> -----Original Message-----
> From: APFN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: APFN ONELIST <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; GetUSoutoftheUN
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: WEBMASTER <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Thursday, November 04, 1999 2:27 AM
> Subject: The State Legislatures sanctioned and approved World Government
>
>
> >From: Joyce Rosenwald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >
> >1943-1945
> >
> >     The State Legislatures sanctioned and approved World Government
> >during the period of 1940 to 1949 three times.  During the period 1940 to
> >1945, the State Legislatures sanctioned and approved the United Nations
> >organization before ratification by the President and Senate on July 28,
> >1945.  The American people were not aware of this legislation as it was
> >never intended to be publicized to any extent.  Further, the people were
> >never afforded an opportunity to vote on this legislation.
> >     The United Nations Organization Resolution was presented to the
> >legislatures during the years 1940 to 1945.  It is to be noted that there
> >were three instruments.  This caused confusion and misunderstanding by
> >the people, because the World Government Resolution has been repealed by
> >almost all the states.  However, the United Nations Resolution and the
> >World Federalist Resolution are still on the books.  (Check the records
> >of your legislature for these resolutions.)
> >     In effect, the State Legislatures ratified the United Nations
> >Organization
> >and World Government.  By doing so, they repealed, set aside, supplanted
> >and substituted the Constitution and Government of these United States
> >with the United Nations Charter and the United Nations Organization.
> >     Below is a copy of the document providing for a declaration of the
> >Federation of the World approved by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in
> >1943.
> >
> >HISTORY OF SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS
> >(COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA)
> >
> >SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
> >Serial No. 113. (Not printed). Legislative Journal page 711.
> >By Messrs.  FARRELL, CARR and WOODRING
> >PROVIDING FOR A DECLARATION OF THE FEDERATION OF THE WORLD
> >
> >In the senate, March 9, 1943.
> >
> >WHEREAS, it is necessary at the present juncture of human affairs to
> >enlarge the bases of organized society by establishing a government for
> >the community of nations. In order to preserve civilization and enable
> >mankind to live in peace and be free, the following principles and
> >objectives are hereby  enunciated in
> >
> >THE DECLARATION OF THE FEDERATION OF THE WORLD
> >
> >Man,  the source of all political authority, is  a manifold political
> >being. He is a citizen  of several communities: the city, the state  the
> >nation and the world. To each of these communities, he owes inalienable
> >obligations and from each he receives enduring benefits.
> >
> >Communities  may exist for a time without being incorporated but under
> >the stress of adversity, they disintegrate unless legally organized.
> >Slowly but purposefully through the centuries,  civilization has united
> >the world, integrating its diverse local interests and creating an
> >international community that now embraces every region and every person
> >on the globe. This community has no government,  and communities
> >without governments  perish.  Either this community must succumb to
> >anarchy or submit to the restraints of law and order.
> >
> >Governments can only be established through the deliberate efforts of
> >men.At this hour two elemental forces are struggling to organize the
> >international community:  totalitarianism  and democracy. The former, a
> >recent version of  repudiated  militarism and tyranny,   is predicated
> >upon the principle of compulsion, rules through  dictatorship and
> >enslaves men;  the latter, a proved  bulwark of the rights of man as
> >human being and as a citizen, drives its authority from the consent of
> >the governed, embodies the will of free men and  renders their
> >collective judgements supreme in human affairs. The corner stone of
> >totalitarianism is the ethnographic state,  whose restricted interests
> >define the scope of its favor; the foundation of democracy is man
> >whose integrity is inviolable and whose welfare is its primary concern.
> >The motivating power of  the former violence; of the latter freedom.  One
> >feeds upon unscrupulous ambition; the other upon an enlightened sense
> >of obligation.
> >
> >One or the other of these forces will now triumph and govern mankind.
> >The present conflict is irrepressible and decisive. It is the challenge
> >of the ages to the generation of today, and represents those spiritually
> >cosmic forces which visit the world at critical periods in human history
> >to shape the destinies of men. This world cannot remain half-slave,
> >half-free; half totalitarian, half democratic. The laws of civilized
> >society prevent intercourse between slaves and free men from being
> >either congenial or profitable. If totalitarianism wins this conflict,
> >the world will be ruled by tyrants, and individuals will be slaves. If
> >democracy wins, the nations of the earth will be united in a
> >commonwealth of free peoples,  and individuals, wherever found, will be
> >the sovereign units of the new world order.
> >
> >Man has struggled from time immemorial to endow the individual with
> >certain fundamental rights whose very existence is now imperiled. Among
> >those rights is man's freedom to worship, speak, write, assemble and
> >vote without arbitrary interference. To safeguard these liberties as a
> >heritage for the human race, governments were instituted among men with
> >constitutional guarantees against despotic exercise of political
> >authority, such as are provided by elected parliaments, trial by jury,
> >habeas corpus and due process of law. Man must now either consolidate
> >his historic rights or lose them for generations to come.
