice of the larger total argument pie that Judges need
|
||
to hear. [258]
|
||
[258]<div> When I
|
||
advocate folks taking cognizance of the fact that the King has many different
|
||
independent sources of jurisdiction to pull from in order to justify the
|
||
existence of the Federal Reserve Board and those paper notes that his Legal
|
||
Tender statutes have designated to be his currency, please do not construe that
|
||
with any philosophical inclination on my part that might appear to favor the
|
||
King issuing out such paper based circulating instruments that excite Gremlins
|
||
so much in elevated enscrewment ecstacy; I am different from Protestors only in
|
||
the limited sense that I always evaluate both sides of an issue before throwing
|
||
something at a Judge. Refusing to badmouth adversaries does not mean that you
|
||
agree with them philosophically, nor does it inferentially suggest that one is
|
||
in alignment with the adversary's objectives; refusing to badmouth means no
|
||
more than realizing that the true remedy for correcting these currency Torts
|
||
will not lie in a Courtroom. Therefore, by examining the case from the
|
||
adversary's perspective, frequently I uncover real error in positions taken by
|
||
Protestors, but by examining the case from the King's perspective, that does
|
||
not mean that I am sympathetic with the King's MODUS OPERANDI or his
|
||
objectives. Unlike Protestors, I do not walk into a judicial confrontation with
|
||
anyone assuming that I am absolutely right, convinced that there is nothing the
|
||
other fellow has to say that is of any value, and then simply expecting justice
|
||
to be administered in my favor -- such a person is necessarily in a very
|
||
UNTEACHABLE state of mind -- he will miss many low profile movements going on
|
||
that are suggestive of error. There may very well be some error in my position
|
||
that I did not see (or understand the significance of), so my excursions into
|
||
judicial arenas are always exploratory in nature, and I keep myself in a
|
||
teachable state of mind (a MODUS OPERANDI Protestors would be wise to consider
|
||
emulating). <div>[258]
|
||
One of the reasons lies in the right of Congress to regulate Interstate
|
||
Commerce through its COMMERCE CLAUSE (and arguing deficiencies in that
|
||
jurisdiction is foolishness). So any Constitutional infirmity or tension in
|
||
effect between the Federal Reserve System and Article I, Section 8 offers no
|
||
reason whatever for dissolving the Fed; as the COMMERCE CLAUSE neatly picks up
|
||
all the loose ends where the restrictive coinage jurisdiction conferred by
|
||
Article I, Section 8 might possibly be imperfect, and renders Judicial
|
||
dissolution of the Fed inappropriate. [259]
|
||
[259]<div> Some Federal
|
||
Reserve Protestors I know are planning to throw some novel protesting arguments
|
||
at Federal Judges. Having concluded that quoting Constitutional restrainments
|
||
is unlikely to perfect judicial dissolution of the Federal Reserve System [and
|
||
correctly so as a factual matter], these Protestors have decided to step down
|
||
one level and just cite judicial reasoning in an attempt to dismantle a small
|
||
appendage of the Fed, called the FEDERAL OPEN MARKET COMMITTEE, or FOMC. By
|
||
researching Supreme Court cases back in the 1930's, an era when Judicial
|
||
annulment of Nelson Rockefeller's social welfare LEX [through his public
|
||
nominee, imp FDR] was in vogue, these Protestors intend to cite Cases like:
|
||
- PANAMA REFINING COMPANY VS. RYAN, 293 U.S. 388 (1934);
|
||
- SCHECHTER POULTRY VS. UNITED STATES, 295 U.S. 495 (1935);
|
||
- JAMES CARTER VS. CARTER COAL COMPANY, 298 U.S. 238 (1936); and then
|
||
pursuant to reasoning in those Cases, argue that the delegation of regulatory
|
||
commercial matters by the Congress to a non-juristic business association of
|
||
some type, is unConstitutional:
|
||
"But would it be seriously contended that Congress could delegate its
|
||
legislative authority to trade or industrial associations or groups as to
|
||
empower them to enact the laws they deem to be wise and beneficent for the
|
||
rehabilitation and expansion of their trade or industry? Could trade or
|
||
industrial associations or groups be constituted legislative bodies for that
|
||
purpose because such associations or groups are familiar with the problems of
|
||
their enterprises? And could an effort of that sort be made valid by such a
|
||
preface of generalities as to permissible aims as we find in [this NATIONAL
|
||
INDUSTRIAL RECOVERY ACT that the Supreme Court is about to run into the
|
||
ground]? The answer is obvious. Such a delegation of legislative power is
|
||
unknown to our Law and is utterly inconsistent with the Constitutional
|
||
prerogatives and duties of Congress."
