Monday, November 16, 2009

Lisbon Treaty December 1st '09. - Traitor's Day.

The Lisbon Treaty will come into force on December 1st 2009


www.blatantnews.com/news/lisbon_treaty_will_come_into_force_from_december_1st.html


Nobody would argue that the U.S.A. does not have a Constitution, or that it is not reliable, sensible and fully functional. Americans are rightly proud of their Constitution. It is the best you can get, - and is based entirely on ours!

Because the British Constitution has developed over along period of time, it is contained in several documents. The Americans were able to merge all of its principles together into one document. That is the only difference. If anyone says we have no written constitution in Britain – they are either seriously mistaken, or a liar.


“I only contend that the English constitution is, in theory, the most stupendous fabrick of human invention, both for the adjustment of the balance, and the prevention of its vibrations; and that the Americans ought to be applauded instead of censured, for imitating it, as far as they have.”

President John Adams.

Common Law was established by Alfred the Great, who reigned from 871-899AD. He compiled the laws and customs of the nation into the "Liber Judicialis," based on the Ten Commandments and the Golden Rule. Alfred's son, Edward, declared, “To all who are charged with the administration of public affairs I give the express command that they show themselves in all things to be just judges precisely as in the Liber Judicialis it is written; nor shall any of them fear to declare the common law freely and courageously"

The Coronation Oath is the freely taken and mutual covenant between the Monarch and the People of Britain.

Magna Carta - a Common Law document - was originally signed in 1215, a contract between the knights, barons, clergy, townspeople and the King. Magna Carta affirmed the right of the People to such things as trial by jury, and protection from excessive fines.

The First Statute of Westminster, passed during the reign of Edward I. According to William Stubbs, the British constitutional historian,

This act is almost a code by itself; it contains fifty-one clauses, and covers the whole ground of legislation. Its language now recalls that of Canute or Alfred, now anticipates that of our own day; on the one hand common right is to be done to all, as well poor as rich, without respect of persons; on the other, elections are to be free, and no man is by force, malice or menace, to disturb them. The spirit of the Great Charter is not less discernible: excessive amercements, abuses of wardship, irregular demands for feudal aids, are forbidden in the same words or by amending enactments.

Clause 15, known as the Freedom of Election Act 1275, and is still in force today.

The Declaration of Right was imposed upon William and Mary as a condition of their assuming the Crown - in other words, they would only be elected by the People if they accepted its terms.

The Declaration of Right, and the Bill of Rights, clearly state that -

no foreign prince, person, prelate, state, or potentate hath, or ought to have, any jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence, or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm.

So it can clearly be seen that every EU treaty imposed upon us by Parliament, is unconstitutional. Here is the evidence that our present Monarch has indeed broken her Coronation Oath, by giving Royal Assent to these treaties.

Other constitutional rights given by these contracts -

  • The right to bear arms
  • The right to petition the Sovereign
  • Free men cannot be imprisoned without cause
  • The Government cannot arrest any man because he disagrees with the Government’s policies
  • Habeas Corpus is not to be denied
  • No person will be compelled to make loans to the King, and there will be no tax without the approval of Parliament
  • Soldiers and sailors will not be billeted on civilians
  • Government will not impose martial law during peacetime

The right to bear arms gives every person the right to self defence using reasonable force, including deadly force if appropriate. Using tragic events as an excuse to remove that right has historically been the work of governments with good reason to fear their people - governments intent on some kind of future totalitarian control of their populations.

Conclusion: Today the British Constitution is in grave danger. Moves are afoot to replace the Bill of Rights and the Act of Settlement. These are to be replaced by a new "Bill of Rights" and a European constitution.

Britain's constitutional documents are timeless, and were constructed by the People. The new "constitutional" documents will be written by politicians. Which would you trust? Parliament has grabbed executive power from the Crown. The House of Lords has become a body which blindly follows the party whip. And today, our Monarch simply complies with the wishes of the Prime Minister, with no thought or consideration to our sovereignty or the Constitution. Nor, it seems, to the solemn oath she took at her Coronation. “[executive power] will corrupt the legislature as necessarily as rust corrupts iron ... and when the legislature is corrupted, the people are undone.” John Adams.

It is up to us to fix this situation.

Anyone attempting to introduce a European constitution into Britain is a traitor to the British People and deserves the most serious punishment.

The British Constitution Group. www.thebcgroup.org.uk

http://clipmarks.com/clipmark/72FB0586-F092-420E-A5BB-321DCDAFED6B

www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlAfhArvnuw