J.A.I.L. News
Journal
______________________________________________________
Los Angeles,
California
January 2,
2006
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The Inherent Right of ALL People to
Alter or Reform Abusive Government
The Right Upon Which All Other
Rights Depend
The Torchbearer for J.A.I.L.
Nationally - Support Them!
P.O. Box 412, Tea, S.D. 57064
- (605) 231-1418
The Right of
The People to Alter or Reform Government Trumps Everything
Else
By: Barbie, ACIC, National
J.A.I.L.
J.A.I.L. IS THAT RIGHT
OF THE PEOPLE TO ALTER
OR REFORM
GOVERNMENT
You don't hear about that from the news
media, do you? Why not? It's because the right of the People
to alter or reform their government whenever they deem it
necessary trumps everything the media has reported --whether
true or false! That right even trumps the Bill of Rights, because without
a lawful government, none of our other rights can be exercised by the
People. It doesn't matter if we have the Right of Petition, the Right of
Redress, the Right of Free Speech, the Right of Free Press, the Right of
Assembly, the Right of Due Process, the Right of Access to our Courts,
and more-- NONE of them matter if the People don't have a lawful
and accountable government instituted to respect their rights and
cooperate in their exercise as a matter of practice, and not exist idly
in theory only.
The right of the People to
alter or reform their government does not depend upon any
writing or documentation as authority. Even if the Constitution
were nothing but a "GD piece of paper," the right of the
People to alter or reform their government exists
nevertheless. It is a law of nature. It exists just because
there is Existence! Because newspaper publishers exist,
because judges exist, because lawyers exist, because the Bar Association
exists, and because the People exist-- THE RIGHT OF THE PEOPLE TO
ALTER OR REFORM GOVERNMENT exists! And to be meaningful, it must exist
in practice. That means the
People must act!
It doesn't matter if the system has
checks and balances in place; it doesn't matter if voters can vote
miscreant judges out of office; it doesn't matter if the system provides
an appellate process; it doesn't matter if commissions on judicial
conduct rein in every judge; it doesn't matter if disgruntled litigants
want to sue judges because they don't like the decision; it doesn't
matter if the independence of the judiciary must be upheld --or anything
else. THE RIGHT OF THE PEOPLE TO ALTER OR REFORM GOVERNMENT supersedes
all of it. That's what
matters!
And it's the
People who must make it
matter! And it's the People of South Dakota
who are making it matter right now in their state, by getting J.A.I.L. on
the 2006 ballot. J.A.I.L. IS THAT RIGHT OF THE PEOPLE TO ALTER OR REFORM
GOVERNMENT, namely the judiciary, when the People find it necessary to do
so. And it's when the People find it necessary to
do so --not when the Bar Association, the newspaper editors, the
commissions on judicial conduct, or the legal fraternity finds it
necessary. Despite the truth or falsity of what they report, it is
the responsibility of the People to move and to
act on this inherent right that trumps all others. Only
the People can make it happen. And they're making
it happen in South Dakota this year!
Regardless of what the legal fraternity
or their newspaper cronies think or say, even if it is true-- it isn't up
to them, but it's up to the People to determine
if it is necessary to alter or reform their forms of government. And that
determination by the People will be based on whether the government is
performing the function it was instituted to perform, i.e., protecting
the integrity of their inherent rights. If government, through the
judiciary, isn't serving and protecting the People's
rights, then it ceases to be
"government."
The People of South Dakota have
determined that it indeed is necessary to alter
or reform the government, by holding the judiciary accountable to the
People because their rights are not being protected in court. The People
of South Dakota (at least 46,800 of them) have found
that
-
Judges deliberately violate the
law
-
Judges commit fraud and
conspiracy
-
Judges intentionally violate due
process of law
-
Judges deliberately disregard material
facts of cases
-
Judges conduct judicial acts without
jurisdiction
-
Judges block lawful conclusions of
cases
-
Judges deliberately violate the
Constitution of South Dakota and the united States
Constitution
The People of South Dakota have found
that judges have the potential of abusing their power, and that
when they do abuse it, (and
only then), the People have the duty to prevent
that abuse by removing the artificial shield of the judge-made doctrine
of "judicial immunity" for the specific violations
listed.
It isn't done because anyone doesn't
"like" judicial decisions. Just because government does things we don't
"like" doesn't mean it ceases to be government. It's only when government
fails to perform its responsibility of protecting the People's
rights that it ceases to be government and must be reformed;
and the listed violations contained in the J.A.I.L. Amendment shows the
ways that the judiciary has failed in that
responsibility.
Remember, it isn't the responsibility of
government to "protect the People" but to "protect the
rights of the People." There's a BIG
difference. As the Declaration states, "That
to secure these rights, governments are
instituted..." If People's rights are not
protected, there is no
protection!
The Right of The People to Alter or Reform Government Trumps
Everything Else! Keep that
in mind when reading what the newspapers and the legal fraternity reports
about J.A.I.L.
-Barbie-