|
||
- SCHECHTER POULTRY VS. UNITED STATES, 295 U.S. 495, at 537 (1935). No
|
||
where in the Constitution does it state that "... the Congress shall not
|
||
delegate any of its regulatory powers over Commerce to business
|
||
associations..." -- as there are numerous negative restrainments and positive
|
||
requirements deemed binding on the Congress, but no where appearing in the
|
||
Constitution; many are reasonably inferred as existing incidental to what the
|
||
Constitution otherwise expressly mandates. By going after just the FEDERAL OPEN
|
||
MARKET COMMITTEE appendage within the Fed, and not the Fed itself, these
|
||
Protestors are emulating a successful MODUS OPERANDI used extensively by
|
||
Gremlins themselves -- by selectively hacking away at something here a little,
|
||
and there a little -- slowly and patiently. Whether or not these Protestors
|
||
will ultimately succeed is inconclusive at the present time. There is some
|
||
merit to their DELEGATION QUESTION arguments as limited just to the FEDERAL
|
||
OPEN MARKET COMMITTEE itself within the Fed; and these arguments are not
|
||
overruled by the other wide ranging fundamental sources of jurisdictional fuel
|
||
the King has to create the larger Federal Reserve. ... And for Protestors
|
||
searching for something to throw at the Gremlin's enrichment Goliath, that's
|
||
enough. I am concerned about whether or not these Protestors can create a sound
|
||
JUSTICIABLE CONTROVERSY, which is another question; to the extent that the
|
||
FEDERAL OPEN MARKET COMMITTEE massages around and regulates with juristic force
|
||
banks and related financial institutions, STANDING is necessarily limited to
|
||
the affected parties absent an evidentiary presentation of the cascading train
|
||
of damages originating within the inner sanctums of the FOMC, that were
|
||
eventually experienced by the Plaintiff. I would feel more comfortable with the
|
||
probable outcome of this impending Case if an FOMC regulated institution itself
|
||
appeared as the Plaintiff. Nevertheless, these Protestors will find that
|
||
judicial reaction will be mixed -- there are Federal Judges who are sympathetic
|
||
with their arguments (as there is merit to them), while there are other TOUGH
|
||
COOKIE Federal Judges who will take advantage of the factual opportunity this
|
||
impending Case presents to them, by throwing snortations at the Protestors.
|
||
<div>[259]
|
||
Yes, Virginia, Paul Warburg knew what he was doing. But even that is not the
|
||
full story.
|
||
QUESTION: How are you Protestors going to attack Federal Reserve Notes on the
|
||
floor of the United States Supreme Court? How are you going to attack
|
||
Sovereignty itself? Are you going to try and attack the essence of Sovereignty
|
||
itself by quoting from the devil himself? If you can't find a quotation from
|
||
Lucifer slicing down Sovereignty, then maybe a quotation from one of his hard
|
||
working Gremlin assistants might be a point of beginning. [260]
|
||
[260]<div> Gremlin
|
||
Zbigniew Brzezinski writing in BETWEEN TWO AGES: AMERICA'S ROLE IN THE
|
||
TECHNETRONIC AGE, once advocated that the fiction of Sovereignty must be
|
||
replaced with reality:
|
||
"The doctrine of sovereignty created the institutional basis for
|
||
challenging the secular authority of established religion, and this challenge
|
||
in turned paved the way for the emergence of the abstract conception of the
|
||
nation-state. Sovereignty vested in the people, instead of Sovereignty vested
|
||
in the king, was the consummation of the process which in the two centuries
|
||
preceding the French and American revolutions radically altered the structure
|
||
of authority in the West and prepared the ground for a new dominant concept of
|
||
reality...
