THE SECRET RIDDLE OF THE 1st AMENDMENT
THE SECRET RIDDLE OF THE 1st AMENDMENT
Without the recollection of history our rights are a contemporary enigma.
For the same reason, future archeologists will scratch their heads wondering why we kept red cylinders full of orange baking soda all over the place.
Back in the hot summer of 1791 delegates were sent to Independence hall in Philadelphia to craft and vote on our Bill of Rights as Americans. They locked themselves inside and kept the windows shut so no one could spy on them and the British could not throw a firebomb in.
Each amendment was kept short and sweet so that they were clear.
Delegates from each of the 13 new countries of the Federation had to get authorization from their respective state legislatures to approve the amendments verbatim. In these days with no telephones that meant they had to saddle up and go home to their states in order to convey the exact words to their legislatures.
That is why they kept the amendments short and on only one topic. It is not like today where they pass an omnibus spending bill that funds the military and has little sneaky clauses about Salmon breeding or lesbian weight gain studies.
But if you study these amendments carefully you will notice something odd.
The 2nd amendment is one sentence long. It refers to 2 things: guns and militia.
The 3rd amendment is one sentence long and refers to only the housing of soldiers in your house.
The 4th amendment is one sentence long and refers to the limits of searches.
The 5th is one sentence and outlines the procedure for a criminal indictment.
Do you see the pattern?
They are all one sentence long.
And they are all about one subject each.
[BTW - ONE sentence! A child could memorize them. Why didn't they teach you to memorize your rights in all 12 years of school?]
They do not deviate from the issue and they cover all aspects of it with iron clad terms like “shall” -not suggestions -nor any wiggle room whatsoever (unless you are really imaginative).
But the very first amendment is different.
It is one sentence but it seems to cover religion, freedom of speech, use of (the sole cutting-edge mass media technology) the printing press, the right to be in groups, and the right to simply ask the Federal government to notice bad decisions.
[That last part sounds a little squishy but I won’t go into that.]
The startling part is that all these issues should have their own amendment. How much negotiation and horse riding back and forth to the Carolinas would it take to get all these issues straight and compiled into one sentence? Why would they do that?
The answer is: you can’t understand the Constitution without the Declaration of Independence. The declaration is the litany of reasons for the violent revolt. The constitution is the litany of solutions.
All these 1st amendment issues are there for one purpose –to permanently fix one grievance only. The Right to Home Bible Studies.
Sounds insane right?
Yes, it does to us today. But I am not exaggerating when I say that home Bible studies are the most powerful tools of resisting tyrannical mind control ever devised. Granted, they don’t have to be actual Bible studies but they were back in 1776 and keeping prayer and Biblical wisdom in your conversation never ever hurts.
The Bible Study can be simply an excuse to meet up. You could be organizing a revolution. But as long as you are carrying a Bible they can’t stop you. And what can be more of a peaceable assembly than a Bible Study?
You need 3 of the 5 clauses in the 1st to have a private Bible study. But if you have all 5 you have available a dynamic network of #AdultEgoState humans that can accomplish anything.
Keep in mind that they were all Adults back then. Even the children thought like adults.
Most people do not realize that the Church of England is an exact copy of the Roman Catholic cult -the only difference is that the pope of the cult of England is the king.
Both of these “churches” are mind control centers for tyranny. Truly Marx, who lived in Lutheran Germany, was correct when he said that (hypocritical Christianity run by a king) is the opium of the people. He saw Judaism up close and he saw Churchianity up close and hated them both. Marx knew a lot about control mechanisms.
Bible studies were probably the big thing for revolutionaries in 1776.
We can assume the big church/state religions hated them.
In times of peace they were excellent excuses to visit friends.
In times of oppression they were useful ways to organize your revolt.
But since they were private the government never knew which time it was… and that is what made Bible Studies dangerous and worthy of their own amendment.
Notice how the Covid psyop was directed at private meetings and travel.
But there is something more important that must be addressed here.
It can save America even now at this late hour and our enemies know it.
Conclusion: