The Talking Clock is an opinion based, independently authored, small 'c' conservative, libertarian blog.

"The laws of England are the birthright of the people thereof; and all the kings and queens, who shall ascend the throne of this realm, ought to administer the government of the same according to the said laws; and all their officers and ministers ought to serve them respectively, according to the same."
Act of Settlement, 1700/01

"And I do declare that no foreign prince, person, prelate, state or potentate hath or ought to have any
jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm."

Bill of Rights, 1689
- an important and still exisiting part of OUR both written and unwritten English constitution

Friday, 3 December 2010

Thought for the day... law and order edition

Some of the most clicked links out of this blog are to those websites outlining the constitutional and treason laws of this country.

Yes, we're talking:

Bill Of Rights 1689
Habeas Corpus
Magna Carta
Treason Felony Act

People want to READ what these say (and the fact that they CAN read them puts an end to the myth that we don't have a written constitution).

Now, we KNOW that our Government is breaching our constitutional law in being part of the European Empire and we KNOW that those who have signed treaties with the European Empire have committed the high crime of treason.

We also know that the European Empire breaches it's own laws and rules - the recent bailouts being a good example.

How can the political class and the elites expect the public to be law abiding if they flagrantly breach some of the most important laws in the land with such gay abandon... and for the purposes of feathering their own nests.

To reduce crime and rid the country of lawlessness, the law enforcement folk ought to start at the top... by arresting every former cabinet minister since 1971 on suspicion of treason and sedition, for a start.

And we do not need to even START considering what would have happened to a member of the public if they had committed wholesale fraud on the scale that we saw with the expenses scandal.

If the 'state' wants databases and naked body scanners and all the rest of it...

...they could start with themselves and the whole of Parliament.

Until then, they really ought to leave the people alone.

Otherwise, the people might - quite reasonably - conclude that we're governed by corrupt and criminal scoundrels.

What... and you expect man on the street to be better?

Quite difficult to be worse, frankly.

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