|
||
"The nation-state as a fundamental unit of man's organized life has
|
||
ceased to be the principal creative force: 'International banks and
|
||
multinational corporations are acting and planning in terms that are far in
|
||
advance of the political concepts of the nation-state.' But as the
|
||
nation-state is gradually yielding its sovereignty, the psychological
|
||
importance of the national community is rising, and the attempt to establish an
|
||
equilibrium between the imperatives of the [Corporate Socialist Rockefeller
|
||
Cartel's] new internationalism and the need for a more intimate national
|
||
community is the source of frictions and conflicts."
|
||
- Gremlin Zbigniew Brzezinski in BETWEEN TWO AGES: AMERICA'S ROLE IN
|
||
THE TECHNETRONIC AGE, at 70 and 56 [Viking Press, New York City (1970)].
|
||
<div>[260]
|
||
Well, an attack on Sovereignty like that, although a majestic goal for Gremlins
|
||
as they tear down our existing Constitution and the Juristic Institution it
|
||
created, and try and replace it with their own, is not much. So now just how
|
||
does an inherent prerogative of the Sovereign, of this right to issue out money
|
||
any way he feels like it, violate the King's Charter? Answer: There is no
|
||
violation -- there is no express Clause restraining the Congress to circulate
|
||
only that currency that physically contains gold and silver -- and you are not
|
||
going to get the chance before the Supreme Court to attack it. [261]
|
||
[261]<div> Juristic
|
||
institutions descend to the level of Commercial game players whenever they
|
||
enter into the world of Commerce; so it can be argued that Sovereignty takes a
|
||
back seat under some circumstances [this interesting Supreme Court Doctrine on
|
||
the declension in status and loss of Sovereignty whenever the King enters into
|
||
Commerce, appears in this Letter later with discussing those CIRCULATING
|
||
EVIDENCES OF DEBT, Federal Reserve Notes].
|
||
<div>[261]
|
||
Our Founding Fathers did not tie the King's giblets down tight enough with that
|
||
level of explicit and blunt language that all Kings need to be restrained by.
|
||
[262]
|
||
[262]<div> For example,
|
||
the original draft versions of the Second and Fifth Amendments were far more
|
||
specific and restrictive than the negotiated comprised milktoast versions that
|
||
finally made it through the Congress of 1787. Yes, the Constitution was an
|
||
INSPIRED DOCUMENT, but an INSPIRED DOCUMENT does not mean PERFECT DOCUMENT:
|
||
"We believe that God raised up George Washington, that He raised up
|
||
Thomas Jefferson, that He raised up Benjamin Franklin and those other Patriots
|
||
who carved out with their swords and with their pens the character and
|
||
stability of this great Government which they hoped would stand forever, an
|
||
asylum for the oppressed of all nations, where no man's religion would be
|
||
questioned, no man would be limited in his honest service to his Maker, so long
|
||
as he did not infringe upon the rights of his fellow men. We believe those men
|
||
were inspired to do their work, as we do that Joseph Smith was inspired to
|
||
begin this work; just as Galileo, Columbus, and other mighty men of old... were
|
||
inspired to gradually pave the way leading to this Dispensation; Sentinels,
|
||
standing at different periods down the centuries, playing their parts as they
|
||
were inspired of God; gradually dispelling the darkness as they were empowered
|
||
by their Creator so to do, that in culmination of the grand scheme of schemes,
|
||
this great nation, the Republic of the United States, might be established upon
|
||
this land as an asylum for the oppressed; a resting place [a sanctuary] it
|
||
might be said, for the ARK OF THE COVENANT, where the Temple of our God might
|
||
be built; where the PLAN OF SALVATION might be introduced and practiced in
|
||
freedom, and not a dog would wag his tongue in opposition to the purposes of
|
||
the Almighty. We believe that this was His object in creating the Republic of
|
||
the United States; the only land where His work could be commenced or the feet
|
||
of his people come to rest. No other land had such liberal institutions, had
|
||
adopted so broad a platform upon which all men might stand. We give glory to
|
||
those Patriots for the noble work they did; but we given first glory to God,
|
||
our Father and their Father, who inspired them. We take them by the hand as
|
||
brothers. We believe they did nobly their work, even as we would fain do ours,
|
||
faithfully and well, that we might not be recreant in the eyes of God, for
|
||
failing to perform the mission to which He has appointed us."
