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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

The Pennsylvania Charter of 1681 is Binding Law in Pennsylvania

The Pennsylvania Charter of 1681, is binding legal precedent in Pennsylvania, and cannot be abrogated by any later Pennsylvania constitution, nor by any Pennsylvania statutory law, common law, or regulatory law. The Pennsylvania Charter of 1681 provides that all laws, both civil and criminal, must be in accordance with reason, that is, they must be reasonable, and therefore cannot involve a logical contradiction, and must be rationally related to a legitimate state interest. Moreover, the Pennsylvania Charter of 1681 also provides that all laws of Pennsylvania must be consistent with the Laws of England, and cannot deny individual rights, guaranteed by the Laws of England. Since the Laws of England, as of 1681, include the individual rights guaranteed to every person, without exception, by reason of the English Bill of Rights, Magna Charta (1215), the aforesaid individual rights are guaranteed to every person by Pennsylvania Law and the Pennsylvania Constitution, that is, the Natural Individual Right that government, or any person acting under color of state law, cannot deprive any person of Life, Liberty, or Property, and cannot exile any such person, without a Jury Trial of the person's peers, under the Law of the Land, where the Law of the Land includes the legal principle that all laws of Pennsylvania must be in accordance with reason, and thus do not violate Substantive Due Process. Any person or governmental actor in Pennsylvania, who acts under the color of state law, to deprive any person of the foregoing Magna Charta individual rights, is guilty of the Federal Crime of violating 18 United States Code, Section 242, and is subject to 10 years in Federal Prison.

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