
This Part Added To Article 1.
Section 16.
The Congress shall not have the power except on Federal property and military installations, in the Territories, the Seat of the United States, and sea areas greater then twelve miles off the ocean coasts of the United States -
Clause 1. To fund, setup, regulate, control, charter, or subsidize any public function or commerce within any State or other political subdivision:
Clause 2. To fund, setup, regulate, control, charter, or subsidize any private function or commerce between private business firms, corporations, banks, farms, or any type of private economic intercourse or transactions:
Clause 3. To fund, setup, regulate, control, charter, or subsidize any public or private housing:
Clause 4. To fund, setup, regulate, control, charter, or subsidize any public or private insurance system, drugs and other medication, and medical services to include abortions:
Clause 5. To fund, setup, regulate, control, charter, or subsidize any public or private education system: nor to set national tests or standards for schools, nor to regulate or control an education curriculum for public or private school systems. But Congress may by general laws prescribe a standard manner in which education records, degrees, and education credits among the States is proved and attested:
Clause 6. To fund, regulate, control, or subsidize any public or private land to include cultivation of crops or animals, extraction of natural resources, or enforcement of any environmental and land use regulations within any State, on or below the ground, rivers, or lakes:
Clause 7. To pass any traffic laws nor regulate or interfere with travel on any public or private highway except on or near international boundaries and points of entry:
Clause 8. To regulate, alter, mandate, or modify any State's voter qualifications except that only Citizens may vote in an election:
Clause 9. To set any type of minimum or maximum wages, pay unemployment benefits, or pass any law that mandates work place or leave policy rules and regulations except for members of the Armed Forces and Federal Civil Service employees:
Clause 10. To publicly finance any political candidate or party nor place limits on any political campaign financing or political speech but a full expense accounting shall be made of all funds received and spent by candidates in their political campaigns for seats in Congress, the President, and Vice President. This shall include a list of all contributors and the amounts given to be made available for public inspection. States may by law place any limits on political campaign financing on candidates and incumbents representing them in Congress:
Clause 11. To fund or establish a retirement-pension system supported by the Treasury for any service as Representative or Senator in Congress, but any extant pensions can still be paid out but the amounts shall be no greater than half their highest pay when they were members of Congress. Any Senator or Representative who is convicted of a crime shall forfeit any right to these pensions.
Clause 12. To fund, setup, regulate, control, charter, or subsidize any type of entitlement, public relief, medical care, or welfare system.
Clause 13. To fund, setup, regulate, control, charter, or subsidize a Social Security System. In order not to burden any current Social Security recipients' pensions may continue in accordance with Social Security Administration regulations as they exist at the time of ratification of this Amendment. Any person twenty one years or younger or born on or after the date this Amendment is ratified shall not pay into the Social Security system, receive benefits (except if their parents are covered), or be assigned a Social Security number. Any person older than twenty one years of age may receive pro-rated pensions upon retirement or opt out of the Society Security System and their payments be refunded as Congress may by law provide for:
Clause 14. To levy a capital gains tax on any person's income from the sale of their lawful capital assets to include homes, farms, investments, and businesses:
Clause 15. To levy an inheritance or gift tax against a person's estate or their lawful heirs from the sale or transfer of the deceased's lawful capital assets to include homes, farms, investments, and businesses, and:
Clause 16. To levy income taxes, either earned or unearned from any legal source, except in the case of a declared war by the Congress as provided by this Constitution. If Congress does not repeal the act establishing the wartime income tax within five years after cession of hostilities, the income tax will automatically expire. The income tax shall be a flat rate so all the People are included but all active, retired, militia, and reserve military pay and allowances are exempt from all taxes.
This Part Supersedes Article 2, Section 2, Clause 2.
Clause 2. The President shall be Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces and other military reserve forces that Congress may by law provide for when in the actual service of the United States, and of the militia of the several States, when called into the actual service of the United States; the President may require the opinion, in writing, of the principle officer in each of the Executive Departments, upon any subject relating to the duties of their respective offices; and the President shall have the power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment or to pardon or grant reprieves to himself.
