That is a natural principle of authority. I don't need a document to say that when an authority figure attempts to rule outside the scope of their authority they have betrayed their office and forfeited their authority. That's a self-evident principle.
I don't know that "their proclamations may be disregarded" is truly comparable with "all their past actions are nullified". It would seem to me that the first statement refers to the specific proclamation that was deemed to be issued in violation of the oath of office.
That is a natural principle of authority. I don't need a document to say that when an authority figure attempts to rule outside the scope of their authority they have betrayed their office and forfeited their authority. That's a self-evident principle.
That's not how the law works.
Actually it really is. Anything codified against such a natural truth is just tyranny disguised as law.
YOU MAY NOT VIOLATE MY CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS. Fucking period.
You're an elected official? You legislate it? You say its legal? You VIOLATE YOUR OATH.
Not only should we disregard them, we should arrest them.
Imagine if we held them to nuremberg law? We'd lose 70% of our doctors.. And all our politicians who followed these insane mandates, based on fabricated data any child could disprove.
How much fucking more tyranny do you need? Will you relinquish your right to work or will you take the dubious clot shot, whenever they tell you to?
Is this a difficult decision?
Actually it really is.
No, it isn't. You want it to be that way, and it hurts your fee fees that it isn't that way. It still isn't that way.
YOU MAY NOT VIOLATE MY CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS. Fucking period
If everyone gets to decide what's a violation of their Constitutional rights, how about the shitlib who thinks it's their Constitutional right to force your to get vaccinated for their safety? Now we have a problem because in your system everyone gets to decide for themselves what's their Constitutional right. You can't say their view is invalid because you've just said that individuals get to decide.
That's how all authority works whether it's written down or not. That's exactly what the British government would have said to the Declartion of Independence which appealed to self-evident principles above any codified system of legal code. Law is founded in authority. And when authority is unjustly wielded it is null. Would it change your willingness to exercise liberties if the code book said otherwise?
That's how all authority works whether it's written down or not.
Then why make any pretense about it being some kind of law. Just say, "I'm not listening to what the government says if I think it's not right," and leave it at that?
That's exactly what the British government would have said to the Declartion of Independence which appealed to self-evident principles above any codified system of legal code.
They did say that by sending over troops. Do you have a Continental army ready to defend your position?
Law is founded in authority. And when authority is unjustly wielded it is null. Would it change your willingness to exercise liberties if the code book said otherwise?
Yes, the problem isn't the theory. The problem is who has the authority to decide what is just and unjust? If it's every individual for himself, then there is no rule of law.
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