"federal officers"
2 episodes tagged with this keyword
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The host discussed two landmark Supreme Court cases from the 1890s—Nagel in Re (1890) and Debs in Re (1895)—that established federal authority for officers to act under presidential constitutional prerogatives and to protect federal interests in interstate commerce. He argued these decisions created legal precedent allowing federal officers to kill American citizens with immunity from state prosecution, predating the War Powers Act by decades. The host connected this historical legal framework to modern examples like Ruby Ridge and criticized the expansion of federal power over state sovereignty.
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Mark Koernke discussed the financial enslavement of Americans through fraudulent bond schemes and straw man contracts, explaining how the government uses citizens as collateral for international banking operations. He covered the October 2008 bailout bill, its hidden provisions including mental health legislation, and the unconstitutional nature of martial law declared during congressional proceedings. Guest Dave from New York presented extensive U.S. Code citations demonstrating that all federal officers are technically United Nations employees bound by international law rather than the Constitution, and explained how courts use competency declarations as a modern equivalent of Soviet commissar tactics to disarm citizens.