|
||
- Orson F. Whitney, in a discourse delivered at the Tabernacle on April
|
||
19, 1885; 26 JOURNAL OF DISCOURSES 194, at 200 [London (1886)].
|
||
<div>[262]
|
||
And so any attack on Federal Reserve Notes will require such an explicit and
|
||
bluntly worded Constitutional Amendment, and that is a political operation for
|
||
the Legislatures to handle, not something lending itself well in nature to a
|
||
Judicial remedy. At best the Judiciary can rule on cases with the outcome
|
||
carefully designed to give the Congress an incentive to get going. An honest
|
||
assessment of the total factual setting of monetary history in the United
|
||
States will emphasize general naivete among the members of the American
|
||
legislatures in 1787: They didn't know what they were doing, collectively
|
||
speaking, although there were a few who did raise their voices in opposition to
|
||
paper money, like Roger Sherman. [263]
|
||
[263]<div> For example,
|
||
in the Continental Congress on August 28th, 1787, "Article 12 was being
|
||
discussed. Article 12 was proposed to be as follows:
|
||
"Article XII. No state shall coin money; nor grant letters of marque
|
||
and reprisals; nor enter into any treaty, alliance, or confederation; nor grant
|
||
any title of Nobility." "Mr. Wilson and Mr. Roger Sherman moved to insert after
|
||
the words COIN MONEY the words TO EMIT BILLS OF CREDIT, NOR MAKE ANY THING BUT
|
||
GOLD AND SILVER COIN A TENDER IN PAYMENT OF DEBTS, thus making those
|
||
prohibitions against paper money absolute. "Mr. Ghorum thought the purpose
|
||
would be well secured by the provision of Article XIII, which makes the consent
|
||
of the General Legislature necessary, and in that mode, no opposition would be
|
||
excited; whereas an absolute prohibition of paper money would rouse the most
|
||
desperate opposition from its partizans. "Mr. Sherman thought this a favorable
|
||
crisis for crushing paper money. If the consent of the Legislature could
|
||
authorize emissions of it, the friends of paper money would make every exertion
|
||
to get into the legislature in order to license it."
|
||
- see Max Farrand's II RECORDS OF THE FEDERAL CONVENTION OF 1787, at
|
||
page 439 [Yale University Press, New Haven (1911-1937)]. Notice how Mr. Sherman
|
||
and Mr Ghorum were concerned, knowledgeable and aware of the exterior
|
||
opposition to prohibiting the emission of paper bills. There was opposition
|
||
lying around the Countryside, opposed to making hard gold and silver mandatory
|
||
with no legislative discretion allowed to substitute paper bills for gold and
|
||
silver coin. So the reason why we have fraudulent Federal Reserve Notes running
|
||
around today is because our Founding Fathers failed to tie the King down
|
||
yesterday -- and Federal Judges are not Commie pinkos when tossing out
|
||
arguments attacking Federal Reserve Notes. Our Founding Fathers specifically
|
||
declined to make explicit and blunt prohibitions against the emission of paper
|
||
bills because they knew then that few people wanted such a mandatory
|
||
restrainment operating on the Congress, and our Fathers in 1787 did not want to
|
||
create opposition to the proposed new Constitution designed to replace the
|
||
ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION. So what we are left with today is the milktoast of
|
||
Article I, Section 8. Gremlins have merely take advantage of what our Fathers
|
||
circumvented back then; and our Fathers found themselves in such a position
|
||
because a lot of folks did not want prohibitions against the emission of paper
|
||
bills. We did this to ourselves, and Patriots are snickering at the wrong
|
||
people. <div>[263]
|
||
