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Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Myth Busting: the ‘Constitutional Expert’

Myth Busting: the ‘Constitutional Expert’
by Geoff Broughton
23. Feb, 2010

Today, public opinion is on our side.  According to a Rasmussen Reports 59% of voters believe the States should be able to ‘opt out’ of Federal Programs it does not agree with.  Compared to 47% who agreed when asked about National Health care in December.  The number jumps to 63% when asked about opting out of Federally unfunded mandates.

That is a trend in which I predict will give rise to much more attention from the opposition.  In the few articles and blogs which have surfaced so far, those who are opposed to a truly federal System as laid out by the founding fathers in our constitution, have called upon ‘constitutional experts’ to put down such silly talk of State Sovereignty, and the notion that the Tenth Amendment has any real bearing on today’s political landscape.

One op-ed that comes to mind was from the LA Times titled Constitutional objections to Obamacare don’t hold up, back in January.  Akhil Reed Amar begins his editorial by listing his credentials.

I’m no healthcare expert, but I have spent the last three decades studying the Constitution, and the current plan easily passes constitutional muster.

Now I am not here to argue with Mr Amar, in fact Rob Natelson already took on each of his points here.  My goal is to debunk the term, ‘Constitutional expert’ and have a little fun with Mr Amar’s credentials.  Lets see, 3 decades is 30 years which breaks down to 10,957(365 days times 30 plus seven for leap years).  A quick google search and I got that the entire Constitution plus amendments including the signature page is 8,114, or 8060 with out the signatures.  Which means he could have spent one day on each word and still had 2,897 days to do other things, perhaps the Declaration of Independence which is 1,457 words long.  I can only imagine the excitement in day one where they did an indepth study on the word: “We”.

Of course, I am being silly, but so is the idea of a ‘Constitutional Expert’.  Even with the formal language and preamble’s, the document is not all that complicated.  What Mr Amar has no doubt studied for the last 30 years is a ‘case law’ look at Supreme Court decisions, and how those decisions have radically redefined what was originally written by our founders.

We know that our founders studied the works of Blackstone, John Locke, Montesquieu, and Cicero and very much believed in Natural Law.  The Declaration and Constitution are filled with Natural Law precepts like unalienable rights and separation of powers.  Up until the early 1900’s the prevailing theory in jurisprudence was something known as Legal Formalism

From Wikipedia Search of Legal Formalism:

Legal formalists argue that judges and other public officials should be constrained in their interpretation of legal texts, suggesting that investing the judiciary with the power to say what the law should be, rather than confining them to expositing what the law does say, violates the separation of powers. (emphasis added)

At this time, a theory called Legal Realism began to become popular, most often connected with Oliver Wendell Holmes.  But more important to our history is a man named Roscoe Pound who believed in something called Social Jurisprudence.

From Wikipedia Search of Legal Realism:

Legal realists advance two general claims: 1) Law is indeterminate and judges, accordingly, must and do often draw on extralegal considerations to resolve the disputes before them. 2) The best answer to the question “What is (the) law?” is “Whatever judges or other relevant officials do“.(emphasis added)

Why is knowing who Roscoe Pound is so important?

From Wikipedia Search of Roscoe Pound:

In 1910 Pound became professor of law at Harvard. He was dean from 1916 to 1936 during what was called Harvard Law School’s “golden age”. He helped shape a faculty and program of legal education equipped to implement his concept of sociological jurisprudence. A large number of the law school graduates were active in formulating policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal, and Pound supported many of its early measures.

This is an important point.  Either the law is what it says, or it is what a judge or other official says it is.  These two ideas cannot be comingled can they?  Our method of selecting Supreme Court Justices makes predicting the outcome of any particular case difficult.

From a Wikipedia search of the Supreme Court:

There are a number of ways that commentators and Justices of the Supreme Court have defined the Court’s role, and its jurisprudential method:

Current Associate Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas are originalists; originalism is a family of similar theories that hold that the Constitution has a fixed meaning from an authority contemporaneous with the ratification, and that it should be construed in light of that authority. Unless there is a historic and/or extremely pressing reason to interpret the Constitution differently, originalists vote as they think the Constitution as it was written in the late 18th Century would dictate.

Associate Justice Felix Frankfurter was a leading proponent of so-called judicial restraint, in that he believed that the Supreme Court should not make law (which, by invalidating or significantly altering the meaning of Congressional bills, Frankfurter felt they were), and so believers in this idea often vote not to grant cases the writ of certiorari. Associate Justice Stephen Breyergenerally advocates a quasi-purposivist approach, focusing on what the law was supposed to achieve rather than what it actually says, and measuring the possible outcomes of voting one way or another.

