Directory of the Supreme Flaw of
the Land Essays This document was most recently revised on Wednesday,
May 18, 2011.
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| | Both the U.S. Constitution and the Articles of
Confederation are in effect today, jointly establishing the present federal
union. That results in a union, and various states, which are unavoidably
in breach of contract. |
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| | According to James Madison, the accumulation
of legislative, executive, and judicial powers in the same hands may justly
be pronounced the very definition of tyranny. In this essay, your
suspicions are confirmed. |
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| | This essay examines the U.S. Bill of Rights on
two levels. On the surface, it's an examination of language, construction,
and effect. On that level, it challenges much of the myth and misinformation
generally associated with the U.S. Bill of Rights. More fundamentally,
the essay offers a beginning into the arcane art of understanding government
and recognizing it for what it really is. Such understanding eventually
suggests the necessity of an alternative. |
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| | The Seventeenth Amendment was ratified in violation
of Article 5 of the U.S. Constitution. Since then, most acts of the
U.S. government have been without constitutional validity. |
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| | With one possible exception, rights aren't unalienable.
The idea that they are is political anesthesia. This mistaken belief
has fostered an incautious attitude toward our rights and has resulted
in their entire loss, except maybe for the possible exception. |
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