Remember that the Britannic Crown was still quite popular then, and the
|
||
American Revolution was a minority rights operation, with many bleeding heart
|
||
native Americans opposing severance from the Crown. And there were also just
|
||
too few George Masons to go around. The experientially wise know that you
|
||
never, ever deal with a King with negative restraining clauses in contracts
|
||
except under the most explicit and blunt words that the English Language
|
||
offers, because the King will always figure out ways to claim some implicit
|
||
permission to work his way around a restraining clause that is sounding in
|
||
milktoast; but our Fathers didn't do that. And compounding the problem drafting
|
||
such specific language, sprinkled in between the floor debates and political
|
||
comprises, were a few traitors of strong influence (like Alexander Hamilton,
|
||
who married indirectly into the House of Rothschild). [264]
|
||
[264]<div> Alexander
|
||
Hamilton was born Alexander Levine, of Jewish lineage, in St. Croix, the West
|
||
Indies. After changing his name and his geographical situs, he married
|
||
Elizabeth Schuyler, the second daughter of Phillip Schuyler, at the bride's
|
||
home in Albany, New York, on December 14, 1780. The bride's mother was
|
||
Catherine van Rensselaer, daughter of Colonel John R. van Rensselaer, who was
|
||
the son of Hendrik, the grandson of Killiaen, the first Partroon, and Engeltke
|
||
(Angelica) Livingston. The bride had been characterized as:
|
||
"... a brunette with the most good natured, dark, lovely eyes that I
|
||
ever saw, which threw a beam of good temper and benevolence over her entire
|
||
countenance." The bride was just over 23, and the groom was 25. Alexander's
|
||
courtship with Elizabeth that year had been very brief, as the arranged
|
||
marriage that it was. While others have uncovered payment records in the
|
||
British Museum in London from the Rothschilds to their nominee Alexander
|
||
Hamilton, an examination of his political orientation [particularly his drive
|
||
to create a national bank] magnifies his Gremlin stature. There is quite a
|
||
large number of Alexander Hamilton related biographics and profile sketches
|
||
floating around. See "THE INTIMATE LIFE OF ALEXANDER HAMILTON," by Allan
|
||
Hamilton [Charles Scribner's Sons, New York (1910) [quote on the bride's
|
||
description, id., at page 95]; and "ALEXANDER HAMILTON: YOUTH TO MATURITY, 1755
|
||
- 1788," by Broades Mitchell [MacMillian Company, New York (1957)].
|
||
<div>[264]
|
||
who knew exactly what they were doing, for and on behalf of their sponsors.
|
||
[265]
|
||
[265]<div> There has
|
||
always been a period of Time in the United States when well sponsored imps have
|
||
ascended into positions of political prominence; sometimes into Juristic
|
||
Institutions, and other times they operate on the outside, perhaps as a
|
||
director of a foundation, a historian, or a university professor of some type.
|
||
One such imp, financially sponsored by Rockefeller Cartel interests, has been
|
||
Rexford Tugwell, who likes to create the image that he is a historian. In one
|
||
of his books, entitled THE EMERGING CONSTITUTION, he really shows off his
|
||
Gremlin colors. He tries to throw derogatory characterizations at our Founding
|
||
Fathers by pointing attention over to such things as the acreage of land once
|
||
owned by Thomas Jefferson and other economic profile information; but the fact
|
||
that the Four Rockefeller Brothers are financially sponsoring little Tug
|
||
himself to write a new Constitution to enrich the Brothers is, of course,
|
||
something this little imp, speaking with a forked tongue, remains silent on.