Other Justices have taken a more instrumentalist approach (see judicial activism), believing it is the role of the Supreme Court to reflect societal changes. They often see the Constitution as a living, changing and adaptable document; thus their ruling will be in stark contrast to originalists. Compare, for example, the differing opinions of Justices Scalia and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who is a more instrumentalist justice.

Finally, there are some Justices who do not have a clear judicial philosophy, and so decide cases purely on each one’s individual merits.

So this is why any so called expert on one side of an argument can be countered with another and why I tend to reject it altogether.  Since your study of this system is bound to be prejudiced by your philosophy of law, since Constitutional law is really Case Law.

From a Wikipedia Search of Case Law:

Which is the reported decisions of selected appellate and other courts (called courts of first impression) which make new interpretations of the law and, therefore, can be cited as precedents in a process known as stare decisis. These interpretations are distinguished from statutory law which are the statutes and codes enacted by legislative bodies; regulatory law which are regulations established by governmental agencies based on statutes; and in some states, common law which are the generally accepted laws carried to the United States from England.

Our opponents will often be from the judicial activism approach.  But there is not a mythical high priests understanding here, no matter what the experts say. You either believe in the Constitution as written, or you believe in the Constitution as what your masters think it means today.  For me it is like choosing between Orwell’s 1984 vs or Jefferson’s writing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776.

I want you to google 1942 Wickard v. Filburn. In a Wikipedia search on that case you find,

The Supreme Court, interpreting the United States Constitution’s Commerce Clause (which permits the United States Congressto “regulate Commerce . . . among the several States”) decided that, because Filburn’s wheat growing activities reduced the amount of wheat he would buy for chicken feed on the open market, and because wheat was traded nationally, Filburn’s production of more wheat than he was allotted was affecting interstate commerce, and so could be regulated by the federal government.

There is no way you can read the interstate commerce clause found in Article One Section 8 which reads ‘To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes”, and come to the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court in 1942.  For the Courts to decide the Federal Government could control the output of a private citizen on his own property for his own use is an abomination of the Constitution and the system of Liberty it is supposed to protect.  Conservapedia goes into much more detail if you want to read more.

If you agree with me that Natural Law should be what governs a free society, then the question you have to ask yourself is: How long will you be satisfied asking the Federal Government to limit its own powers, before you accept that the answer that an inconsistent court or legislators like Pelosi or Conyers have made clear.

CNSNews.com: “Madam Speaker, where specifically does the Constitution grant Congress the authority to enact an individual health insurance mandate?”

Pelosi: “Are you serious? Are you serious?”

John Conyers on Congress reading the Bills?

John Conyers: “I love these members, they get up and say, ‘Read the bill’.  What good is reading the bill if it’s a thousand pages and you don’t have two days and two lawyers to find out what it means after you read the bill?”

The answer is the Federal Government will never limit itself. 

Quotes Supporting State Sovereignty:

Alexander Hamilton:

·        “It may safely be received as an axiom in our political system, that the State governments will, in all possible contingencies, afford complete security against invasions of the public liberty by the national authority.”

·        “We may safely rely on the disposition of the state legislatures to erect barriers against the encroachments of the national authority.”

James Madison:

·        “The local or municipal authorities form distinct and independent portions of the supremacy, no more subject, within their respective spheres, to the general authority than the general authority is subject to them, within its own sphere.”

·        “The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite.”

·        “Hence, a double security arises to the rights of the people. The different governments will control each other; at the same time that each will be controlled by itself.”

Justice Scalia:

·        “This separation of the two spheres is one of the constitution’s structural protections of liberty. Just as the separation and independence of the coordinate branches of the federal government serve to prevent the accumulation of excessive power in any one branch, a healthy balance of power between the States and the Federal Government will reduce the risk of tyranny and abuse from either front.”

·        “…the Constitution’s conferral upon Congress of not all governmental powers, but only discreet, enumerated ones.” 

·        “It is incontestable that the Constitution established a system of dual sovereignty”

The next question will be: Do you have the political will to be called names, and be made fun of, and say no to federal monies, in order to win back true liberty and freedom for the next generation?  If so the answer is State Sovereignty, and that starts by making sure we elect people who will stand up for our rights instead of promising to “do” things for us.



Geoff Broughton [send him email] is the State Chapter Coordinator for the Colorado Tenth Amendment Center
Copyright © 2010 by TenthAmendmentCenter.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given

Gill Rapoza
Veritas Vos Liberabit


Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Early Pennsylvania, Nullifying the Way to Freedom

Early Pennsylvania, Nullifying the Way to Freedom
by Steve Palmer
22 Feb, 2010

Introduction

It might be instructive to look at how Pennsylvania dealt with the issue of slavery in our early history.  This topic is useful, because in retrospect it is perfectly clear which side was morally right.  So, this week I learned a little bit about the history of anti-slavery laws and sentiment in early Pennsylvania.  I have only scratched the surface, so we will probably revisit this topic in the future.  It may be that Pennsylvania’s activities, in support of Liberty for blacks in early America, can contribute to our Tenth Amendment roadmap for the future.

