--Getting you to worship this thing has been the second-most successful Cabal psyop of all time (with the most successful being organized religion with tithe structures).
The first ten words of Article 1, section 8 is the very core of the Constitution, without which it has little purpose. Title VII (among a host of other incrustations layered thick enough to drag down a battleship under their weight) is attached to the Constitution.
When the average red-blood MAGA-hat pronounces his love for the Constitution, he's almost solely laser-focused on the second amendment, oblivious to the tooling of the state codified by the rest of it.
Few are aware these days that the Bill of Rights was attached to the thing as precautionary layer of Saran-wrap hopefully containing a Pandora's Box already bursting at the seams before the ink was dry -- as inattentive Kentucky farmers found out quick enough when Washington mounted up to lead the troops in to collect Hamilton's Whiskey Tax.
"...That investigation (into the nature and construction of the new constitution), which the conspirators have so long and zealously struggled against has,...so far taken place as to ascertain the enormity of their criminality. That system which was pompously displayed as the perfection of government, proves upon examination to be the most odious system of tyranny that was ever projected, a many-headed hydra of despotism, whose complicated and various evils would be infinitely more oppressive and afflictive than the scourge of any tyrant...
No wonder then that such a discovery (by the Anti-Federalists) should excite uneasy apprehensions in the minds of the (Philadelphia convention) conspirators, for such an attempt against the public liberties is unprecedented in history, it is a crime of the blackest dye, as it strikes at the happiness of millions and the dignity of human nature, as it was intended to deprive [Americans] of the choicest blessing of life...."
(Samuel Bryan, commenting on the 1787 coup d'état in "Centinel", January 1788)
So much for that Linus van Pelt blanket-coddling worship.
The "1776"/Q/2nd American Revolution is going to flush out more evil than only that dating back to 1871. It's going to overturn the 1787 coup d'é·tat.
Oh please. Delegates from all states were free to attend. They were part of the Continental Congress and the ratification process was completely public, only the crafting of the document was private.
This description above is called "rhetoric". Obviously from someone who wanted permanent total state sovereignty which is basically what we had under the Articles.
Samuel Brian certainly knew about the crafting of the Constitution, how is that? He also wrote three essays that were published critical of the Constitution. The tyranny! It wasn't like the Grand Convention only permitted Federalists in.
American independence was achieved as the result of a war begun in part over a 2c tax on stamps (they understood well the concept of "slippery slope"), and not half a decade after it was over, a bunch of belly-slithering patrician reptiles gathered together in the aftermath to smuggle in "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect Taxes" to subject everyone right back under the thumb of the Cabal. They were thieving tyrants right from the outset.
It still contains the first ten words of Article 1, section 8.
--Getting you to worship this thing has been the second-most successful Cabal psyop of all time (with the most successful being organized religion with tithe structures).
The first ten words of Article 1, section 8 is the very core of the Constitution, without which it has little purpose. Title VII (among a host of other incrustations layered thick enough to drag down a battleship under their weight) is attached to the Constitution.
When the average red-blood MAGA-hat pronounces his love for the Constitution, he's almost solely laser-focused on the second amendment, oblivious to the tooling of the state codified by the rest of it.
Few are aware these days that the Bill of Rights was attached to the thing as precautionary layer of Saran-wrap hopefully containing a Pandora's Box already bursting at the seams before the ink was dry -- as inattentive Kentucky farmers found out quick enough when Washington mounted up to lead the troops in to collect Hamilton's Whiskey Tax.
"...That investigation (into the nature and construction of the new constitution), which the conspirators have so long and zealously struggled against has,...so far taken place as to ascertain the enormity of their criminality. That system which was pompously displayed as the perfection of government, proves upon examination to be the most odious system of tyranny that was ever projected, a many-headed hydra of despotism, whose complicated and various evils would be infinitely more oppressive and afflictive than the scourge of any tyrant...
No wonder then that such a discovery (by the Anti-Federalists) should excite uneasy apprehensions in the minds of the (Philadelphia convention) conspirators, for such an attempt against the public liberties is unprecedented in history, it is a crime of the blackest dye, as it strikes at the happiness of millions and the dignity of human nature, as it was intended to deprive [Americans] of the choicest blessing of life...."
(Samuel Bryan, commenting on the 1787 coup d'état in "Centinel", January 1788)
So much for that Linus van Pelt blanket-coddling worship.
The "1776"/Q/2nd American Revolution is going to flush out more evil than only that dating back to 1871. It's going to overturn the 1787 coup d'é·tat.
Oh please. Delegates from all states were free to attend. They were part of the Continental Congress and the ratification process was completely public, only the crafting of the document was private.
This description above is called "rhetoric". Obviously from someone who wanted permanent total state sovereignty which is basically what we had under the Articles.
Samuel Brian certainly knew about the crafting of the Constitution, how is that? He also wrote three essays that were published critical of the Constitution. The tyranny! It wasn't like the Grand Convention only permitted Federalists in.
"the ratification process was completely public."
Irrelevant, because "to even submit the matter to a vote represents a grievous assault on the very idea of rights".
American independence was achieved as the result of a war begun in part over a 2c tax on stamps (they understood well the concept of "slippery slope"), and not half a decade after it was over, a bunch of belly-slithering patrician reptiles gathered together in the aftermath to smuggle in "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect Taxes" to subject everyone right back under the thumb of the Cabal. They were thieving tyrants right from the outset.