|
||
And he has, of course, just the right solution for all those CRUCIAL American
|
||
legal ailments: A new Constitution >see TEXT FILE on THE NEWSTATES
|
||
CONSTITUTION, available on some BBS's for downloading< -- designed along
|
||
Corporate Socialist lines that would enrich his sponsors in the Rockefeller
|
||
Cartel. Under this new Constitution, large private corporations assume several
|
||
of the functions once held exclusively by Juristic Institutions -- such as
|
||
criminal prosecutions, the regulation of business, issuance of commercial
|
||
licenses, and, of course, there is no Trial by Jury. Rexford Tugwell shows off
|
||
his true Gremlin colors by coming down on those great triple Gremlin irritants:
|
||
LAISSEZ-FAIRE, INDIVIDUALISM, and the INDEPENDENCE of national Sovereignty:
|
||
"So much for the Constitution. But it did not end there; continuing
|
||
suspicion of authority allowed LAISSEZ-FAIRE to thrive beyond its time and
|
||
allowable scope; and the propensity to contrive produced an affluence we did
|
||
not use to advantage because we held to INDIVIDUALISM and INDEPENDENCE in
|
||
theory although we created a system of social and economic complexes requiring
|
||
integration and organic management. If these generalizations are accepted, they
|
||
describe a curious and unanticipated outcome. It is not certain, for instance,
|
||
how much of our affluence is owed to the INDIVIDUALISM that now threatens to
|
||
choke its own further growth...
|
||
"Yet the myth of INDEPENDENCE and INDIVIDUALISM persists, mostly
|
||
nowadays as a political appeal, but it furnishes assurances to unthinking
|
||
citizens. These words are regarded with cynical tolerance by intellectuals; but
|
||
they still have an appeal to the electorate, and they will until a more
|
||
realistic approach has made its way into people's minds...
|
||
"The laws establishing [administrative] agencies did not clearly
|
||
recognize that the businesses involved were using resources belonging to the
|
||
people, and lacking this, their authority to make allocations was hazy. They
|
||
were handicapped also by the prevailing belief in LAISSEZ-FAIRE..."
|
||
- Rexford Tugwell in THE EMERGING CONSTITUTION, at 17, 27 and 145
|
||
[Harper & Row, New York (1974); Sponsored by the Rockefeller's FUND FOR THE
|
||
REPUBLIC in Santa Monica, California]. Notice what difficulty Gremlins like
|
||
little Tug have in restraining themselves not to throw invectives at those
|
||
heinous institutions of INDIVIDUALISM, LAISSEZ-FAIRE, and the INDEPENDENCE of
|
||
national Sovereignty. Gremlins do not want INDIVIDUALS to amount to something
|
||
great on their own volition [they want men to remain boys, and for everyone to
|
||
keep their diapers on by looking to Government for security, for protection,
|
||
and as a source of remedies for society's problems]; they do not want
|
||
LAISSEZ-FAIR [they want total top down Government control of everything, so
|
||
that when Government controls it, then they can control it]; and Gremlins do
|
||
not want the world divided up into multiple independent Sovereignties [they
|
||
want a ONE WORLD GOVERNMENT, under their control]. Those are the great Gremlin
|
||
objectives, and getting rid of that United States Constitution -- and
|
||
everything else Majestic, Celestial, and developmental of INDIVIDUALS that it
|
||
represents -- is a glorious dream for imps to bask in. [For other attacks on
|
||
the Founding Fathers by sponsored self-proclaimed "historians," see imp Charles
|
||
Beard in AN ECONOMIC INTERPRETATION OF THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION [The Free
|
||
Press, New York (1913)]; who uncovered detailed financial profile information
|
||
on the Founders, and then came to the conclusion, as he was paid to do, that
|
||
the Constitution was just a legal instrument to self-enrich its creators. Like
|
||
his brother Rexford Tugwell, CHARLES BEARD SHOULD BE THE VERY LAST ONE TO
|
||
TALK.] <div>[265]
|
||
One might think that with the passage of time, an increase in political SAVOIR
|
||
FAIRE might just develop nationally. But no. If a Constitutional Convention
|
||
were held over again today, as is quite close to happening, I am afraid of the
|
||
consequences. We need a Constitutional Convention today in the 1980's like we
|
||
need the Ortega Brothers >of Nicaraguan infamy< in the United States Senate
|
||
representing the State of New Hampshire. Conservatives believing a new