The first ever American resolution against slavery was issued from Pennsylvania in 1688.  The University of Houston quotes the Germantown Petition against slavery as saying, “…In Europe there are many oppressed for conscience-sake; and here there are those oppressed which are of a black colour….Pray, what thing in the world can be done worse…”.  The Germantown Petition, although largely ineffective, was passed among the Quaker communities in Pennsylvania.

Anti-slavery sentiment in Pennsylvania grew during the following years.  Numerous writings against slavery, by various Quaker authors, were published in Ben Franklin’s Philadelphia newspaper.  Pennsylvania abolished slavery, using a gradual phase-out starting in 1780, and George Washington commented in 1786 that “once slaves got to the Pennsylvania/West Jersey area, they became nearly impossible to find and retrieve”.

Between the American Revolution and The Civil War, two fugitive slave laws were passed by the federal government in order to attempt to ensure that slavers were able to forcibly return any slaves who had escaped to other states.  Pennsylvania met these federal laws with laws of our own, designed to insure liberty for the escaped slaves and to nullify the unjust federal legislation within Pennsylvania’s borders.

Federal Fugitive Slave Act of 1793

In 1793, the first Federal Fugitive Slave Act (FFSA) was issued.  Wikipedia says that this act established a legal mechanism by which fugitive slaves could be seized, brought before a magistrate, then forcibly returned to their state of origin.

Pennsylvania’s legislative resistance to this law apparently began in the 1820s.  There are conflicting claims about Pennsylvania’s legislation in that decade, but the years 1820 and 1826 are commonly mentioned.  The University of Pittsburgh says that in 1820, Pennsylvania passed a law to prevent state officials from enforcing the FFSA.  In 1826, after receiving an appeal from Maryland to implement the FFSA, Pennsylvania responded by passing another law which is variously referred to as a Personal Liberty Act or a state Fugitive Slave Act and “After enactment of the 1826 law, there was virtually no way for a slaveholder to recapture a fugitive slave in Pennsylvania and be safe from prosecution as a kidnapper”.

Prigg v. Pennsylvania

According to many sites, including TheDish.Org, a Maryland slave named Margaret Morgan escaped to Pennsylvania in 1832.  A warrant was received from a Pennsylvania district justice to forcibly return her to Maryland, but the local constable refused to honor it.  She and her children were then abducted and taken to Maryland by several Maryland men, including Edward Prigg.  Pennsylvania charged the men who abducted her with kidnapping and the dispute made its way to the Supreme Court in 1842.

In the decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the FFSA was constitutional and Pennsylvania could not prevent federal agents from enforcing it.  The court also ruled, however, that Pennsylvania state officials could not be compelled to enforce the FFSA.

Personal Liberty Laws and a New FFSA

In 1847, Pennsylvania passed a new Personal Liberty Law.   The University of Pittsburgh says, “This law provided sanctions for purchasing or removing free Blacks with the intention of reducing them to slaves; prohibited state officials from accepting jurisdiction over cases arising under the federal Fugitive Slave Act of 1793; provided penalties for claimants seizing slaves in a violent, tumultuous, and unreasonable manner”.  The AfroLumens Project says that this law was carefully crafted to comply with the Prigg v. Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling.  Around that time, New York, Vermont and Ohio passed similar Personal Liberty Laws.

The federal reaction to the new set of Personal Liberty Laws was to pass the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850.  This law provided for the seizure of blacks without any due process at all.  As a result, even free blacks were suddenly at risk of capture based on nothing more substantial than an accusation.  This, in turn led to more Personal Liberty laws from many of the North Eastern States including Massachusetts in 1855.

A Proposed Compromise

In 1860, a Virginia Newspaper carried an editorial proposing a compromise to save the Union.  In this editorial, they suggested that Pennsylvania could save the Union by repealing our Personal Liberty Law, saying,

“There will probably be a separation of one or more States from the Union before the obnoxious laws passed by some of the Northern States can possibly be repealed.  But the separation will not be final if Pennsylvania, responding to the patriotic suggestions of Virginia, shall set her sister States of the North the example of repealing an act conceived in unreasonable hostility to the South, and beyond all question violative of the just rights of the people of fifteen sovereign States.”

Lessons for Pennsylvania Today

We all know what happened next.  A brutal and bloody war was fought and slavery came to an end.  We should be careful about reading too much altruism into the federal government’s motives in that conflict though.  Ending slavery in America was merely a happy side-effect.  President Lincoln, the Great Emancipator, wrote in an 1862 letter to Horace Greely,

“If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that.  What I do about slavery, and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to save the Union; and what I forbear, I forbear because I do not believe it would help to save the Union”.

