By redefining Article 6 of the
US Constitution, all globlists now
have to do is ratify international
treaties that, in total, subvert the
Constitution and put all power into
their hands. As a consequence,
Americans are systematically coming
under the control of international law
and the United Nations, and flies and
suckerfish have more legal rights than
people. |
To most American citizens the Endangered
Species Act (ESA), and many other
environmental laws are a noble effort to
save species from extinction, and to
protect the environment from reckless
destruction by man. The human tragedy
caused by the ESA and other environmental
laws is rarely reported, hence most
Americans also do not realize that
hundreds of thousands of their fellow
citizens, primarily in rural areas, are
needlessly being stripped of their
livelihoods and decimated economically by
these laws as our government uses them to
nationalize their property.
The Endangered Species Act of 1973, the
granddaddy of all these anti-human US
laws, derives its authority and power from
five international treaties, the most
prominent being the Western Convention.
Section 2, paragraph (4) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973 states; "the United
States has pledged itself as a sovereign
state in the international community to
conserve to the extent practicable the
various species of fish or wildlife and
plants facing extinction, pursuant
to-
-
A.
migratory bird treaties with Canada and
Mexico;
-
B.
the Migratory and Endangered Bird Treaty
with Japan;
-
C.
the Convention on Nature
Protection and Wildlife Preservation in
the Western Hemisphere;
-
D.
the International Convention for the
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries;
-
E.
the International Convention for the
High Seas Fisheries of the North Pacific
Ocean;
-
F.
the Convention on International Trade
in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and
Flora; and
-
G.
other international agreements; and...
The ESA even extols the fact that it cedes
sovereignty to the international community
by saying its purpose is to "develop and
maintain conservation programs which meet
national and international
standards." These in turn are "key
to meeting the Nation's international
commitments." (Bold and italics
added for emphasis)
The Western Convention and
the ESA
Even if they did not know of its
existence, most Americans who live in
rural America will recognize with alarm
some of the key language in The Western
Convention because they have witnessed it
being applied in their area through the
ESA. The goal of The Western Convention is
to "protect and preserve in their
natural habitat representatives of
all species and genera of
their native flora and fauna...in
sufficient numbers and over areas
extensive enough to assure them from
becoming extinct through any
agency within man's control.... (Bolding
and italics added for emphasis)
Some citizens have even experienced the
ESA horror as it has stripped them
personally of their right to use their own
land. Under the ESA, private property can
condemned by the federal government to
create the habitat needed, or possibly
could be needed, by an endangered fly,
sucker fish or beetle, as well as more
glamorous species like the bald eagle.
The Western Convention also provides for
the establishment and total protection of
National Parks, National Reserves, Nature
Monuments and Wilderness Reserves. Within
these protected areas, Section 4 of the
Western Convention requires the host
nation, "to the maximum extent
prudent and determinable – shall...
designate any habitat of such species
which is then considered to be critical
habitat." Not surprisingly, in
language identical to the Western
Convention, Section 4 of the ESA states,
"to the maximum extent prudent and
determinable–shall...designate any habitat
of such species which is then considered
to be critical habitat." (Bold and
italics added for emphasis)
According to Article VIII of the Western
Convention, all endangered species "shall
be protected as completely as
possible, and their hunting,
killing, capturing, or taking,
shall be allowed only with the permission
of the appropriate government authorities
in the country." Not surprisingly, the
concept of full protection, critical
habitat and takings is also found in the
ESA. Under Section 9 of the ESA, it is
unlawful to "take any"
endangered "species within the United
States or the territorial sea of States,"
or "take any such species
upon the high seas."
If only National Parks, Reserves,
Monuments and wilderness areas received
this kind of protection, the treaty would
accomplish what most Americans desire.
But, it goes far beyond protecting these
political designations. Article V also
includes " the protection and preservation
of flora and fauna within their
(the nation's) national
boundaries but not included in the
national parks, national reserves, nature
monuments, or strict wilderness
reserves.... (bold and italics
added for emphasis)
Hence all land, public and private
is under the jurisdiction of this UN
treaty through the ESA.
