Purpose:
The People of the United States of America shall be the Official Fourth Branch of Government, with its own powers and obligations, such as: The power to conduct national initiatives and referendums along with the power to recall members of both houses of Congress (to their respective states); the power to pardon crimes (by a two-thirds vote of 38 state legislatures, which must include the state where the offense was committed); It makes voter registration mandatory at the age of 18 (from the time of its signing) and voting a national holiday (and a paid day off for all Americans); the first 6 lines of the Declaration of Independence apart of the new official prologue to the U.S. Constitution (immediately followed by the original Preamble) and, as such, was made law (legal and binding) both perpetually and irrevocably; And it also declares the Press (which includes all those who pass on information by word of mouth, scuttlebutt and or rumor) are to be the first to know of important things- things which concern violations of and or infringement upon the rights of citizens (especially those rights enumerated within the Constitution) and to disseminate this information to the entire populace of the United States of America by any means available and or necessary. In essence, the 28th Amendment, which creates the new fourth branch of the Government (the Popular Branch), shall give the American People the powers needed to fulfill the duties of their new office.
13 Principles
The following thirteen principles shall be law and shall be the basis for the limitations, rights, powers and obligations of the Popular Branch. They are as follows:
1. People can dissolve the political bands which have connected them to one another.
2. People (and individuals), upon birth, are as sovereign as any nation or government.
3. People can take back their sovereignty, if the government
breaches the Social Contract.
4. People should declare the causes which impel them to dissolve their political bands.
5. We hold these truths to be self-evident, all men are created equal.
6. All humans have indestructible rights like life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
7. Governments exist and are instituted in order to secure their peoples’ inalienable rights.
8. Governments derive their just powers and authority from the consent of the Governed.
9. We the People have the right to alter or to abolish our government.
10. No government is forever. They exist until they cease securing their Peoples’ rights.
11. A government should not be changed for light (trivial) and transient (ever-changing; inconsistent) reasons.
12. People have the right and the duty to throw off a despotic government (government bend on placing us under despotism).
13. People have the right to institute new political systems and future legislative safeguards.
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
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I agree 100 percent with what you said and everything we've talked about. If I had the intelligent and knowledge you have I'd be walking next to you.
ReplyDeleteSam