Then, as now, Washington’s primary goal was to maintain political dominance.

From this history, we can learn a few things which may be helpful when we think about nullification in the modern context.  First, it is indisputable that Pennsylvania’s Personal Liberty Laws were right and the federal government was wrong.  The federal government was attempting to take away the blacks’ inherent right to liberty.  Pennsylvania stood on the side of natural law.  It is crystal clear that nullification is a valid course of action for a state pursuing a just cause.

As far as tactics, the various states used different tactics in their Personal Liberty Laws.  Some of the legislation simply said that state officials need not assist with enforcing the FFSA; Other legislation made it illegal for state officials to assist with enforcement and still other legislation made even Federal action illegal within the state.  A variety of tactics like these should be kept in our nullification tool box.

From Prigg v. Pennsylvania, we learn that we can count on the federal government to take the side of the federal government in any particular dispute.  From the 1860 VA Newspaper editorial we learn that the Supreme Court does not give the final answer.  Regardless of the Supreme Court’s ruling in 1842, Pennsylvania apparently continued to successfully hinder abductions for another 18 years.

Lastly, we see from the 1850 FFSA which followed the 1847 Personal Liberty Law, that the initial response from the federal government will be to escalate when challenged.  Only through persistent challenges from numerous states will the federal government eventually wind down.  Pennsylvania resisted the federal government on this issue for somewhere around forty years.  Successful nullification requires commitment.

Natural Rights

Before wrapping up, I would also like to redirect slightly for a final point about natural rights. Some of today’s writers seem to think that our rights are granted and revoked at the whim of the government.  Examining the question of slavery makes the error in that viewpoint clear.  Was slavery reprehensible because of the thirteenth amendment or was slavery reprehensible because men’s inherent rights to Liberty were being violated?

Those who say that our rights come to us at the pleasure of government must also believe that if a majority votes to repeal the thirteenth amendment, than slavery could be sanctioned.  This is self-evidently wrong to anyone with a functioning conscience.  It is clear from this example that our rights are natural possessions which cannot be granted or withdrawn by government edict.

The government’s role is to be a protector of rights, not a giver of them.



Steve Palmer [send him email] is the State Chapter Coordinator for the Pennsylvania Tenth Amendment Center
Copyright © 2010 by TenthAmendmentCenter.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.

Gill Rapoza
Veritas Vos Liberabit


Castle Defense: Individual Plan of Action Blueprint


Greg Evensen will be a bit over the top for some, and that’s OK.  I am not of the mind everything is going to fall apart and we will need to have armed posts in the woods any time soon.  But I pass some of these articles on simply because I really don’t know how far we are headed as a nation.  I can see things are not good, and have not been for some time now, but I yet pray regularly that we go back to a better time. 

I still hold the basic philosophy that says we should expect the best, but prepare for the worse.  And I agree completely that it is important, and more than anything else you read here, to keep a focus on our Lord Jesus Christ. 

And for any that wonder, I have a few things like food, and some essential tools, but you would not mistake my home for an armory (not that it is a bad idea).  It seems there is always something that comes up in daily living to pay for that I don’t know I will ever have all I think is needed to be ready for “anything.”  (However, I’m looking to build a large home made outdoor fire pit/cooking grill if any one wants to donate a bunch of supplies or work very cheaply!)

Godspeed,

Gill Rapoza
Veritas Vos Liberabit



Castle Defense: Individual Plan of Action Blueprint
Part 2
By Greg Evensen
February 24, 2010

Events are cascading so fast that preparation time is being compressed like the debris field on 9-11 at the World Trade Center disaster.  Even among former skeptics, the apprehension is building rapidly that a banking catastrophe, terrorist event, or Middle East nuclear outbreak is unfolding on cue for the elite manipulators to complete their diabolical and deadly plan.

As you have waited for this installment, I am hopeful that it began a series of ideas for your own blueprint that has taken shape both--from a sense of awakened creativity--and a sense of heightened anxiety to get this done.  I am not a date setter, but this one ranks up there with Noah getting the Ark finished ahead of the first sprinkles, or at least somewhat close to that.  “Global warming,” Planet X, human munching E-T’s, or Bank of China U.S. Debt Collectors in Red Army uniforms all qualify you for this plan.

Remember, your list of priorities may differ from mine and your ability to achieve all of these goals may not be the same as mine or someone else’s, but the very fact that you got this underway, actually well along the way, or even close to being completed, is light years ahead of some or God help ‘em many, who just don’t care.  Move on anyway, you will never, ever regret doing what you did.  Your friends and family will be forever grateful that you motivated them, educated them, and in fact saved them from any number of very negative outcomes, considering the world--both natural and geo-political--that we live in.  So, let’s get started right where we left off.

Section III-Constructing The Retreat-What Plan To Use?

Ø     Above ground or below you must live with the pros and cons.