> >
> >The ceaseless changes wrought in human society by science, industry, and
> >economics, as well as by the spiritual, social and intellectual forces
> >which impregnate all cultures, make political and geographical isolation
> >of nations hereafter impossible. The organic life of the human race is
> >at last indissolubly unified and can never be severed, but it must be
> >politically ordained and made subject to law. Only a government capable
> >of discharging all the functions of sovereignty in the executive,
> >legislative, and judicial spheres can accomplish such a task.
> >Civilization now requires  laws in the place of treaties, as instruments
> >to regulate commerce between peoples. The intricate conditions of modern
> >life have rendered treaties ineffectual and obsolete and made laws
> >essential and inevitable. The age of treaties is dead; the age of laws
> >is here.
> >
> >Governments, limited in their jurisdiction to local geographical areas,
> >can no longer satisfy the needs or fulfill the obligations of the human
> >race. Just as feudalism served its purpose in human history and was
> >superceeded by nationalism, so has nationalism reached its apogee in
> >this generation and yielded its hegemony in the body politic to
> >internationalism. The first duty of government is to protect life and
> >property, and when governments cease to perform this function, they
> >capitulate on the fundamental principle of their raison d'etre.
> >Nationalism, moreover, is no longer able to preserve the political
> >independence or the territorial integrity of nations, as recent history
> >so tragically confirms. Sovereignty is an ideological concept without
> >geographical barriers. It is better for the world to be ruled by an
> >international sovereignty of reason, social justice and peace than by
> >diverse national sovereignties organically incapable of preventing their
> >own dissolution by conquest. Mankind must pool its resources of defense
> >if civilization is to endure.
> >
> >History has revealed but one principle by which free peoples, inhabiting
> >extensive territories, can unite under one government without impairing
> >their local autonomy. That principle is federation, whose virtue
> >preserves the whole without destroying its parts and strengthens its
> >parts without jeopardizing the whole. Federation vitalizes all nations
> >by endowing them with security and freedom to develop their respective
> >cultures without menace of foreign domination. It regards as sacrosanct
> >man's personality, his rights as an individual and as a citizen and his
> >role as a partner with all other men in the common enterprise of
> >building civilization for the benefit of mankind. It suppresses the
> >crime of war by reducing to the ultimate minimum the possibility of its
> >occurrence. It renders unnecessary the further paralyzing expenditure of
> >wealth for belligerent activity, and cancels through the ages the
> >mortgages of war against the fortunes and services of men. It releases
> >the full energies, intelligence, and assets of society for creative,
> >ameliorative and redemptive work on behalf of humanity. It recognizes
> >man's morning vision of his destiny as an authentic potentiality. It
> >apprehends the entire human race as one family, human beings everywhere
> >as brothers and  nations as component parts of an indivisible community.
> >
> >There is no alternative to the federation of all nations except endless
> >war. No substitute for The Federation of the World can organize the
> >international community on the basis of freedom and permanent peace. Even
> >if continental, regional or ideological federations were attempted,
> >the governments of these federations, in an effort to make impregnable
> >their separate defenses, would be obliged to maintain stupendously
> >competitive armies and navies, thereby condemning humanity indefinitely
> >to  exhaustive taxation, compulsory military service and ultimate
> >carnage,
> >which history reveals to be not only criminally futile but positively
> >avoidable
> >through judicious foresight in federating all nations.  No nation would
> >be
> >excluded from membership in The Federation of the World that is willing
> >to suppress its military, naval and air forces, retaining only a
> >constabulary sufficient to police its territory and to maintain order
> >within its jurisdiction, provided that the eligible voters of the nation
> >are permitted the free expression of their opinions at the polls.
> >
> >It Being Our Profound Conviction:
> >
> >That man should be forever free and that his historic rights as an
> >individual and as a citizen should be protected by all the safeguards of
> >political wisdom and experience.
> >
> >That governments are essential to the existence of communities and that
> >the absence of government is anarchy.
> >
> >That there exists an international community, encompassing the entire
> >world, which has no government and which is destined, as a consequence
> >of the present war, either to be ruthlessly dominated and exploited by
> >totalitarianism or to be federated by democracy upon the principle of
> >freedom for all nations and individuals.
> >
> >That all human beings are citizens of this world community, which
> >requires laws and not treaties for its government.
> >
> >That the present conflict will determine the survival of free
> >institutions throughout the world, and that it is morally incumbent upon
> >this generation, as one of the declared objectives of the current war,
> >to federate the nations, in order to make secure, and hereafter
> >unchallenged, freedom for all peoples everywhere, and in order to impart
> >to those who are called to give their lives and fortunes for the triumph
> >of democracy the positive assurance of the incorruptible utility of
> >their sacrifice.
> >
> >That World Federation is the keystone in the arch of civilization,
> >humanity's charter of liberty for all peoples and the signet
> >authenticating at last the union of the nations in freedom and peace.
