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A future history of the calling of the First U.S. Constitution Article V Convention to Propose Amendments by the man who might have started it all. Montgomery Blair Sibley details an alternative future arising from his lawsuit against Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan had the Circuit Court allowed his case to be heard. In the process, Sibley spills the beans on the D.C. Madam, Barack Obama's Birth Certificate and the curious role former Vice President Joe Biden played in closing down a real threat to Obama's road to the Presidency.
Justice is dead. The Justicide Brief traces the historical development of Justice from the Magna Carta to the U.S. Constitution. Describing the Founders' vision for Justice as defined in the Judiciary Act of 1789, the Justicide Brief then continues by describing how that vision has been destroyed. Starting with the Judiciary Act of 1891, by silent approaches and slight deviations from legal modes of procedure, the slow death of Justice is detailed through to the present state of affairs where: (i) decisions are made based upon the practically unreviewable whims of a judge, (ii) the private American Bar Association has been given the power to determine who will be able to practice law and sit as judges, and (iii) judges are absolutely immune from the consequences of any judicial misbehavior. Concluding with specific proposal to bring back to life the Justice the Founders had envisioned, the Justicide Brief is a necessary read for anyone claiming to be an informed citizen.
The unchallenged premise in all legal arguments regarding Islam is that Islam is a "religion" as that term is used in the jurisprudence of the United States. This monograph takes a critical look at the premise and, upon well cited authorities, concludes that such a premise has no footing in the law of the United States. Though completely politically-incorrect, the conclusions reached in "Is Islam a Religion" cannot be avoided if full faith and allegiance to our secular constitutionalism is to be continued in the 21st Century.
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