Ø     Above ground has weather and defensive considerations for you.

Ø     Below, creates some difficult air-flow/moisture possibilities.

Ø     Multiple egress points for emergency use must be defensible.

Ø     Strength above beauty and functionality above conveniences.

Let me try and summarize Part I II & III and the suggestions so far.

Whether you are in the city or country you MUST reinforce all that you have using standard construction techniques and adding extra reinforcement where you need.  You must protect against natural and extraordinary active agents (biological agents/nuclear ash/ultraviolet) to enhance your chances of emerging from your retreat intact and reasonably healthy.

Because ALL things must be considered in terms of a powerless environment, you have to devise for continuing use all observation ports, mirrors, telescopes and spotting scopes for surveillance instead of remote TV monitoring.  You must be able to see “beyond” your immediate environment to assess damage, incoming flood or fire dangers, roving patrols or gangs looking to scavenge and loot or any other defensive needs.  The details of your inner living design or types of furniture need to be your own choices.  Cooking, water and sanitation must be simple and easy to use or repair.

Gardening: Your cultivated area must be well hidden, yet open and sunny. Protection from animals must be designed to blend in with the surrounding area.  Hillsides are not optimum because they can be easily observed and are subject to erosion.  NON-HYBRID seeds only so that you may raise more than one year’s crop.

Farm Animals: In order of need and ease of care would place chickens first, goats second, hogs third, cattle next, and horses last.  Grazing is best with as little supplemental feeding as possible.  A stream or pond is ideal.  You can raise other animals, but the more exotic the more difficult.  Fencing will be required for some of the stock as well as shelter.  Know how to recognize pasture or barn illness and how to treat the stock as naturally as possible.  (Colloidal silver)

Natural Medicines:  I will not list them here. You need to have a reputable book on this subject and secure the major herbs before the Pharma Nazi’s buy off Congress again.

Firearms & Ammunition:  Without these “tools” everything else is wasted.  You will be overrun, killed and gone forever before you can look over your shoulder running, unless you can stand and make a fight of it.  My preference is a .12 gauge pump shotgun with a magazine extension, full stock and no other frills.  Laser sites and flashlights just let the other guy get a bead on you first in my opinion and you save enough money to buy a couple of great knives.  Remington and Mossberg are my choices for price and dependability.  500 rounds of #4 buckshot, 500 rounds of slugs, 500 rounds of game/light load/”bird” shot are minimums.  This weapon will be your most effective and versatile.  A .410 pump shotgun for children and women unaccustomed to recoil and report would be a great second weapon.

Ø     A Smith & Wesson six shot revolver for dependability and ease of repair in .357 or .44 magnum caliber is my choice.  At least 1000 rounds of ammunition.  A Kimber, Sig Sauer, Colt or Ruger .45 semi-automatic

Ø     10 shot magazine fed pistol is next on the list.  1000 rounds bare minimum.  For the younger set, a .40 Glock or Czech 75 is good and is effective.  1000 round at least.

Ø     In a rifle, look at .30 something.  An H&K.308 or Remington 30.06, a good heavy round are two suggestions. 500 rounds minimum.  Finally, a Ruger Mini-14 in .223 is a great “pray and spray” weapon.  It uses the standard military rifle round and is clip fed.  There are many others out there, but this is the standard no-frills “Ford V-8” recommendation.

Ø     A “Barnett” style crossbow with 100 “bolts” (arrows) is a silent way to get the job done in necessary situations—if you know what I mean. 

Storable Foods:  There are suppliers who offer many types of foods, but I recommend this for sustainability in most extreme conditions and environments.  Freeze dried foods are the absolute best.  Stackable cans are best, followed by vacuum sealed pouches.  Simple rehydration and some seasoning make them very useable.  Shelf life on “processed” foods, canned goods are 7-10 years in ideal storage areas.

Water: Use water filters to protect against disease and parasites.  Boiling is good and works with 99% of the water sources.  REMEMBER,

If you contact a disease from water, use charcoal harvested from a wood fire.  Ingest it in small quantities with safe water.  It will arrest many “bugs” that would lodge in your gut.  It doesn’t taste too hot, but it will keep you from turning liquid and dying within two days.

Clothing: Many fine manufactures (Filson, Carhartt, Pendleton) are available; USA made but can be pricey.  Cheap stuff does not protect and will rot away in weeks if not months.  Pure wool and cotton are the best.  HEAVY winter gear, Gore-Tex type footwear is also best.  There are several brands, but make sure you get at least one good set of combat type boots to protect your ankles and lower legs from rocks, shrubs and snakes.  Camping out requires shaking them well to dislodge spiders, centipedes and other nasties is a must.  Do NOT reach down inside to help them out.

