Both Federal and California State laws require that all government employees have bonds. California stopped issuing bonds when Reagan was president. This means the entire state government is illegitimate and we the people have the legal right to just step in and take it over: https://gwsandiego.net/blog/?p=2219
Likewise, a large percentage of our government officials have not taken proper oaths, including San Francisco's State Senator Scott Wiener (Wiener's oath is nearly at the bottom, so lots of scrolling down to find him): https://gwsandiego.net/blog/?p=1608.
Anyone without an oath has no right to be in office. For elected officials, someone can just swoop in and take over: "The obligation imposed by the Public Officers Law statute is personal to plaintiff, it is an act he is required to do and the office became vacant by the mere failure to file the oath, whether or not the defendants knew or were chargeable with notice that plaintiff had failed to file his oath, and they are not required to make any declaration or give any notice. On his default in' filing his official oath "the appointment was vitiated and the office * * * became vacant" [citing Ginsberg v. City of Long Beach, 286 N.Y. 400, 36 N.E.2d 637; and also People ex reI. Walton v. Hicks, infra].
I am trying to talk to people in the Bay Area now and try to encourage them to find a replacement for Wiener and just swoop in and take over his job since the legal right is there to do so.
Both Federal and California State laws require that all government employees have bonds. California stopped issuing bonds when Reagan was president. This means the entire state government is illegitimate and we the people have the legal right to just step in and take it over: https://gwsandiego.net/blog/?p=2219
Likewise, a large percentage of our government officials have not taken proper oaths, including San Francisco's State Senator Scott Wiener (Wiener's oath is nearly at the bottom, so lots of scrolling down to find him): https://gwsandiego.net/blog/?p=1608.
Anyone without an oath has no right to be in office. For elected officials, someone can just swoop in and take over: "The obligation imposed by the Public Officers Law statute is personal to plaintiff, it is an act he is required to do and the office became vacant by the mere failure to file the oath, whether or not the defendants knew or were chargeable with notice that plaintiff had failed to file his oath, and they are not required to make any declaration or give any notice. On his default in' filing his official oath "the appointment was vitiated and the office * * * became vacant" [citing Ginsberg v. City of Long Beach, 286 N.Y. 400, 36 N.E.2d 637; and also People ex reI. Walton v. Hicks, infra].
I am trying to talk to people in the Bay Area now and try to encourage them to find a replacement for Wiener and just swoop in and take over his job since the legal right is there to do so.