The usurpation of the US
Constitution
The UN-administered Western Convention has
provided the hammer for denying landowners
of their property rights in the US by
superceding the Fifth Amendment of the US
Constitution:
....No person shall be deprived of life,
liberty, or property,
without due process of law; nor
shall private property be taken for public
use, without just compensation.
(bold and italics added for emphasis)
Most if not all of US environmental
natural resource laws have their authority
derived from Article VI of the US
Constitution, not Article I that defines
the eighteen enumerated powers of
Congress. Article 1, Section 8 of the
United States Constitution states:
Congress shall have power to:
-
Collect Taxes and
Duties
-
Borrow Money
-
Regulate Commerce
-
Naturalize Citizens
-
Coin Money
-
Punishment of
Counterfeiting
-
Build Post Offices &
Post Roads
-
Promote Inventions
-
Constitute Lower
Courts
-
Punish High Seas
Offences
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-
Declare War
-
Raise an Army
-
Provide a Navy
-
Make Rules for
Military
-
Call Militia and
Suppress Insurrections & Invasions
-
Organize and Arm
Militia
-
District of Columbia
-
To Make All Laws for
Above Powers, and Powers
Vested by the Constitution
|
According to the US Constitution, Congress
has no power to legislate anything
other than in the eighteen areas listed
above, and none of those allow Congress to
pass environmental law, except number 18,
which is defined in Article VI, Clause 2:
This Constitution,
and the Laws of the United States which
shall be made in Pursuance thereof;
and all Treaties made, or which shall be
made, under the Authority of the United
States, shall be the supreme Law
of the Land; and the Judges in
every State shall be bound thereby, any
Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any
State to the Contrary notwithstanding.
(Bold and italics added for emphasis)
As it was originally written, the
Constitution was the supreme law of the
land. The laws of the United States had to
be "in pursuance thereof," or subservient
to the Constitution. Likewise, treaties
could only be made "under the Authority of
the United States." Since the authority of
the United States comes from the sovereign
people who delegated it to the US
Constitution, treaties also had to be
subservient to it.
Although the founders thought it obvious
and therefore did not include it in the
original US Constitution, the sovereignty
of the people was spelled out in the first
ten amendments to the Constitution. For
instance, Amendment IX states, "The
enumeration in the Constitution, of
certain rights, shall not be construed
to deny or disparage others retained by
the people." Just to make sure
future courts understood this, Amendment X
states, "The powers not delegated to the
United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are
reserved to the States respectively,
or to the people. It was the
people's ironclad contract that they would
never become serfs to the state. (Bold and
italics added for emphasis)
Needless to say, the US Constitution
stopped the globalists from implementing
their one-world plan dead in their
tracts. They knew that something had to be
done to override the sovereignty of the
individual. In the case of property rights
and natural resources, international
treaties were used. The Constitution began
to be reinterpreted in the case Missouri
vs. Holland 252 U.S. 416, 40 S. Ct. 3822,
64 L.Ed 641 (1920). In that decision the
US Supreme Court held that the federal
government may preempt state control over
wildlife under federal legislation
implementing the Migratory Bird Treaty. By
putting liberal and corrupt judges into
lower courts and the Supreme Court,
Article 6.2 of the Constitution was
gradually reinterpreted to mean:
...all Treaties made, or which shall
be made, under the Authority of
the United States, shall be the
supreme Law of the Land...
Such an interpretation fits perfectly
within the globalist’s agenda. By
redefining Article 6 of the US
Constitution, all globlists now have to do
is ratify international treaties that, in
total, subvert the Constitution and put
all power into their hands. As a
consequence, Americans are systematically
coming under the control of international
law and the United Nations, and flies and
suckerfish have more legal rights than
people.
"Although
they claimed to be wise, they became fools
and exchanged the glory of the immortal
God for images made to look like mortal
man and birds and animals and reptiles."
(Romans 1:22-23)
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