Campfires: I came up with an idea 15 years ago that made me exactly $100, but has probably made someone else millions.  It is called “Campfire in a Box.”  Take a standard 16” square box and load it with shredded newspaper, discarded cotton strips, dried leaves and twigs.  Put several 6-8” x 1” wooden strips and four or five 10” x 3” round dried branch remnants and you have a ready made against all types of weather campfire.  Clear an area of dry ground in a discreet location, line it with sand if possible and ring it with stone.  Keep the fire going at all times and scavenge for wood that can be kept dry (under a tarp).  If it looks like rain, get a whole bunch and then set up a tarp shelter to protect the fire pit area.

As we approach the end of this segment, please remind yourself that I can only go into limited detail in this forum.  Consult standard Army manuals for additional detailed information if you can locate them.  There are some suppliers of topics mentioned here, but few that cover 25 segments similar to our in-field training camps.  Of course our DVD series covers in nearly nine hours much of this as well with my personal demonstrations for firearms use mentioned above if you cannot attend a camp.  Do what you must, but do it quickly.

Standing Guard: For the novice, this is the most difficult and “scary” part of operating under pressure outside.  YOU are responsible while others sleep and are counting on you to stay awake and alert to avoid disaster.  You hear things and see things that are not there at times and can miss the very real monsters in the dark.  Ideally, two or more stand guard with quiet communications through mobile handsets.  When reporting a sighting, confirmation MUST be obtained before any preplanned action is undertaken.  Jittery nerves culminating in a too fast trigger response has caused many good men to die without cause, sometimes from their own fellow troops.

Defensive Perimeters: that is the area that you can, by personnel and defensive weapons, cover reasonably. They are critical issues and must be minimally flexible to achieve a goal for holding that area safely and successfully.  Your ability to sit quietly for long periods and remain alert is essential.  Your vision and hearing must be excellent.  Finally, your ability to discern movement and various targeted shapes must be infallible.  Plans, operational strategies, use of “kill zones” retreat paths and a fall back to fortified positions are methods that will keep you around for the next night of “fun.”  (Actual placement and set-up of these zones will be covered in the Part 3 article)

The final installment set to be released on or about March 5th will discuss the final components of this compressed Defense Blueprint with all of you.  I realize to some of you this has been superficial, but to many others it is all new, or mostly new to their way of life.  So during this next week, use this information as another launching point to confirm, refine and expand your personal plan of action.  If you will do that and really work to fine tune just what you can do and how much you can invest (how much is your future and your family’s safety worth??) to achieve these goals or any portion of them, then you are a potential victor in the battle to save America and your destiny.

Liz and I are committed to continue our training camps here and around America during the next seven months barring a complete collapse of this nation.  Contact us at the web: www.theheartlandusa.com. We will stand our post until relieved. 

As always, until we meet somewhere down the road, I urge you to remain focused, committed and eternally faithful to the One who died for you, Jesus Christ.  In these frightful and unsettling times we must all love and support our fellow Patriots.  Those great men and women, who have fought and passed on into eternity to keep us free since 1776, their voices still whisper to us each and every single day.  Steady..…steady..….all the way to the end. 



By Greg Evensen, author of “America: Fall from Grace and Power” copyright 2010.


Gill Rapoza
Veritas Vos Liberabit


Monday, March 1, 2010

Jefferson vs Lincoln: America Must Choose

Jefferson vs Lincoln: America Must Choose
by Josh Eboch
20. Feb, 2010

Over the course of American history, there has been no greater conflict of visions than that between Thomas Jefferson’s voluntary republic, founded on the natural right of peaceful secession, and Abraham Lincoln’s permanent empire, founded on the violent denial of that same right.

That these two men somehow shared a common commitment to liberty is a lie so monstrous and so absurd that its pervasiveness in popular culture utterly defies logic.

After all, Jefferson stated unequivocally in the Declaration of Independence that, at any point, it may become

necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them…

And, having done so, he said, it is the people’s right

to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

Contrast that clear articulation of natural law with Abraham Lincoln’s first inaugural address, where he flatly rejected the notion that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.

Instead, Lincoln claimed that, despite the clear wording of the Tenth Amendment,

no State upon its own mere motion can lawfully get out of the Union; [and] resolves and ordinances [such as the Declaration of Independence] to that effect are legally void…

King George III agreed.

Furthermore, Lincoln claimed the right of a king to collect his federal tribute, by violence if necessary. Without even bothering to pretend such authority existed in the Constitution, Lincoln offered (and eventually carried out) a thinly veiled threat that

beyond what may be necessary for [collecting taxes], there will be no invasion, no using of force against or among the people anywhere.

In the words of Tony Soprano, pay up and nobody gets hurt.

But perhaps, as some have said, Jefferson intended his Declaration merely as a political tool to justify American independence from Britain. He surely would never have acknowledged or defended an individual state’s right to secede from the very union he helped to found. Except that he did, in his own first inaugural.

