Bankers & Lawyers

Discussion in 'History & Past Politicians' started by Flanders, Jun 4, 2012.

  1. Flanders

    Flanders Well-Known Member

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    There are so many lawyers in Congress, I thought I would open a topic that might interest some of the folks on this board: The Missing 13th Amendment.

    Here’s the XIII Amendment everyone is familiar with:


    Here’s the missing XIII Amendment:

    Which 13th Amendment do you prefer? I personally prefer inserting the missing one without repealing or changing the one everyone knows. Just move the later amendments higher by one number. (That is probably too complicated for all of those lawyers in Congress to handle.)

    Incidentally, Lincoln signed yet another XIII Amendment that allowed slavery. The Civil War began and that one was forgotten.

    The article at the first link is good place to start if you are unfamiliar with the missing XIII Amendment. Should you read it you will understand the title of this thread. Here’s a brief excerpt:


    Missing 13th Amendment To The United States Constitution
    By The Pen
    Reprinted from the Oregon Observer for April 1997

    http://www.uhuh.com/constitution/am13-pen.htm

    Even if you do not care to read the entire piece please go to the link and scroll down for some facts about the Income Tax Amendment.

    Next

    The items on the following list clarify the missing XIII Amendment:


    http://www.w3f.com/patriots/13/13th-01.html

    You really have to click on each item in the above list to get a handle on the topic; most items are very brief. There are one or two things I don’t agree with, but number 4 is especially interesting. There’s plenty more on the subject that you can find on your own if your curiosity is peaked. Should you require incentive just imagine no lawyers in government.

    NOTE: Royalists are still screwing the country not to mention the Constitution. And I’ll bet that you thought Americans won the War for Independence?

    Finally, it’s no wonder lawyers who claim they defend the Constitution are busy chipping away at it. They’re afraid the missing XIII Amendment will be implemented. I have a strong hunch that the concept of a “living, breathing, Constitution” was an insurance policy designed to protect against the missing XIII Amendment. If the Constitution is a living, breathing, document, there is no need for constitutional amendments. The only thing you need is judges who are lawyers to begin with. Can you imagine lawyers trying to repeal the missing XIII Amendment if it was implemented today?
     
  2. Flanders

    Flanders Well-Known Member

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    How about applying the 13th Amendment to this:

    Court: Christians can be ordered to violate beliefs
    Refuse to photograph lesbians, get fined $7,000
    Published: 10 hours ago
    by BOB UNRUH

    http://www.wnd.com/2012/06/refuse-to-photograph-lesbians-get-fined-7000/

    As I understand it, Elaine and Jonathan Huegeunin were not convicted of a crime in a criminal trial; so they should be protected:

    1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

    2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

    The joke is that Congress and State legislators write legislation that gives the government the power of slave owners. The way things have been going Americans will be better off if the current XIII Amendment is repealed. Clearly, the Income Tax Amendment is a form of slavery, but the government forcing a law abiding individual to work for someone else is abject slavery:

    slavery (noun)
    plural slaveries

    1. The state of one bound in servitude as the property of a slaveholder or household. See synonyms at servitude.

    2. a. The practice of owning slaves. b. A mode of production in which slaves constitute the principal work force.

    3. The condition of being subject or addicted to a specified influence.

    4. A condition of hard work and subjection: wage slavery.

    Now, suppose Elaine and Jonathan Huegeunin had told the lesbians “Okay, we’ll snap the pictures for $50,000 paid in advance.” Had both parties agreed slavery would not imply.

    I do not know what the criminal charge would be if the lesbians still complained about discrimination. Logically, in order for the government to take the case in that scenario the criminal charge would have to be pricing discrimination. The government would then have to refuse the case or set the wages the Huegeunins must accept for their work. That brings us right back to wage slavery. Such an action by the court would enforce the XIII Amendment’s prohibition against slavery.

    What does this have to do with the missing XIII Amendment?

    1. The people who punished the Huegeunins violated the current XIII Amendment. They are lawyers which makes implementing the forgotten XIII Amendment all the more appropriate.

    2. The Attorney General of the United States and his assistants are lawyers, as are most members of Congress. All swear to defend the Constitution. The attorneys general and their assistants in every state are lawyers. Not one of them sees anything wrong with judges ordering forced labor and, by extension, the behavior of law abiding citizens.

    3. The fact that so many lawyers are using the power of government to enforce obedience to socialism’s anti-America ideology makes implementing the forgotten XIII Amendment not only appropriate but necessary for America’s survival.
     

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