Timothy  Baldwin
May 5,  2010
For  generations, the federal government has pissed on the integrity of the union,  supposedly formed by the bonds of choice, reflection, friendship and likeness[1].  It has treated the people of the States as scoopers in the valley of the crap  they roll down hill, of which they claim to be king. The society of each state  serves as nothing more than just another creditor to their addictive gambling  game of power, corruption and debauchery.
Anymore, one  cannot even possess an accurate knowledge of just how much degradation permeates  the entire system of the federal government and its chain-gang of states.  Amazingly, some still believe that freedom can be restored through the political  gamesmanship in Washington D.C. For this reason, some of the States have finally  awakened to this reality and are beginning to act appropriately and  accordingly.
Another  blaring contemporary illustration highlights just how true this  is.
As many now  know, Arizona passed an illegal immigration law which is designed to secure the  borders of its State from those who are in that State illegally. The response  from the federal government was predictable and typical: “Arizona can’t do that;  it is our sole prerogative to ‘secure’ the border. Arizona’s action is  unconstitutional. Blah, blah, blah.” Of course, there are always those  nationalists and statists who criticize a State for doing anything without the  federal government’s permission: “The new law, which is due to take effect in  late July or early August in the unlikely event it withstands constitutional  challenges, essentially codifies racial profiling, throwing civil liberties to  the wind.”[2]  (Emphasis added). Together, they make a beautiful partnership of distortion and  misinformation.
The federal  government and its supporters would rather oxymoronically protect illegal  immigrants’ supposed “legal rights” than protect the natural and compact rights  of the state citizens, governments and societies. They would rather each state  suffer the irreparable harm and costs of allowing (and yes, encouraging!)  millions of illegals to come here and suck the life out of these States for now  and most assuredly for later.
These people  paint a portrait with a set of children’s crayons on cheap toilet paper and  frame it with used cardboard paper from a flea market. And somehow we are  supposed to hang it on the walls of our most revered sanctuaries and say, “look  how pretty our country is with the federal government in  control.”
Why would  these illegals confidently and self-righteously protest against such a state  law: because they have no respect for the law to begin with; they do not know  what the purpose and responsibility of the state government is; they could not  care less about the cultural, moral and American ideals forming the individual  republics of the States and the United States; they do not respect the union of  the states’ formation, nor do they care about its foundation; and they know the  federal government has no intention of enforcing the already-existing laws to  secure U.S. borders. Ultimately, just leave them alone: they are doing fine with  the federal government in control of illegal  immigration.
Why would the  federal government ignore its responsibility in securing the borders and then  criticize a state for protecting itself in response to the federal government’s  failure to do so: because its agenda is one of amnesty and integration; it is  ready and willing to buy illegals’ votes and support by “guaranteeing” them all  of the social and governmental benefits that we, the legal workers in America,  pay for and provide; and it prefers and seeks after a one-world system of  government and despises the sovereignty of individual states and nations.  Ultimately, just leave them alone: they are accruing the power and control they  desire by exercising unfettered control.
Thankfully,  some of the States do not agree. Best-selling author, Jerome Corsi, recently  described Arizona’s illegal immigration law as “sparking a state rights  revolution”.[3]  His acknowledgment of the State rights revolution is correct, but Arizona’s law  is not the spark. Rather, it is another burst of oxygen on the fire that has  been burning brightly for over a year and has been stoking for  many.
The fire will  only continue to grow given the despicable manner in which the federal  government and its faithful supporters disrespect and even despise the  (original) U.S. Constitution, the tenth amendment, the principles expressed in  the Declaration of Independence and the ideals of freedom founding the union of  thirteen independent and sovereign states of America.
I welcome the  fire’s growth and encourage its success. In fact, I just happen to have some  (very expensive) gasoline I am willing to donate to Arizona and its  like.
Copyright  2010 Timothy Baldwin
[1]  “[We are called upon to decide whether] societies of men are really capable or  not of establishing good government from reflection and choice, or whether they  are forever destined to depend for their political constitutions on accident and  force.” Alexander Hamilton, Federalist Paper 1 (emphasis added). “With equal  pleasure I have as often taken notice that Providence has been pleased to give  this one connected country to one united people–a people descended from the same  ancestors, speaking the same language, professing the same religion, attached to  the same principles of government, very similar in their manners and customs,  and who, by their joint counsels, arms, and efforts, fighting side by side  throughout a long and bloody war, have nobly established general liberty and  independence.” John Jay, Federalist Paper 2 (emphasis added).  
[2]  Author Unknown, “When it comes to illegal immigration, Arizona goes too far,”  APP.com (May 3, 2010), found at http://www.app.com/article/20100503/OPINION01/5040309/1029/OPINION/When-it-comes-to-illegal-immigration-Arizona-goes-too-far
[3]  World Net Daily, “Arizona law sparks states’ rights revolution,” (May 3, 2010),  found at http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=149085.
Gill  Rapoza
Veritas Vos  Liberabit

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