Clause 2a. The President shall have the power, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make treaties, provided two-thirds of the Senators present concur. The President shall nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, Judges of the Supreme Court, officers of the Armed Forces, and all other officers of the United States, whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by law; but the Congress may, by law, vest the appointment of such inferior officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in courts of law, or in the heads of Departments. If the Senate does not reject the nomination for appointed offices within twenty days (Sundays and national holidays excepted) after the President shall have presented a nomination to the Senate, the same shall be appointed, in like manner as if the Senate approved the nomination. If the Congress adjourns during the twenty days, the nomination shall be carried over to the next meeting of Congress or withdrawn by the President. All nominations shall be presented only before the full Senate and shall be voted upon only by a simple majority vote.
Clause 2b. The President shall have the power to issue and execute Executive Orders, open or secret, that do not violate this Constitution but will expire thirty days after the President leaves office.
Clause 2c. Any naturalized citizen of the United States of thirty or more years and can meet the other requirements in the Constitution shall be eligible for the offices of President and Vice President.
This Part Supersedes Article 3, Section 1, Clause 1.
Clause 1. The judicial power of the United States shall be vested in one Supreme Court, which shall consist of one Chief Justice and eight Associate Justices and in such Inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish. The judges, both of the Supreme and Inferior Courts, shall hold their offices during good behavior till seventy years of age, and shall, at stated times receive for their services a compensation which shall not be diminished during their continuance in office. The said age restriction shall not apply to any Federal Judge appointed before ratification of this Article of Amendment.
Clause 1a. If the Supreme Court or any inferior Federal court loses a majority of their members in cases of terrorism, war, or other disaster then the President shall have the power to appoint new justices as needed without the consent of the Senate for a period of ninety days. After ninety days the Senate may confirm the appointments as provided for in the Constitution or extend the time period till the judges are confirmed.
This Part Added To Article 3.
Section 4.
Clause 1. All Judges shall be independent in the exercise of their conscience and shall be bound only by this Constitution and the laws and are prohibited from practicing Judicial Activistism or ruling on social or cultural issues and invoking other concepts of non-objective law that displaces or supersedes natural, British or American Common Law.
Clause 2. Congress or any State is prohibited from requiring any Judge to follow mandatory sentencing laws.
Clause 3. A convicted person or group of persons, lawfully imprisoned for a crime shall not have the power to sue any prison authority over the conditions of their imprisonment except in a manner that Congress may by law provide for.
Clause 4. The trial of all class action lawsuits, criminal or civil, that involves two or more States shall be argued in a Federal Court as the Congress may by law direct.
Clause 5. A manufacturer, supplier, seller, or producer of any legal goods and services, including arms and ammunition, shall not be held liable for the deliberate misuse of said good or service nor if used in a crime.
Clause 6. If any court of law finds that any lawsuit is frivolous or without any merit the complaint and his lawyers may be found liable for all court and lawyer fees in whole or part.
Section 5.
The Judicial power of the United States shall not-
Clause 1. Extend to any case or controversy arising on increasing, decreasing, mandating, or changes to appropriations and taxes that Congress or the States may decide except as may be specifically authorized by legislation:
Clause 2. Override the will of the majority of the Citizens if their petition for redress of grievances, initiatives, or referendum does not violate either this or individual State Constitutions:
Clause 3. Prohibit the use or method of Capital Punishment in a State justice system. This power is reserved to the States. But the convicted person is allowed one review of the death sentence by a Federal appeals court that Congress may by law provide for. This court will either uphold the sentence or pass it on to the Supreme Court for final disposition only if there are Constitutional questions. If the appeals court or Supreme Court upholds the sentence, the State may then carry out the sentence in accordance with their laws:
Clause 4. Find any part of a State Constitution null and void unless it is a violation of this Constitution:
Clause 5. Extend to regulate, control, or prohibit the educational, religious, and moral standards of local communities:
Clause 6. Place limits on any political campaign financing or political speech, and:
Clause 7. Extend to regulate, alter, mandate, or modify any State's voter qualifications or ballots.
