There
was an article in yesterday’s SF Examiner by Christopher B. Dolan, Page
11, which was not given a URL by the newspaper. The title of the article
was “Community tells City Hall no courtrooms mean no peace”, here are
some excerpts:
“There was a rally at city hall on Wednesday; No Courts, NO Justice,
No Freedom” (led by the people that most rallies are held to object
to). “The court budget , allocated to protect the rights of 38 million
Californians is controlled by the Legislature. Therefore, one branch
can cut the other (hardly co-equal). In these times, when the courts
are needed most to protect citizens ~ the court budget has been cut
25 percent. ~ No courtroom, no justice. It is just that simple.”
As the US has learned as California goes so goes the nation!
If this spreads, or if it is allowed to stand in California, then everything
is over with. As someone pointed out yesterday since most of what the
courts are used for now is to allow corporations to sue other corporations
(because of their personhood standing); maybe now we shall all be returning
to the days of the Wild, Wild West where every person needs to
be their own judge, jury and personal-protector whenever there is any
dispute about anything that requires some kind of actual settlement?
Without an active and honest court system—then for certain there can
be no justice and no peace until the public’s legal voice is restored,
at least symbolically! This article was written by a lawyer, but I doubt
that it was legal for one branch of the three that makes possible the
existence of the Republic, to remove either of the other two without
the full consent of the public that is dependent upon all three branches
being operative. And since it was the legislature that screwed up the
budget so badly in the first place it is they who should be cut, and
not the courts.
Afterall the legislative branch has ceased speaking either for or to
the people they supposedly represent at least since the New Millennium
began. Consistently the Legislature has avoided making hard choices
(in California) choosing instead to allow public referendums to be passed
straight into law—and with all of the ballot boxes being rigged—what
we have now is anarchy by fraudulent votes of the supposed-public in
the true absence of any legislative-responsibility.
kirwanstudios@sbcglobal.net
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