14th Amendment Citizenship: Citizen or citizen? BIG DIFFERENCE!
Submitted by JerichoDotm on Wed, 10/14/2009 - 20:54
If you are a citizen of your state, you have all the rights protected by the Constitution. If you are a citizen of the USA you only have privileges.
Video --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4xV4MTnCdc
More info --> http://www.supremelaw.org/rsrc/twoclass.htm
»





















Ahhhh..Anchor Babies
Easy Street for soooooooooooooooooooooo many.
http://www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2006/tst100206.htm
i have been thinking a lot
i have been thinking a lot about this, one of the ways I thought maybe they get us in is through the school system, its one of the first "benefits" we except. Once you start excepting all the benefits, your in.
Doesn't that mean that a
Doesn't that mean that a pistol permit in one state is good in all 50 states? A Connecticut driver's license allows me to drive in all the states, and my right to drive is not a Right protected by the Bill of Rights.
Why do the American people allow criminals to restrict their Rights? Why do they continue to elect these misfits?
The way I interpret the 14th Amendment, it means that my Rights in one state apply to all the states. In particular, Rights protected by the Bill of Rights. Do we go by the Constitution, or by the opinions of the Supreme Court? What do public officials take an oath to defend? The Constitution or the opinions of the justices?
You do not have a right to drive...
you have a right to freely travel. You do not have passengers, you have companions...words and terms are important. Driving is a privilege because to do it you concede to licensure, permit and or registration - privilege - and by intent cast off your rights.
Also the 14th ammendment does more damage to your rights under federal jurisdiction than you can imagine. It mainly provided basis for qualifying corporations as equal in privilege to humans; instigating the backbone of corporatism that is strangling us today.
Assert Your Authority
Assert Your Authority
No
Because as an American citizen you only have privileges, not rights.
-------
http://www.RebootTheRepublic.com