Great article. To add also that the problem for Germany is that China is its biggest market so it’s caught between a rock and a hard place too. In terms of Brexit, I’d imagine Bozo the Clown is bought and paid for and will do a good song and dance about sounding tough but will ultimately sell us down the river to the EU unless there is a coup. I.e. this talking tough by Bozo is simply theatre to reassurance the British public and hoodwink them into thinking they’re getting a good deal. Unfortunately for him, you cannot polish a turrrrkey which will just empower the current claims being brought against the government under common law. If that gains traction, it will be set a precedent, which will mean that the UK being part of the EU was illegal under our laws all along, thus we are bound by nothing.
The law – “Jus” in Latin – has a force which is also etheric, as has been discussed occasionally on the website. It is my H.O. speculation that the current phase, with the issue of patently illegitimate orders, ordinances, decrees etc. both in Europe and in Common Law countries, is actually stimulating the usually slow “body of the law” into action. Europe and America are seeing a tidal wave of lawsuits against the various grotesque and harmful measures based on rickety foundations. I am not a lawyer so I am not tooting my own horn. But the law, with all its contradictions, faults and changes (just like human beings), and seen as an intergenerational custodian of corporate power and expertise, may turn out to be a surprisingly important factor in the coming years.
Speaking from only a small amount of legal/paralegal studies, and addressing the U.S. situation, I think it comes down to three things:
– Who the judge is (a person of character or not; a political activist or not)
– Whether the country has relinquished judicial sovereignty over the matter (e.g., did it sign something like the Trans-Pacific Partnership and transfer jurisdiction to some supranational corporate monstrosity?)
– Enforcement (how it’s enforced and whether it’s enforced at all in your locality)
Moral of the story: push for (or elect) judges with integrity, keep your sovereignty at all costs, and know your sheriff!
I love this quote, says it all.
“ our European betters. They’ve reduced us to a bunch of poo-flinging monkeys screaming at each other behind masks sinking into inter-sectional madness.”
Tom is an excellent “Bad Boy” and his unsentimental analysis’s are uncomfortably believable. Check him out on http://www.tomluongo.me where he blogs weekly.
Great article. To add also that the problem for Germany is that China is its biggest market so it’s caught between a rock and a hard place too. In terms of Brexit, I’d imagine Bozo the Clown is bought and paid for and will do a good song and dance about sounding tough but will ultimately sell us down the river to the EU unless there is a coup. I.e. this talking tough by Bozo is simply theatre to reassurance the British public and hoodwink them into thinking they’re getting a good deal. Unfortunately for him, you cannot polish a turrrrkey which will just empower the current claims being brought against the government under common law. If that gains traction, it will be set a precedent, which will mean that the UK being part of the EU was illegal under our laws all along, thus we are bound by nothing.
…well, that’s the Bojo I remember…
Worst PM in living history and Treason May was a tough act to follow.
The law – “Jus” in Latin – has a force which is also etheric, as has been discussed occasionally on the website. It is my H.O. speculation that the current phase, with the issue of patently illegitimate orders, ordinances, decrees etc. both in Europe and in Common Law countries, is actually stimulating the usually slow “body of the law” into action. Europe and America are seeing a tidal wave of lawsuits against the various grotesque and harmful measures based on rickety foundations. I am not a lawyer so I am not tooting my own horn. But the law, with all its contradictions, faults and changes (just like human beings), and seen as an intergenerational custodian of corporate power and expertise, may turn out to be a surprisingly important factor in the coming years.
“Though the mills of God grind slowly, yet they grind exceeding small;
Though with patience He stands waiting, with exactness grinds He all.”
― Henry Wadsworth Longellow (“Retribution”, Poetic Aphorisms, 1846)
Speaking from only a small amount of legal/paralegal studies, and addressing the U.S. situation, I think it comes down to three things:
– Who the judge is (a person of character or not; a political activist or not)
– Whether the country has relinquished judicial sovereignty over the matter (e.g., did it sign something like the Trans-Pacific Partnership and transfer jurisdiction to some supranational corporate monstrosity?)
– Enforcement (how it’s enforced and whether it’s enforced at all in your locality)
Moral of the story: push for (or elect) judges with integrity, keep your sovereignty at all costs, and know your sheriff!
I love this quote, says it all.
“ our European betters. They’ve reduced us to a bunch of poo-flinging monkeys screaming at each other behind masks sinking into inter-sectional madness.”
Tom is an excellent “Bad Boy” and his unsentimental analysis’s are uncomfortably believable. Check him out on http://www.tomluongo.me where he blogs weekly.
Katie B, Billy Bob, TSC, thank you for your engaging contributions to this discussion.
Thanks for posting the article.