The U.S. Constitution is the ultimate law in the United States for the purpose of
maintaining liberty and defending the nation from hostile invasions. You always have Constitutional Rights, they cannot be taken away. Your Constitutional rights are more powerful any any local, state or federal laws. The government sponsored schools did not and will not teach your children about their Constitutional Rights as they reduce the federal government and clearly show that the people are the government and your representatives are servants of the people.
Article 1, Section 8, Clause 15 states that-
“The congress shall have the power to….provide for
the calling forth of the militia to execute the laws of the union, suppress
insurrection and repel invasion.”
According to Richard Henry Lee, the “militia,” when
properly formed, is made up of the people themselves and includes all men who
are able to bear arms. Put in the
context of the U.S. Constitution, this makes sense because the idea of our
republic is that the people are sovereign to government power and the government
is a servant to the people. This could not be the case except for the first ten
amendments to the U.S. Constitution, which are known as the Bill of Rights.
Today, it seems as if many people accept the idea
that the federal government, through the supremacy clause, has total power over
the states. This is untrue: they only have supreme power over those laws that
support the Constitution, and the Tenth Amendment explicitly states that:
“All powers not delegated to the federal government
are reserved to the states and the people, respectively.”
This supports the rights of the people to be armed
and ready to act in defense of the nation. Many people today feel that the idea
of militias and an armed citizenry is outdated and unnecessary because we have
an Army. In fact, many would argue that the National Guard is the
constitutionally authorized militia. Not true; the reality is that the only
constitutionally authorized military force to be funded and maintained by the
government is the United States Navy.
Article 1, Section 8, Clause 13:
“The congress shall have the power to provide and
maintain a Navy”
While Article 1, Section 8, Clause 12 states that:
“The congress shall have the power to raise and
support armies, but no appropriations of money to that use shall be for more
than two years.”
That means that the standing U.S. Army is in fact
an unconstitutional entity receiving money illegally. The founders, at the time
of signing the Constitution, understood that standing armies historically have
been the greatest threat to the liberties of the people. That is still true today, as the tyrannies of
the twentieth century saw the world’s most brutal dictators use their standing
armies to commit mass murder on an unprecedented scale. At the time, of course,
the founders would have been referring to the armies of Great Britain and the
history of the Roman Empire as examples.
This clause explicitly describes the congress’
responsibility to provide funding for the state militias while giving it a
choice to provide for a “national military.” This is more evident by the actual
wording of the Second Amendment. Not too many people realize that the Second
Amendment is the only place in the Constitution where the word “necessary” is
found. The word is referring to the maintenance of the people’s militias.
The purpose of our constitutional republic based on
the rule of law is to protect the sovereignty of the people and ensure
government does not have the power to suppress the rights of freemen. Our Constitution is not a granter of our
natural rights, it only states what they are, while establishing a system of
government where the power to protect those rights is derived from us, the
people of the United States. Any law that is passed in direct contradiction to
the Constitution is null and void and people have no obligation to follow such
laws. The precedent for this was established in Norton vs. Shelby County in
1886. Failure to understand this is
essentially the only way a free people can lose their rights. This is why there
is such an influence of the social and behavioral sciences colluding with
government and education. They seek to psychologically condition you to
surrender your rights out of fear and uncertainty.
The Constitution described the powers of the
federal government as few and limiting in scope so as to ensure that the vast
majority of political power would remain with the states and people, as
described above in the Tenth Amendment. When government abuses these powers,
the people are under no obligation to offer allegiance, as the government’s
primary responsibility is the preservation of life, liberty, property, and the
people’s right to pursue their own ends, to pursue happiness. In fact, it is
the responsibility of sovereign state governments to immediately enact laws
that protect the constitutional rights of its citizens in the face of such
usurpations. This includes but is not limited to laws concerning the
constitutional militia and gun control. In fact, in 1903, a law was passed that
was to prohibit the federal government from ever trying to enact gun control
laws based on this very reasoning. This was called the Dick Act of 1902.
While the
context of this article will certainly appear radical to many, it doesn’t
change the historical facts presented.
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