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Regarding Our Original, Stolen, Fourteenth Amendment

Rocky Montana

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Regarding Our Original, Stolen, Fourteenth Amendment

 

R. Montana / 2-21-2015

I don't know about you, but it makes me angry that this travesty has occurred and angrier still that it hasn't been corrected, and that most Americans don't even know about it.  However, I know that to add a new Amendment to the U.S. Constitution at this time is problematic.  Therefore, I asked the question: what can be done to right this wrong?  And the following came in response:

If the lawyers and attorneys ("esquires") of their day indeed removed the original Fourteenth Amendment from our united States Constitution, which barred lawyers and attorneys from holding public office, can we not live and act as though it still exists?  Is it not our patriotic duty to, at the very least, petition against and vote against all lawyers and attorneys seeking and re-running for public office?  The original Fourteenth Amendment can still exist in our minds and hearts if we will unite as one people and honor the spirit and true intent of principles of this important, stolen, document.  We can make a difference by voting against all lawyers seeking and re-running for public office during all future election cycles we participate in.  Ferreting-out these lawyers will take research, and it may become more difficult as the word gets out that there is a grass-roots campaign set against them.  It all comes down to: what are we willing to do for our country?  I think it is worth it, don't you?  Our Constitution hangs in the balance; it is being ignored and attacked daily by those very lawyers who are disloyal to the ideals of freedom, liberty and independence of the people and do not honor, defend and protect the U.S. Constitution, nor protect the people from enemies foreign and domestic.  If we-the-people will just use the power of unity to start a grass-roots campaign to reinstate the original Fourteenth Amendment through the above actions, perhaps this the mind-set will spread and endure.  As less lawyers were to make it into and are voted out of public office, our federal, state and local governments would come in closer alignment with true U.S. Constitutional law, and it would be easier to effect positive change in this country which serves the greatest good of the people.  May it be so.

Rocky Montana <rockymontana@cox.net>