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this in turn gave power to the U.S. Constitution, which created the Federal Government; which<br />

has, in a sense, incorporated and gave power to the United States Government; which has turned<br />

the U.S. citizen into a subject of the U.S. Government. Therefore, the Federal Government has<br />

been able to wield its influence over the entire country, rather than just the area referred to as the<br />

District.<br />

This is possible, because, for all intents and purposes, there are two of every state. For<br />

example, the official name of Pennsylvania is the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; but to the<br />

U.S. Government, it is known as the State of Pennsylvania. There are even two state flags. One<br />

with a gold fringe, which represents the State of Pennsylvania, and martial law under the U.S.<br />

Government; and one without the fringe, which represents the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.<br />

The gold-fringed flag was reserved for use by the General of the Army, where it was present at<br />

military headquarters and displayed at court martials. Its use elsewhere, as a government battle<br />

flag, was only to be done at the discretion of the President, within his role as the Commander-in-<br />

Chief of the military, to establish the jurisdiction of the military presence. This gold-fringed flag,<br />

which is common in many public places, such as courthouses, and schools, is not the national<br />

flag which represents our constitutional republic. It is a symbol of federal government<br />

jurisdiction.<br />

When Franklin D. Roosevelt was inaugurated on March 4, 1933, he called for an emergency<br />

session of Congress on March 9th, where the Emergency Banking Relief Act (also known as the<br />

War Powers Act, which seized all the country’s constitutional gold and silver coinage) was<br />

passed, which gave FDR the power to issue any order, and do anything he felt was necessary to<br />

run the country, without restriction, by authority of the Trading with the Enemy Act of October<br />

6, 1917 (which placed all German citizens under the authority of the President, because they<br />

were enemies of the U.S.).<br />

In 1917, Chapter 106, Section 2, subdivision (c), of the Trading with the Enemy Act, defined<br />

the Enemy as someone “other than citizens of the United States…” and in 1933, according to<br />

Chapter 106, Section 5, subdivision (b), the Act designated as the Enemy “any person within the<br />

United States.”<br />

America was under the authority of an emergency war government. According to the book<br />

Constitution: Fact or Fiction by Dr. Eugene Schroder (with Micki Nellis), our Constitution was<br />

actually nullified on March 9, 1933, when President Franklin Roosevelt declared a national<br />

emergency. As recorded in Congressional Record in 1933, Rep. James Buck said: “...the<br />

doctrine of emergency is the worst. It means that when Congress declares an emergency, there is<br />

no Constitution. This means it’s dead.” Senate Report 93-549 (Senate Resolution 9, 93rd<br />

Congress, 1st Session) in 1973 said that since 1933 “the United States has been in a state of<br />

declared national emergency … A majority of the people of the United States have lived all their<br />

lives under emergency rule. For 40 years freedoms and governmental procedures guaranteed by<br />

the Constitution have, in varying degrees, been abridged by laws brought into force by states of<br />

national emergency...” The Act was never repealed after the World War II, because Roosevelt<br />

died; and Truman used the extraordinary powers he gained through the rewriting of the War<br />

Powers Act to establish the National Security infrastructure, which included the C.I.A.<br />

The “national emergency” technically ended on September 14, 1976, when the 93rd<br />

Congress passed H.R. 3884, the National Emergencies Termination Act (50 USC 1601, Public<br />

Law 94-412) in response to President Richard Nixon’s abuse of the Trading with the Enemy Act<br />

(which was part of Roosevelt’s emergency legislation). Though he had promised an end to the<br />

U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, he actually escalated the war by authorizing the secret

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