Upon assuming the presidency in 1801, amidst severe political and sectional turmoil, Jefferson said

If there be any among us who wish to dissolve the Union or to change its republican form, let them stand undisturbed, as monuments of the safety with which error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.

In light of these facts, no serious student of history or politics could believe that Jefferson and Lincoln possessed similar visions for America. Or that Jefferson would have condoned the violent subjugation of a single sovereign state (let alone 11 of them), or thought Lincoln’s disregard for the Constitution in any way legal or justified.

Rather, he would have known at once that what Lincoln spawned through his belligerence was a government capable of violating its own fundamental law at will; of using illegal force to prevent the governed from withdrawing voluntary consent (regardless of their motivation), and thereby destroying consent altogether.

Such a government is incapable of liberty, and antithetical to the very existence of Jefferson’s America.
For that reason, it is not possible to truly understand, and yet still admire, the words and deeds of both men. Despite his occasional use of the Declaration’s language, Lincoln himself despised Jefferson; demonstrating by his policies that they occupied polar opposite ends of the ideological spectrum, as do their political descendants today.

But, after decades spent trying to ignore or deny the irreconcilable disconnect between these two figures, the political class has succeeded only in perpetuating the contradictory and inherently dishonest character of modern American government. Though our system is ostensibly rooted in the rule of law and the ideals of liberty, its current nature is really embodied much more accurately by the lawless despotism of our 16th president.

We cannot continue to have it both ways. The preposterous dichotomy between America’s founding principles and the actions of her government, from the War Between the States to the War on Drugs, has predictably eroded that government’s moral standing at home, and its credibility around the world.

As a society, we cannot both revere a man whose fierce dedication to the right of political self-determination formed the philosophical foundations of our republic, and at the same time worship a dictator whose arrogant and bloody denial of that right transformed our republic into an empire.

It is time to choose. If Americans truly are heirs to the Jeffersonian legacy, than it has always been and must always be, not only our right, but our duty as citizens to withdraw consent from any government that becomes destructive of life, liberty, or the pursuit of happiness.

If, however, We the People believe ourselves incompetent to judge when that line has been crossed, then we will continue to find no shortage of political masters eager to carry on Lincoln’s legacy of contempt for our Constitution, and violent suppression of self-government.

Either way, one thing is certain: America will never regain the principles of her founding until her people muster the courage and clarity to finally separate liberty’s friends from its foes.



Josh is a proud “tenther”, freelance writer, and activist originally from the Washington, D.C. area. Josh is the State Chapter Coordinator for the Virginia Tenth Amendment Center.

Gill Rapoza
Veritas Vos Liberabit


Sunday, February 28, 2010

Some Fantastic Heretics I Have Known

Some Fantastic Heretics I Have Known
by Thomas R. Horn
Posted: February 21, 2010

Recently while searching for a particular document that I had placed in an old photo album years ago for safe keeping (usually how we wind up actually losing things, right!?), I took an unexpected stroll down memory lane.

I had gone through at least a dozen books of images, old newspaper clippings, seeing members of churches we had pastored and records of events frozen in time from nearly 30 years inside institutionalized Christianity, when finally between dusty storage bins and spider webs I found what I was looking for. I placed the coveted item among the research notes for the new book on Spiritual Warfare that my wife Nita and I plan to write later this year, then returned everything else to the closets.

That should have been that, but for the next week the old memories in those boxes kept calling to me about things and friends I had nearly forgotten—people who represented the true mission of the Church and were wonderful examples to my wife and I about what it means to be a Christian. Their names would not be recognized by most today—dedicated believers like O.R. Cross, Henrietta Stewart, Lorraine Morgan, Wyoming Rosebud Dollar, C.K. Barnes, Eugene & Evelyn Fuller, Annie Walton, and others of the New Testament clan.

And then there was that other group, hiding in plain sight among the believers, sometimes even leading them, the ones the Bible calls “clouds without water, carried about of winds; trees whose fruit withereth, without fruit, twice dead, plucked up by the roots” (Jude 1:12).

Among this second class were—and still are—some fantastic heretics I have known.

Take our old friend Carlton Pearson for instance. When I was pastor of Life Center and then Family Worship Center near Portland, Oregon during the 80s, my church was the host for TBN’s West Coast broadcasts and special events where some of America’s top evangelists appeared almost nightly for a while, including Carlton on numerous occasions. In those days, the Church was in flux. The Great Generation with its Faith of the Fathers was getting older, and errant doctrines made delicious by nasty end-time agents known as demons were finding more and more willing hearts who were having the time of their lives abandoning solid theology in exchange for such teachings as “The Doctrine of Inclusion” (in which nobody goes to hell) eventually branding such false prophets as heretics (including Carlton Pearson) among thoughtful evangelicals. I can tell you Carlton didn’t start out that way. He was a sweet man with a heart of gold who unfortunately not only lost his way, but embraced delusion. God only knows how many he has since led astray.

