This case uncovers a serious national security breach that
is unique and is of first impression, and due to the serious
nature of this case it involves the possible removal of a
sitting President and Vice President of the United States
along with members of the United States Congress, while
deeming them unfit from ever holding office under Federal,
State, County or local Governments found within the
United States of America, and at the same time the trial
court also has the authority, to be validated by this Court,
to authorize the swearing in of the legal and rightful heirs
for President and Vice President of the United States.
Hmmm, I don't know if this is legit or not, but some of the wording sounds rather colloquial and not in legalese. Example:
Due to the fact that this case represents a national security
breach on a unprecedented level like never before seen
seriously damaging and violating Brunson and coincidently
effects every citizen of the U.S.A. and courts of law.
"Coincidentally" is misspelled; it is not a complete sentence, it's a sentence fragment; and "like never before seen" sounds like a teenage girl writing in he diary.
Common English matters, even in court filings. I've seen multi-million dollar grants and reports rejected because they are semi-literate, full of misspellings, or syntactical errors.
adverb co·in·ci·den·tal·ly (ˌ)kō-ˌin(t)-sə-ˈdent-lē -ˈden-tə-lē
1 : in a coincidental manner : by coincidence
lonely singles who meet coincidentally and click People
2 : it is or seems coincidental that coincidentally, the dog died exactly one year after his owner did
You DO realize that I was referring to the text, taken DIRECTLY from the document in question, don't you? See the text in quotes and italics, and if you look VERY VERY CAREFULLY, you will see that the word "coincidentally" is spelled as "coincidently".
Or better yet, why don't you also go directly to the text of this purported petition in PDF, and search it for yourself. It's right there.
This case uncovers a serious national security breach that is unique and is of first impression, and due to the serious nature of this case it involves the possible removal of a sitting President and Vice President of the United States along with members of the United States Congress, while deeming them unfit from ever holding office under Federal, State, County or local Governments found within the United States of America, and at the same time the trial court also has the authority, to be validated by this Court, to authorize the swearing in of the legal and rightful heirs for President and Vice President of the United States.
He is representing himself.
If True?
The USSC has already accepted the case in October 22.
Hmmm, I don't know if this is legit or not, but some of the wording sounds rather colloquial and not in legalese. Example:
Due to the fact that this case represents a national security breach on a unprecedented level like never before seen seriously damaging and violating Brunson and coincidently effects every citizen of the U.S.A. and courts of law.
"Coincidentally" is misspelled; it is not a complete sentence, it's a sentence fragment; and "like never before seen" sounds like a teenage girl writing in he diary.
C'mon, is this legit? I have my reservations.
It’s some dude representing himself doing the best he can.
Common English matters, even in court filings. I've seen multi-million dollar grants and reports rejected because they are semi-literate, full of misspellings, or syntactical errors.
Good catch.
It will be rejected.
Most likely... IF it's even truly been filed.
Any one dig into the name address of this said perosn
Well I haven't.
Coincidentally:
adverb co·in·ci·den·tal·ly (ˌ)kō-ˌin(t)-sə-ˈdent-lē -ˈden-tə-lē 1 : in a coincidental manner : by coincidence lonely singles who meet coincidentally and click People 2 : it is or seems coincidental that coincidentally, the dog died exactly one year after his owner did
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/coincidentally
Coincidentally is SPELLED CORRECTLY!!! The More you know!!!!
You DO realize that I was referring to the text, taken DIRECTLY from the document in question, don't you? See the text in quotes and italics, and if you look VERY VERY CAREFULLY, you will see that the word "coincidentally" is spelled as "coincidently".
Or better yet, why don't you also go directly to the text of this purported petition in PDF, and search it for yourself. It's right there.
Its already decided and I think we find out the supreme court answer on Nov 23. Hopefully the supreme court did it correctly
How do you know it’s already been decided?