Judiciary Act of 1789: How Congress and Early Judges Created an Unconstitutional Federal Court Empire That Turned Free Citizens into Subjects of Washington The Constitution is the supreme Law of the Land—exactly as stated in Article VI. Its meaning is fixed by the original public meaning of the text at ratification and the intent of…
The Constitution is the supreme Law of the Land—exactly as stated in Article VI. Its meaning is fixed by the original public meaning of the text at ratification and the intent of the Framers as expressed in the Federalist Papers and ratification debates. Article V sets the only lawful process for changing that document. Anything…
Case Studies & Milestones in Constitutional Rights Advocacy: How Judicial “Milestones” Were Actually Unconstitutional Erosions of the Fixed Original Public Meaning The Constitution is the supreme Law of the Land—exactly as stated in Article VI. Its meaning is fixed by the original public meaning of the text at ratification and the intent of the Framers…
Examining Institutional Roles in Constitutional Shifts: How Congress, the Executive, and the Judiciary Usurped Power and Violated the Fixed Original Public Meaning of the Constitution The Constitution is the supreme Law of the Land—exactly as stated in Article VI. Its meaning is fixed by the original public meaning of the text at ratification and the…
The Impact of Judicial Decisions on Rights Evolution: How Judges’ Rulings Have Eroded the Fixed Original Public Meaning of the Bill of Rights and Turned Citizens into Serfs The Constitution is the supreme Law of the Land—exactly as stated in Article VI. Its meaning is fixed by the original public meaning of the text at…