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Principles of Freedom |
of the united States of America |
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Article 1: We believe that governments were
instituted of God for the benefit of man and that he holds men accountable for their acts
in relation to them, both in making laws and administering them, for the good and safety
of society.
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Article 2: We claim the Constitution for
the United States of America to be a document prepared and adopted by inspired men as directed by
Almighty God; and we claim that it is an uncompromising necessity to retain that document
in its original, inspired form that liberty and good government may be preserved as
intended by our Founding Fathers.
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Article 3: We claim the privilege of worshipping
Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all men the same
privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may.
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Article 4: We believe that religion is instituted of
God; and that men are amenable to him, and to him only, for the exercise of it, unless
their religious opinions prompt them to infringe upon the rights and liberties of others;
but we do not believe that human law has a right to interfere in prescribing rules of
worship to bind the consciences of men, nor dictate forms for public or private devotion.
We concur with Blackstone's famous statement, "If ever the laws of God and man are at
variance, the former are to be obeyed in derogation of the latter."
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Article 5: We do not believe it just to mingle
religious influence with civil government, whereby one religious society is fostered and
another proscribed in its spiritual privileges, and the individual rights of its members,
as citizens, denied.
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Article 6: We hold that amending the original
Constitution for the United States of America shall not occur except in accordance with the
strict provisions for amendments as set forth therein. Changes shall not be arbitrarily
imposed by judicial decisions, executive orders, or any other governmental action. We
claim it is proper that the meaning of the Constitution should be explained as new
conditions warrant, but never should the Constitution be amended to change its original,
inspired intent; neither shall the popular vote of the people nor ratification by the
States be permitted to defeat that original intent.
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Article 7: We claim that the purpose of the
Constitution for the United States of America is to form a more perfect union, establish
justice, assure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense and promote the
general welfare; that is, wherein all men are benefited equally and are secured in the
blessings of liberty.
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Article 8: We claim that no people can exist in
peace, except such laws are framed and held inviolate as will secure to each individual
the free exercise of conscience, the right and control of property, and the protection of
life.
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Article 9: We claim that We, the People, and their Land and Soil jurisdiction of the
several States, should assume the responsibility of self-government by retaining and
possessing the fulness of the powers and authority reserved by us in the original
Constitution for the United States of America.
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Article 10: We claim that the individual has
inherent and unalienable God-given rights and freedoms as outlined in the Declaration of
Independence and further explicated in the Bill of Rights, and that no rightful delegation
of these rights can ever be made to or be assumed by any governing body. We hold that the
free agency of man, working within the legitimate bounds of these rights and freedoms,
must be held inviolate. The Constitution provides to regulate bodies of men and not
individuals.
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Article 11: We claim that the essential rights and
freedoms set forth in the original Constitution for the united States of America should be diligently and justly guarded.
No treaty, foreign agreement, or any other governmental action, domestic or foreign, shall
be permitted to deprive any individual of the rights vouchsafed to him in that
Constitution. We insist that foreign treaties do not supersede or defeat the provisions of
the original Constitution for the United States of America.
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Article 12: We claim that freedom of speech, freedom
of assembly, and freedom of the press are solemn rights guaranteed by the original
Constitution for the United States of America; but that these freedoms are not to be used
to infringe upon the rights and liberties of others or to subvert or destroy that
Constitution which guarantees God-given freedoms.
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Article 13: We believe that a government necessarily
requires civil officers and magistrates to enforce proper laws, and that such officers as
will administer the original Constitutional law in equity and justice should be sought for
and upheld by the voice of the people.
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Article 14: We believe that civil magistrates should
restrain crime, but never control conscience; should punish guilt, but never suppress the
free expression of the soul.
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Article 15: We believe that it is the major duty of
all public officials to protect the innocent and punish the guilty. We claim that every
man should be responsible to bring offenders against the Public common law to
justice. We hold that all men so charged shall be presumed innocent until proven guilty,
and that all false accusers shall be summarily punished. We claim that the right to trial
by jury, as put forth in the Magna Carta, shall not be denied any person. This is an
unalienable right.
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Article 16: We hold that the people as the sovereign
power reserve the right to be made aware of the actions of all elected or appointed
governmental officials, while they are acting in their official capacity as servants of
the people. We claim that individuals have the right to hold public officials accountable
for their conduct and that interested individuals shall have access to all public records,
in order that they may determine, without governmental harassment, whether such officials
are properly representing them.
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Article 17: We hold that all public officials who
take the oath of office to uphold and sustain the Constitution for the United
States of America, and who violate that oath, shall be deemed guilty of high treason and of having
committed a capital crime.
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Article 18: We hold that it is sedition to aid or
abet or in any way to sustain, provide for or assist any person, group of persons, nation,
or group of nations seeking to undermine our original Constitution for the
United States of America.
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Article 19: We claim that the Federal, State,
County, and City governments should not involve themselves in any economic
activity, except as explicitly permitted by the original Constitution for the
United States of America. We hold that any governmental body must not, in any way, restrain free and
competitive institutions.
