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Even though Trump could use his Presidential powers to remove activist Judges, it would be better politically for the people to unite and demand our lawmakers use their power to do it;
It's time to start reforming our beliefs about the fairness and impartionality and power limits of the American justice system. And doing something about it by demanding we get our rightful power back to decide the direction our Nation will take.
The only way to effectively do that, is to demand our State Legislatures petition Congress for a States Amendment convention. It's listed in Article-V of the Constitution, and was put there by our Founders, the Framers of the Constitution, to insure the people had a peaceful way to overrule any decisions our elected and/or appointed leaders do something the majority did not approve of.
An Article-V called for by the States, requires Congress to call it then step back and allow the people to decide what they want in the Amendment. Congress has no control over any amendment proposal, or any authority to change the wording of it. However, All proposed amendments must contain approved wording by the delegates to the states called convention, the safeguards in place for a Congressional amendment convention are fully in place for a states called convention, Congress must send all proposals out to all 50 states for Ratification by vote of approval by the people tell their States through an open vote, how their States will vote on the Ratification. It takes a vote by 3/4 of the States to approve a new amendment or the modification or removal of an existing one. The basic Constitution CAN NOTbe opened or it's wording changed by an Article-V convention by either the Congress or the people. Contrary to what the politicians want you to believe, an Article-V is not a Constitutional Convention to open the basic Constitution, it only has the power to add or remove Amendments. The scare tactics you hear to the contrary are from politicians and other power brokers/elites/billionaires, who are afraid of losing their power over the people.
It's not the Judges or even Congress who should have the final say.
The Highest Authority in the United States are the PEOPLE of the United States.
The Tradesman
Source; Anonymous
Despite a widespread misunderstanding of the role of Christianity in our founding and decades of bad Supreme Court rulings, and despite the fact that the founders were uniformly opposed to government imposing religion, they did think religion, especially Christianity, was extremely important to the founding of the country. They understood that humans are created in the image of God and instilled with dignity. And if people have dignity, they must have rights to protect that dignity. This is the religious inspiration for the huge number of rights enumerated for all citizens at the founding of the republic.
The founders also believed that to ensure the success of the America, people needed to use those rights responsibly. Put bluntly, they must be moral. As George Washington said in his Farewell Address: “Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports.” For a representative form of government to work, you must have a moral people, meaning a religious people.
What about Thomas Jefferson, you may ask? He is held up as the poster child for the strict separation of church and state, famously informing the Danbury Baptist Association in 1802 that the 1st Amendment created a “wall of separation between Church & State.” But fact is that the purpose of Jefferson’s letter was to reassure the Baptist congregation that the government wouldn’t interfere with their church, not that religion would have no place in the actions of government. He did not think the Constitution kept the government out of the business of religion altogether. For instance, as governor of Virginia, he invited his fellow Americans to join him in prayer. Jefferson also made the War and the Treasury Dept. buildings available for church services. So, in his own political life, Jefferson didn’t act as if there were a wall of separation between church and state.
Recognizing the role of religion in America is one thing. But does the display of the 10 Commandments in public schools go too far? There are all sorts of buildings in Washington, D.C., with scriptural engravings, including the Supreme Court building. No one has ever considered those an establishment of religion. And there’s also a long history and tradition of monuments of the 10 Commandments on public property. Unfortunately, in the 1970s, the Supreme Court profoundly altered how the courts think about the establishment clause. In the 1971 case of Lemon v. Kurtzman, the Supreme Court devised a new test for courts to use when establishment clause violations are alleged. The court advised lower courts to look at whether the law “has a legitimate secular purpose, does not have the primary effect of either advancing or inhibiting religion, and does not result in an excessive entanglement of government and religion.” The justices thought the Lemon test would help resolve the establishment clause conundrum. It did the exact opposite. It has lived up to the parochial definition of being a lemon.
After Lemon, all sorts of things were held constitutional and unconstitutional. The court said a public school district couldn’t lend maps to a private religious school, but it could lend them textbooks that had maps in them. Government could subsidize bussing children to private Catholic schools, but it couldn’t subsidize field trips for children from private religious schools. The Lemon test was also applied in the 1980 Supreme Court case of Stone v. Graham. There the court struck down a Kentucky law mandating a standalone display of the 10 Commandments in public school classrooms.
Over the last decade, the Supreme Court has steadily dismantled the Lemon test. In American Legion v. American Humanist Association, the court held that the Bladensburg Cross, a 32ft Latin cross WW I memorial that stands on public property, did not violate the establishment clause. Justice Samuel Alito, writing for the court, noted that the 10 Commandments have historical significance as 1 of the foundations of our legal system. 3 yrs later, in Kennedy v. Bremerton School District, the Supreme Court vindicated a public school football coach’s right to pray privately after games. Justice Neil Gorsuch’s opinion rejected the “ahistorical” Lemon.
But shortly after Gov. Landry signed the Louisiana law mandating displays of the 10 Commandments in classrooms, the hypocritical left-wing aclu sued. It claimed the 10 Commandments are not a source of American law and that having the displays would unconstitutionally expose some people to a religion they don’t believe in. A federal judge ruled in the aclu’s favor, and the state appealed to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. Expect the Louisiana case to be brought before the U.S. Supreme Court. Also expect more states to follow Louisiana and pass similar laws. Given the Supreme Court’s rejection of the Lemon test and its many rulings upholding public displays of religion, it is time to state unequivocally that passive displays of the 10 Commandments in public schools are most certainly constitutional.
Supplemental Info:
Source; Padraig Martin
We owe GenZ a chance at what you had
If your primary complaint is that the Trump tariffs have hurt your 401K / Retirement funds, then you are missing the point. For decades, we traded away higher paying jobs for cheap trinkets. We did this while sending our young men and women to wars that did nothing. Retirement accounts got fatter, while job opportunities for the younger generations vanished, and body bags returned from useless engagements.
For many Boomers, when you came back from Vietnam, you had labor jobs waiting. For GenX, Millenials, and especially GenZ, they had Walmart stockboy and Dominoes delivery jobs after Iraq and Afghanistan. We spent trillions building other countries so that their young men would have opportunities. What began as the outsourcing of cheap trinkets and tee shirts has now become factories making cars, computers, and high tech chips.
Learn to code? We told our children to do just that. Those jobs are now in India.
Imagine a twenty-eight year old veteran coming home to the United States from Afghanistan with no job opportunities. While you say, "Thank you for your service," he is struggling to survive on $15 and hour in his camouflage vest at Lowes. That is fundamentally immoral.
GenZ is not suffering from a work ethic crisis. They are suffering from decades of betrayal - by older generations who traded their future for one more dollar in their retirement accounts. How can they not be angry?
Yesterday, my retirement account took a 10% hit. I am about 20 years from retirement (if that ever happens). Today, I may lose another 5%. So what? We owe it to our children and grandchildren to give them a future we have long since stolen from them. As a father, my selfish desire to retire comfortably needs to take a backseat to a correction necessary so that some day my children and grandchildren can have their own future.
They need a chance. If we are unwilling to give that to them, we - as a society - fail. Let's see what the tariffs get us. Hopefully, it gets more opportunities for our younger generations. Your stocks will recover. Their future, however, remains uncertain.
My comment;
STEPHEN MILLER SAYS IT BEST ON THE TARIFFS AND HOW IT HAS COST AMERICANS TRILLIONS THAT SHOULD BEEN IN OUR POCKET, AND I AGREE WITHY HIM.
See Video; https://gettr.com/post/p3jjtuwf802
The Tradesman