This Part Added To Article 4, Section 1.
Clause 2. Each State shall have the power to create its own Supreme Court and other inferior courts as provided for by their Constitution. The decision of the State Supreme Court shall be the final authority for all laws (including laws passed by the Congress) for that individual State and shall not be appealed in any Federal court unless a three-quarters majority of the United States Supreme Court agrees to directly hear the case.
This Part Supersedes the Second Article Of Amendment.
Clause 1. A well-trained militia of the People at large is necessary to the security of a free State against criminal acts, sudden foreign invasions, domestic insurrections, domestic usurpation of rulers, or other issues of public safety or security.
Clause 2. The right of a Citizen or legal immigrant over the age of eighteen to keep and bear arms (open or concealed) is an individual right and shall not be infringed or regulated by the United States, any individual State, or any political subdivision except as a punishment for a crime or mental incompliancy nor shall privately owned and lawfully used firearms be registered or tracked in any way.
Clause 3. Every person shall have the inherent right of defending the life, liberty, or property of any person using whatever force is necessary, through whatever means available, including the use of deadly force.
Clause 4. The bearing of arms may be prohibited or regulated within sensitive public enclosures such as prisons and jails, police stations, courtrooms, or other places approved by a vote of the people living within the political subdivision where same is located and safe provision is made to secure such arms before entering.
Clause 5. The bearing of arms may be prohibited or regulated on private property only by the property holder.
Clause 6. This clause voids all previous Federal, State and local statutes, laws, court decrees, executive orders and legislative acts that pertain to the keeping and bearing of arms.
This Part Supersedes the Fourth Article Of Amendment.
Section 1.
Clause 1. The right of the People to be secure in their travels, communications, records, persons, houses, businesses, papers, and effects against unreasonable electronic and other monitoring, searches, and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched or monitored, and the persons or things to be seized.
Clause 2. The burden of proving guilt on any matter; civil, tax, or criminal shall be on the Government nor shall a person be again put upon trial for the same offence after a verdict of not guilty; and the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.
Section 2.
Clause 1. The People have a right to full access to information, files, and records that any organization: private, public, or government, may keep on individuals and to file rebuttals to correct any errors or false information within. Except in the case of active, legal criminal investigations or upon valid warrants or orders issued by a court of law to release or to deny access in a manner that Congress may by law provide for, all of the following clauses shall be adhered to.
Clause 2. The information to be contained in personal records shall be obtained and personal records shall be processed fairly and held only for specified and lawful purposes. Personal records held for any purpose or purposes shall not be used or disclosed in any manner incompatible with that purpose or those purposes. Personal records held for any purpose or purposes shall be adequate, relevant, and not excessive in relation to that purpose or those purposes.
Clause 3. Personal records shall be accurate and kept up to date. Personal records held for any purpose or purposes shall not be kept longer than is necessary for that purpose or those purposes. Where appropriate, such records must be corrected or destroyed and the subject notified. A person shall be entitled to be informed by any records holder if personal records is being collected, transferred, destroyed, or held of which that person is the subject and to have access to any records held by a records user to file rebuttals to correct any errors or false information within.
Clause 4. Record keeping organizations shall insure that records will not be released to third parties without permission of the persons named and appropriate security measures shall be taken against unauthorized access to, or alteration, disclosure or destruction of, personal records and against accidental loss or destruction of personal records.
Clause 1. This Article of Amendment shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an Amendment to the Constitution by the legislatures of the several States, as provided in the Constitution upon the submission hereof to the States by the Congress.
Clause 2. The Congress shall have the power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this Article of Amendment.
Clause 3. This Article of Amendment shall take effect two years after the date of ratification.
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