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Article 20: We support a free-enterprise economic
system without governmental interference and restrictions. Inherent in such a system is
the right to succeed or fail, the right to hold, develop and enjoy private property; and
the right to exchange and profit.
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Article 21: We are opposed to mandated governmental
charity. We hold that each individual should make every effort to be self sufficient and
that the responsibility of helping the destitute be relegated to family, friends, or
religious bodies, exclusive of any governmental jurisdiction.
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Article 22: We claim that taxes shall only be levied
as authorized by the original Constitution for the United States of America, and that it is
an unholy principle to levy income taxes. Each individual who enjoys the protection of
government ought to bear his equal share of the cost of proper governmental functions.
These governmental functions are to be limited to those which the original Constitution
explicitly authorizes, and taxes imposed shall be uniform.
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Article 23: We believe in honest money, the gold and
silver coinage of The Constitution for the united States of America, and a circulating medium convertible into such money
without loss.
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Article 24: We maintain that all Federally
controlled land and all other lands held by national agencies, with the exception of that
land stipulated in the original Constitution for the United States of America for Federal
use shall revert to the States and appropriately to private ownership. Any governmental
body which presently does not have organic Constitutional authorization should be
summarily dissolved and all residual effects of such programs, including real property and
any improvements thereon, shall be returned to private ownership.
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Article 25: We claim that the Federal government
shall exercise its power only within the strict construction and explicit boundaries
delegated to that government by the original Constitution for the United
States of America.
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Article 26: We claim that the checks and balances on
the use of power by the three branches of government as set forth in the original
Constitution for the United States of America shall be perpetuated and not removed,
weakened or undermined.
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Article 27: We claim that the Federal government is
the result of a contract among the States and as such is a unifying tie and is their
common voice to the world. We hold that State governments are the voice of their
respective citizens from whom they derive all of their authority. The authority of an
individual State does not come from the Federal government; it can only come from the
people of that State.
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Article 28: We claim that each State is sovereign
under the American theory of jurisprudence. We hold that the Federal government has no
authority to regulate or control the States in performing their functions as outlined by
the original Constitution; further, we hold that the Federal government has no
authorization to usurp these functions.
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Article 29: We claim that the Federal government
shall not deprive the people of the united States of America of their property through
unlawful taxation, confiscation, or deliberate misrepresentation in order to provide aid,
gifts, subsidies or recognition to foreign nations and international organizations which
are dedicated to the destruction of this nation. We are at war with atheistic
international communism, which avowedly is dedicated to our destruction.
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Article 30: We claim that freedom of the press is
not to be construed as license to undermine our Constitution. All those who own or control
media of communications shall be held liable and punishable by law, when they willfully
advocate destruction of the Constitution and ultimately the nation.
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Article 31: We claim that in order to preserve a
strong nation that state militias ought to be organized according to the original
Constitution for the United States of America, in order to do this, the individual right to
keep and bear arms must and shall be maintained. In order to protect our country from
external invasion and internal turmoil the States must be ready and willing to be called
upon at all times. We hold that all men are justified in defending themselves.
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Article 32: We hold that the death penalty must be
imposed as a proper punishment and deterrent for premeditated murder, forcible rape and
other major acts of violence which result in mutilation of body or destruction of mind. We
repeat that treason or felonious malfeasance of office on the part of any public official,
appointed or elected, should be a capital crime.
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Article 33: We claim that life is a God-given right
to the unborn and the aged and that no other agency has the right to take away that life.
We hold that deliberate abortions and euthanasia must be placed in same category as
premeditated murder, to be punished as capital crimes.
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Article 34: We believe in the first great
commandment, which is to multiply and replenish the earth, and no government has the right
to interfere with that religious belief as guaranteed by Constitutional law. We do not
believe that any government has the authority to forcible miscegenate.
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Article 35: We claim the right to educate our own
children, in either private or public schools, free from all Federal governmental control
or jurisdiction. Each school should be under the jurisdiction of the parents or their
delegates.
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Article 36: We claim that there are certain
unalienable rights guaranteed by God to all men in the exercise of their free agency.
These were sustained by the Founding Fathers and written into the Constitution. They need
no interpretation, nor can they be abrogated by anyone other than God. It is not the
prerogative of the President of the United States of America or any one of the Executive
branch of government, nor is it the prerogative of the Congress of the United States or
other legislators, nor any of the Judiciary including the Supreme Court of the United
States, to abridge those rights or interpret them in any manner except as stated in the
original Constitution for the united States of America. Moreover, the power to abridge such rights does not rest in any of
the offices of any of the States; and it is the sole prerogative of the People to
determine when such rights have been abridged or when they, the People, have been robbed
of their agency; and it is within the power of the people to remove from office any of the
officers of the Federal government or of the State who attempt by executive order or
judiciary action or arbitrary interpretation to change the Constitution . Those who would
unrighteously foist their will upon the People of the United States of America must be
removed from office by due process of law, whether by impeachment or by initiative of the
People.
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