Friday, February 2, 2024

Federally Driven Invasion Must Be Ended By State Laws And Enforcement

Texas Governor Greg Abbott formally stated on January 24, 2024 that more than 6 million illegal immigrants have crossed Texas's southern border in just 3 years, and Texas's constitutional authority to defend and protect itself from this invasion is the supreme law of the land.

The current congress and President Biden are using the United Nations as a holding organization through which they fund 248 "Non-governmental" organizations in 17 Latin American nations to arrange for aliens to invade the USA. Of all of the aliens they have been encountering at the southwest border, President Biden's complicit subordinates have been detaining at most 11.5%. For state-government people to adequately secure the life, liberty, and property of their residents, they would need to enact and enforce constitutional state laws that repel invaders.

Rob Natelson and Andrew Hyman have compiled a thorough case that considering the state of the states when the Constitution was ratified, state-government people have been delegated constitutional power in the current invasion to issue warnings, erect barriers, raise state troops and ships, use these to conduct defensive war, create checkpoints, return invaders, capture combatants, seize combatants' property, kill combatants who don't surrender, launch preemptive attacks, foray into neighboring sovereignties that harbor the enemy, suspend habeas corpus, and hold prisoners of war.

State legislators have the duty to pass rules-of-engagement cards that are clear enough to protect their people in situations in which the legislators place their people in harms' way.

State legislators and governors together have the duty to pass bills that would establish laws, consisting rules and associated sanctions, which would not violate constitutional national laws and which would have sufficient force to make state residents secure.

They can do this by replicating in state laws a minimal set of the rules and sanctions that are in the existing national laws.

Governors, and any other state executives in whom some of the state executive powers are vested, have the duty to execute the constitutional laws. 

https://www.lewrockwell.com/2024/02/james-anthony/federally-driven-invasion-must-be-ended-by-state-laws-and-enforcement/ 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Closing the Gates: How South Carolina’s Closed Primary Bill Mirrors a National Incumbent Protection Playbook

In South Carolina, a proposed bill, House Bill 3643 (H.3643), aims to close the state's primary elections, but critics argue that it ser...