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IN A VIRTUAL STATE OF WAR
IS FDR'S EMERGENCY PLAN STILL IN PLACE?

By: Chuck Morse
The "National Emergency" legislation, passed through Congress in the first
100 days of the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration, 1933, under the guise
of dealing with the economic depression, set in motion the continuing
transfer of the sovereign rights of the American citizen and the States to
the Federal government in Washington D.C. It is from this legislation that
the Feds derive much of their power over such areas as education, health,
welfare, civil rights, the environment, and an ever-expanding infringement
into the overall freedoms and personal rights of the citizenry. Understanding
this legislation opens the door to the mystery of Federal expansion and why
we the people feel helpless in its wake.

The "national emergency" technically ended on September 14, 1976, 43 years
after it’s enactment and 31 years after the end of World War II, when
Congress passed H.R. 3884, the National Emergencies Act (50 USC 1601), Public
Law 94-412. President Roosevelt had promised the American people that the
emergency would be ended at the conclusion of World War II but he died in
office before that time. President Harry S. Truman retained the extraordinary
powers granted under the re-writing of the War Powers Act and, under it’s
guise, established much of what is known as the National Security structure
which includes, among other agencies, a permanent CIA.

The "national emergency" was ended by the 93rd Congress as a response to
actions by President Richard M. Nixon. Less than three months after taking
office, Nixon, who had promised to end US involvement in Vietnam during his
campaign, escalated the war by authorizing the secret bombing of Cambodia.
After the New York Times broke the story, May 9, 1969, Congress responded by
repealing the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which had been the vehicle by which
President Lyndon B. Johnson had launched the US Vietnam offensive in 1965.

Nixon responded by claiming authority for his Vietnam policy under the
Trading With the Enemy Act, which was part of Roosevelt’s emergency
legislation. Congress threatened, in response, to cut off all funding. Nixon
backed down temporarily by stopping the bombing of Cambodia and hastily
withdrawing troops which served to destabilize the Vietnam situation.

Nixon would again antagonize Congress when, on August 15, 1971, he would
issue Presidential Proclamation 4074 which would impose a surcharge on
imports and devalue the dollar. This would be based on Section 5(b) of the
Trading With the Enemies Act declaring a "national emergency." On December
12, 1972, under the authority of the Trading With the Enemies Act, Nixon
would order American B-52’s to drop over 36,000 tons of bombs over Haiphong
and Hanoi.

Congress, in response to what it viewed as Nixon’s abuse of power and in the
atmosphere of the Watergate scandal with an unraveling presidency, appointed
a special committee, headed by Sen. Frank Church (D-ID) called the "Special
Committee on the Termination of the National Emergency" with hearings
beginning July, 1973.

On September 14, 1976, Congress would formally repeal the emergency
legislation. This was a classic example of sleight of hand. In fact, Congress
exempted all laws, based on the emergency of 1933 that were already in place.
Rather than being based on the authority of the President under a "national
emergency" these federal laws would now be codified as a permanent part of
the U.S. Federal Code. Included among the codified laws would be Section 5(b)
of the Trading With the Enemies Act, which classifies the American citizen as
an enemy of the government.

Our Federal government does, at times, seem to be in a state of war with the
American citizen. The American conception of citizenship, articulated by the
founding fathers and codified by the Constitution of the United States, is
that all sovereign powers are retained by the citizen and by the respective
States with a limited, proscribed grant of power given to the Federal
government. Since 1933, and the New Deal of FDR, our Federal government has
been in a virtual state of war with these concepts, with the Constitution,
and with we the people.


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