> >
> >That the universal ordeal, through which mankind is now passing, marks
> >the birth of a new epoch that will affirm for all time the
> >indestructible solidarity of civilization and the advising unity of the
> >human race.
> >
> >That there are supreme moments in history when nations are summoned as
> >trustees of civilization, to defend the heritage of the ages and to
> >create institutions essential for human progress. In the Providence of
> >God, such a crisis is this hour, compelling in duty and unprecedented in
> >responsibility----a fateful moment when men meet destiny for the
> >fulfillment of historic tasks.
> >
> >Now, therefor, Be I resolved by the Senate, the House of Representatives
> >concurring:
> >
> >Section 1. That the General Assembly of Pennsylvania does hereby
> >solemnly declare that all peoples of the earth should now be united in a
> >commonwealth of nations to be known as The Federation of the World, and
> >to that end it hereby endorses. The Declaration of the World as is
> >specifically set forth in the preamble hereof, and makes said
> >Declaration a part of the Resolution in the same manner as if it were
> >recited herein, and requests the Senators and Members of the House of
> >Representatives in Congress from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to
> >support and vote for a Resolution in the Congress of the United States,
> >approving the principle of World Federation and requesting the President
> >of the United States to initiate procedure necessary to formulate a
> >Constitution for The Federation of the World, which shall be submitted
> >to each nation for its ratification.
> >
> >Section 2. That a copy of this Resolution be sent to each of the
> >Members of the House of Representatives in Congress from the
> >Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
> >
> > Section 3. That this Resolution shall be in full force and effect after
> >its ratification.
> >
> >Referred to Committee on Federal Relations, March 9.
> >
> >SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
> >
> >Serial No. 114. (Not printed) . Legislative Journal page 759
> >
> >By Mr. Kephart.
> >
> >MEMORIALIZING PRESIDENT AND CONGRESS TO
> >DEFER ACTION INVOLVING SOVEREIGNTY OF
> >UNITED STATES UNTIL RETURN
> >OF ARMED FORCES
> >
> >In the Senate, March 10, 1943
> >
> >Whereas, A strong and wholly commendable sentiment exists throughout the
> >Nation in favor of the development of a plan or plans for international
> >organization, or at least cooperation, to the end that any nation or
> >combination of nations may hereafter be prevented from imposing its will
> >by force and in violation of law, right and justice upon any other
> >nation or group of nations; and
> >
> >Whereas, The participation of the United States in any such plan, if
> >such plan is to be effective, will necessarily involve a modification or
> >impairment of our national sovereignty and independence; and
> >
> >Whereas, Any such modification or impairment of our national sovereignty
> >and independence must be accomplished only by the President of the
> >United States by and with the advice and consent of two-thirds of the
> >Senate, as provided by Article II, Section two of the Constitution of
> >the United States; and
> >
> >Whereas, Approximately one-fourth of the voting constituents of the
> >aforesaid President and of the members of the Senate are now, or shortly
> >will be, engaged in serving their country in the armed forces, and
> >therefore prevented from expressing any views or exerting any influence
> >of a political nature concerning the interests of both themselves and
> >the Nation for which they are fighting: therefor be it
> >
> >Resolved, ( if the House of Representatives concurs) That the General
> >Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, through its duly
> >constituted officers, hereby memorializes the President of the United
> >States, the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
> >Representatives, and the members of Congress from Pennsylvania that
> >the participation of   the United States in any plan, conference, treaty,
> >or
> >ther action involving any modification or impairment of  the national
> >sovereignty or independence of the United States shall be deferred and
> >postponed until such time as at least two-thirds of the citizens of the
> >United States serving in its armed forces at the conclusion of the
> >current hostilities shall have been returned to their homes, released
> >from such service, and restored to a position to assert their proper
> >voice and influence in the political affairs of their country.........
> >
> >The war ended in 1945, the same year the United Nations Charter was
> >adopted by the United States of America. The war ended in 1945, the same
> >year the plan to destroy the sovereignty of this nation began. How
> >ironic, that while ordinary American  men and women were fighting and
> >dying to preserve liberty and freedom for the world, our illustrious
> >elected public servants chose to stay at home, and within the protection
> >of the hallowed halls of government, proudly voted to give this nations
> >sovereignty away.
> >
> >> For information on what YOU can do to help stop the United Nations
> >> from imposing a one world government on America, click on the
> >> following
> >>
> >> http://www.vvm.com/~ctomlin/a73.htm
> >>
> >> ******************************
> >>
> >> Rev. "Curt" Tomlin
> >> President
> >> The Christian Alert Network,Inc.
> >> POB 11746
> >> Killeen, Tx 76547-1746
> >> Ph: 254-628-7043
> >> Fax: 254-628-7894
> >> EMail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >> Web Site: http://www.vvm.com/~ctomlin
> >
> >
>
>






Reply via email to