|
||
Constitutional Convention, called for the purpose of a BALANCED BUDGET
|
||
AMENDMENT, are playing into the hands of Gremlins, who fully intend to use that
|
||
Constitutional Convention to replace our Father's Constitution with their own;
|
||
in fact that is how the Constitution of 1787 was proposed to the States, as a
|
||
replacement for the ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION. And if you don't think Gremlins
|
||
are smart enough to use parliamentary devices to work their way around wording
|
||
in some State Resolutions calling for such a Convention (attempting to limit
|
||
the subject matter discussed in the Convention to just the content of the
|
||
BALANCED BUDGET AMENDMENT), then you have no knowledge whatsoever of Gremlins,
|
||
and you are not even qualified to exercise such political judgment today when
|
||
in fact Gremlins now hold the upper hand in the United States. [266]
|
||
[266]<div> If you
|
||
CONSERVATIVES were smart, you would not consider donating money or voting for
|
||
any candidate expressing sympathy with either the milktoast Democratic or
|
||
Republican Party Platforms; such a candidate is no adversary of Gremlins. As
|
||
far as I am concerned, if in fact the Gremlins can pull off this Constitutional
|
||
switch at the impending Constitutional Convention, then they fully deserve the
|
||
avalanche of benefits such a juristic instrument will generate for them. I
|
||
admire victors of battles for their tactical SAVIOR FAIRE, even though I may
|
||
not be sympathetic with their doctrines or objectives.
|
||
<div>[266]
|
||
And Gremlins are not about to let a Constitutional Convention come and go in
|
||
the United States without putting up a good fight. [267]
|
||
[267]<div> "In
|
||
connection with the attack on the United States, the Lord told the Prophet
|
||
Joseph Smith [that] there would be an attempt to overthrow the country by
|
||
destroying the Constitution. Joseph Smith predicted that the time would come
|
||
when the Constitution would hang as it were by a thread, and at that time...
|
||
the Elders of Israel, widely spread over the nation, will, at the crucial
|
||
time... [participate by providing] the necessary balance of strength to save
|
||
the institutions of Constitutional Government. Now is the time to get ready."
|
||
- Ezra Taft Benson in CONFERENCE REPORTS, page 70 (October, 1961).
|
||
<div>[267]
|
||
If you want to get a good preview and feel for the class of new Constitution
|
||
that such a convention would produce, just examine the caliber of Presidents
|
||
elected in recent history. [268]
|
||
[268]<div> If you are
|
||
unaware of the interest certain Gremlins have towards using that impending
|
||
Convention for their own proprietary purposes, then consider these words from
|
||
our Gremlin friend EXTRAORDINAIRE, Zbigniew Brzezinski:
|
||
"The approaching two hundredth anniversary of the Declaration of
|
||
Independence could justify the call for a national constitutional convention to
|
||
reexamine the nation's formal institutional framework. Either 1976 or 1987 --
|
||
the two hundredth anniversary of the Constitution -- could serve as a target
|
||
date for culminating a national dialogue on the relevance of existing
|
||
arrangements, the workings of the representative process, and the desirability
|
||
of imitating the various European regionalization reforms and of streamlining
|
||
the administrative structure. More important still, either date would provide a
|
||
suitable occasion for redefining the meaning of modern democracy -- a task
|
||
admittedly challenging but not necessarily more so than when it was undertaken
|
||
by the founding fathers -- and for setting ambitious and concrete social
|
||
goals."
|
||
- Gremlin Zbigniew Brzezinski in BETWEEN TWO AGES: AMERICA'S ROLE IN
|
||
THE TECHNETRONIC AGE, at 258 [Viking Press, New York City (1970)]. Those
|
||
"social goals" that Brzezinski wants involve a NEW ECONOMIC ORDER which
|
||
Brzezinski openly admits would seriously threaten "the traditional American
|
||
values of individualism, free enterprise, the work ethic, and efficiency." --
|
||
but pesky little anachronisms like those are nuisances today, and his employer
|
||
David Rockefeller has no room for nuisances. What David decrees is what's
|
||
important, and David has decreed that Corporate Socialism is important.
|
||
</conspiracyFile> |