Posted by
John Diamond on Monday, January 22, 2007 7:50:12 AM
Judicial Tyrants
By John D. Diamond
January 22, 2007
Throughout world history, every nation has gone through a period in which its leaders began to exercise unjust and even illegal power over its subjects. This action is defined as tyranny. The American Republic was created because our Founding Fathers, after years of appeals to the British crown, refused to live any longer under the unjust control of its tyrannical King and judges.
When we study the causes of the first American Revolution, we see that the colonists felt the need to secede from Britain’s rule for four primary reasons. Britain restricted the colonies’ religious liberties, imposed oppressive taxation, rejected an appeal to allow the colonies the right of self-government and trampled upon the rights of the people to own property free from government seizure.
After winning our freedom from Britain, our Founding Fathers created a Constitutional system of government under which the American people were given the power to govern their country free from government tyranny. As Alexander Hamilton said in his speech to the New York Ratifying Convention, “Here, sir, the people govern!”
However, over the last sixty years, the U.S. Supreme Court has illegally and unconstitutionally expanded its constitutional powers to make themselves the unchallengeable rulers of America. Long-time Democrat and Republican Senator Strom Thurman had this to say about this unconstitutional usurpation of power by the third branch of government:
“The [Supreme] Court has consistently moved to expand its power till it threatens to be the dominating power of the government. The time has come for action by the Congress to call halt to this unconstitutional seizure of power by the third branch of government.”
Over the last sixty years, erroneous Supreme Court rulings have resulted in a nation that is no longer a government “of the people” and “by the people,” but rather a government “of the court” and “by the court.” Since that time, the Supreme Court has nullified the first, fifth and tenth amendments to the constitution without the permission of the American people and has taken the right of self-government away from the states, in much the same way that the colonists were not allowed to govern their respective societies.
It is important to pay close attention to the reasons for the first American Revolution because we, as Americans, are experiencing much of the same tyranny that the Founding Fathers experienced from the leaders of Britain--a government that restricts our religious liberties, nullifies private property rights, enforces oppressive taxation and rejects an appeal by the states for a system of self-government.
Our Founding Fathers did not create a government in which all power was to be consolidated in Washington, D.C. As Thomas Jefferson said in his letter to Judge William Johnson, “The States can best govern our home concerns and the [federal] Government our foreign ones. I wish, therefore . . . never to see all offices transferred to Washington, where, further withdrawn from the eyes of the people, they may more secretly be bought and sold at market.”
The U.S. Constitution has granted the federal government limited power and the tenth amendment has granted all remaining power to the American people and to each individual state. In my book, “The Rise of America: Fighting the Next American Revolution and the Constitutional Crisis,” I explain this in much greater detail.
For years the American people have petitioned the federal government to restore our right to self-government guaranteed by the tenth amendment. In response we have been scorned, disregarded and mocked. The time for inaction is over.
Copyright 2006 by John D. Diamond. All rights reserved.