Without doubt our enemy's greatest
weapon is incredulity.
Tell Mr and Mrs Average that in
1972 the Queen abdicated and the monarchy was ended and that Parliament became
an unlawful assembly following a covert political coup by the Conservative Party
and they will not believe you, yet the evidence of this is to be seen
everywhere.
Up to 1972 when the then Conservative
government and the Queen surrendered the people's sovereignty and the supremacy
of the Crown to the European Economic Community our armed forces personnel took
an oath of allegiance to the Monarch, and through the Monarch to the British
people, which made our soldiers accountable only to the Monarch and no one
else,. Parliament had nothing to do with it and for good reason. This
arrangement insured that the Monarch, as official Governor of the nation and
Commander in Chief of the people's Armed Forces, retained the essential power to
dismiss and dissolve unlawful and despotic Parliaments.
The oath of allegiance our soldiers
took not only committed them to protecting the Monarch her heirs and successors
and so the people from their enemies it also protected them when engaged in
their duties by the limitation of the oath. An accusation against a soldier when
he or she is on active service was also an accusation against the Monarch who,
being the soldiers Commander in Chief was accountable for their
actions.
This all changed in 1972 when, under
the terms and conditions of the Treaty of Rome, the nation's sovereignty was
ended along with the supremacy of the Crown and the monarchy as the Treaty
contained no provisions for a constitutional monarchy. There can be no sovereign
head of state in a nation that is no longer sovereign and no official governor
of a nation that is no longer self governing.
Having abandoned recognition of
constitutional constraint, Parliament then presumed the position of the UK's
official administration for the European government. With the termination of the
supremacy of the Crown and the office of the monarch, Parliament also assumed
control over our armed forces, using them as political mercenary forces engaged
and acting under contracts of employment, like any other worker or work
force.
Our soldiers still take an oath of
allegiance to the monarch but it is now meaningless, as the constitutional
authority of the office of the monarch has been ended, along with the sovereign
authority of the British people who are now citizens of the EU and as such
subordinate to the EU government according to the constraints and conditions of
that citizenship.
With our soldier's oath of allegiance
now meaningless, the protection the oath afforded them has been removed, a point
it seems that did not escape the notice of Chief Justice Lord Thomas, a fully
compliant member of our now politicised judiciary. The outcome of this means
that our armed forces personnel no longer have lawful protection when engaged in
armed conflict and can therefore be held individually accountable, by any group
or nation anywhere in the world and at any time in their lives, even many years
after an alleged offence. Now that the defence of this country depends entirely
on a voluntary force one can only view the handling of this
particular unfortunate incident as a threat to that dependency, occurring as it
has at a time of irresponsible national defence cuts and growing discussions on
the building of a European defence force.
Marine Blackman is a victim of his
time. The state he bravely served is now a sham, a charade, justice, order and
accountability abandoned. The once supreme spirit of our law is now subordinate
to the letter of the law for reasons of political expediency. Those who presume
to preside in high offices still wear the robes and carry the trappings of
state, they even act out the traditional ceremonies, but all this is but
meaningless pantomime. This once great nation now resembles a last year's
Christmas tree on a June day, the false tinsel still sparkles, but the tree
beneath is dead.
Bob Lomas. The Magna Carta
Society.
“A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to fear.”
CICERO
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