Title: Declaration of Revoked Consent, Part 1 - Conundrum of
Governance
By Stephen L. Rush
Liberties of the people have effectively been
undermined. It appears laws have been
made to specifically subvert the economics and liberties of the people
otherwise guaranteed by the Constitution and higher law. Erosion and denial of rights to the middle
class and small business, along with profiteering to the specific detriment of
the taxpayer, homeowner, and worker, from corporate bailouts to universal
insurance schemes, have resulted in grave inequities to lesser fortunate and
understandable public outcry. Worse,
orders were given and laws were made designed to quell the people from
reaction, allowing police officers to apply brut force and arrest anyone who
would question lawmakers. (See
www.willofthepeople.agency for partial list of these laws.) Resolution of these grievances are imperative
for the protection of the people.
These laws are written in a way that their language is so
broad, and their application is so wide, there can be no mistaking what they
accomplish. These laws are a concerted
attempt to attack nearly every right throughout the Bill of Rights: abridging
freedom of speech, disparaging peaceful assembly, resisting and obstructing
protestors, denying petition for “redress” (new correction), authorizing
soldiers and spies in times of relative peace to be quartered by electronic
means in every house and mobile equipment, issuing unreasonable searches and
seizures of electronics and communications devices without warrant or probable
cause, depriving persons of their life, liberty, or property without any
compensation, as well as discouraging accountability of representatives to the
people, amending the Constitution through laws made in secret and other
unconstitutional means, and prohibiting or excluding power otherwise guaranteed
by the Constitution to and for the people.
The Bill of Rights guarantees consent to be governed and sovereign
accountability by will of the people.
Without them, the people have no real protection from tyranny.
It matters not whether the threat is perceived or real; the
Constitution affirms rights and freedoms to the people. But, people are genuinely concerned about
their liberties for good reason. In
spite of the uncertainty as to what government intends with these laws, the
government has taken taxpayer monies to reward financial executive pay through
the Troubled Asset Recovery Program (Bank Bailout), and has required the
working and middle classes and small business to participate in costly health
insurance. Laws like these were made in
closed door sessions, and people were physically thrown out of the Senate
hearings for the Affordable Health Care Act (Obamacare) in 2010. The government has not required the same of
the wealthy or corporate executives, creating greater income inequities – that
have flatlined since the 1970’s. Jobs
that have been added since the Great Recession are either menial or have
exacerbating stringent qualifications because the market is still flooded with
applicants. And, news of photos of the
National Guard and statements attesting to high powered weapons arriving in Fergusson,
Missouri to aid local police is not a casual response.
These are the most recognizable laws and acts, but numerous
other examples of disparity persist. The
government has not responded to these concerns, either. So, people believe the government has acted
with malice against the Constitution for the detriment of the people. The people have every right to see their
liberties restored and easement of such taxation and Marshal Law over the
American people. This is where the
government has fallen short. The
government cannot resist a protest of the people; it is a First Amendment right
to assemble. The government cannot
reject petitions and notices of the people; it is a First Amendment right to
receive new correction. The government
cannot refrain from accountability; it is our system of government. The government cannot retain consent of the
governed when it has been revoked; it is our heritage to dissent
oppression. The government cannot return
an extraordinary writ unresolved; it is the purview of the people. The government cannot refuse the proclamation
by a Continental Congress; it exists to protect the Union from anarchy. The government cannot restrict a people-initiated
recall election; it exists in defense of the Constitution. The government must not rebel against any
order to comply with the sovereign authority of the people, even for contempt,
warrant to leave, or registrar notice; it restores faith in governing laws.
Every effort has been made by the people to rein in the
government of this nation – by each one of these endeavors. Yet, the government of the United States has
failed to acquiesce to the will of the people and relinquish unrestrained
power. In other words, this event is
considered catastrophic failure of governance.
The federal government cannot both be authorized of the Constitution and
simultaneously act against it. This has
been called, a “conundrum of governance”.
Will of the People Constitutional Authority board has declared the U.S.
government to be illegitimate. What is
left is for the people to enforce the results of the recall (despite attempts
to derail it) and assert a government of the Constitution.
Stephen L. Rush, Defender of the Constitution
Will of the People Constitutional Authority Board
www.willofthepeople.agency
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