Thursday, July 31, 2014

Constitution Studies, An Originalist for Hire

By Douglas V. Gibbs

Constitution Law is case law.  That is not what I teach, or support.  The opinions of a bunch of judges is not what the Constitution says.  In law school, the Constitution is never opened, because its principles of limited government oppose what academia dreams of creating through their schemes of utopianism.

Limited Government is the essence of liberty.

When I teach classes on the Constitution, I am often met with anger and confusion.  We have been conditioned our entire lives to believe a lie.  We have been living under the rule of man, and they have been calling it the rule of law.  The rule of law is not what a bunch of politicians and judges say it is.  The rule of law, if I may quote the Declaration of Independence, is the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God.

The Constitution is the Law of the Land.

In 1787, delegates from twelve of the thirteen States gathered in convention to create a new government, one that was strong enough to protect and preserve freedom, yet limited enough not to allow the new government to take freedom away.  The ruling elite was to be no more.  Preferential treatment was to be a thing of the past.  Nobody is above the law, including government officials, and the Constitution was written in the way it was to ensure that those principles remained intact.

An unrestrained government is a tyrannical government.

In today's society, we have a President that is lawless, a Congress that is gutless, and a court system that has been infiltrated by political ideology and the rule of man.

To turn this all around, however, we must know, and understand, the instruction manual our founders gave to us, commonly referred to at The Constitution of the United States.

Join us on Tuesdays in Corona at 6:00 pm for Classes, or Temecula on Thursdays at 6:30 pm.

Or, hire me.  Learn more at www.constitutioneducation.yolasite.com.

-- Political Pistachio Conservative News and Commentary

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