Then there were those who embraced things far worse than “Inclusion.” For instance, “Kingdom Age” theology (also known as Reconstructionism, Kingdom Now Theology, Theonomy, Dominion Theology, and most recently, Dominionism), which singularly has wrought some of the most far-reaching destruction within the Body of Christ this century.

Dominionism is a form of hyper-Calvinism (though supported by both reconstructionists and non-reconstructionists) that ultimately seeks to establish the Kingdom of God on earth through the union of politics and religion. Though ravenously popular among most talking-heads for the Religious Right, combining religious faith with politics as a legislative system of governance such as Dominionism would do, hearkens the formula upon which Antichrist will come to power. Note how in the book of Revelation, chapter 13, the political figure of Antichrist derives ultra-national dominance from the world’s religious faithful through the influence of an ecclesiastical leader known as the False Prophet. Similar political enthusiasm exists among dominionists despite the fact that neither Jesus nor His disciples (who turned the world upside down through preaching the gospel of Christ, the true “power of God,” according to Paul) ever imagined the goal of changing the world through supplanting secular government with an authoritarian theocracy. In fact, Jesus made it clear that His followers would not fight earthly authorities purely because His kingdom was “not of this world” (John 18:36). While every modern citizen—religious and non-religious—has the responsibility to lobby for moral good, combining the mission of the church with political aspirations is not only unprecedented in New Testament theology—including the life of Christ and the pattern of the New Testament church—but a tragic scheme concocted by sinister forces that seek to defer the Church from its true power while enriching insincere bureaucrats. So... let me take this moment to also add that, while I personally appreciate the values represented by such people as Sarah Palin (and I vote!), my prayer for believers is that they will not be fooled (again) into believing in 2012 that they can fulfill the will of God by pulling a voting lever.

While great heresies like “Dominionism” and “Inclusion” are, or should be, self evident, other contenders for the most spectacular heresies in the world today would have to include the Prosperity Movement, Ecumenical Modernism, and Dual Covenant (wherein Jews do not need to accept Jesus as Messiah) espoused by such well-known preachers as John Hagee . Yet those aged voices that called out to me recently from my fading boxes of memories also reminded that, while it’s easier today to get an “amen” while condemning the BIG LIE of Dominionism, the most insidious doctrines are those “smaller lucifers,” which are often harder to perceive. For instance how easy it is (and was) to see through the glaring examples of self-serving and lavish lifestyles that some of my old televangelist friends sought support for, while overlooking or even excusing Luciferianisn (selfishness) that is measured in the tiniest of portions, minute amounts so cleverly concealed within subtle and popular doctrines today that they are nearly impossible to detect.

Ask any evangelist who has tried to take the Gospel outside the four-doors of the local assembly what I mean and hear them repeat stories of how quickly certain members arose to resist the plan and to grumble over the resources that could otherwise be used to benefit them. This is the cancer that two decades of prosperity preaching, inward focusing and me-ism has produced. Of course most of these anti-evangelists wrap their Luciferianism in nifty religious phrases—like Judas Iscariot did when he pretended to care for the poor but secretly wanted to steal the value of the oil that was used to anoint the feet of Jesus (John 12:1-6).  These types resemble Judas in another way as well; they don’t even know how they are thus being used as fleshy gloves, the earthen hands of that invisible spirit, the master of waterless clouds operating within or behind them that hates true fishers of men. But for those with eyes to see, the father of lies always gives himself away through his envy of others, seeking what he can gain from believers and religion, not what he can give, then pretending that there is something wrong with those he cannot control, those that get things done like Jesus did, disparaging them, while he himself accomplishes nothing but division, diversion, and destruction.

Perhaps you have seen this spirit in the actions or heard it in the mouths of people you thought were your partners. When once you (or somebody you knew) had nothing more to give them, they turned away from you, or worse, against you and revealed the awful truth: their religious spirit had only come for what it could get, gain, take, absorb, and then turned “to kill and to destroy” (John 10:10a).

Thankfully the verse above goes on to describe the true spirit of Christ, which comes so that people might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly. This is why it is wise to observe what religious people do, not only what they say, so that ultimately it becomes clear what spirit is operating within them. “Ye shall know them by their fruits,” Jesus said in Matthew 7:16.

Yes, it’s true, I have personally known some fantastic heretics. But as I get older and the institution that I served so long breathes its final breaths and crumbles beneath the mighty tsunami of Dominionism, Prosperity Cultism and other doctrines of demons, I wonder about the survivors, where they will go now and how they will persevere, and I find that my pastor’s heart is concerned most of all with those little lucifers still lurking in plain sight among them.


Gill Rapoza
Veritas Vos Liberabit