Why should a voluntary assembly of people be any more than just that? What legal or official status does it need? What power? If the assembled decide to act in unison and cause some societal change, then they have made their own power.
Does the Constitution give us our rights or do we have unalienable rights and the Constitution limits the power of government?
Cletus wanted to empower the Federal government to decertify all unions. Is that a power you want the Feds to have?
Why should a voluntary assembly of people be any more than just that? What legal or official status does it need? What power? If the assembled decide to act in unison and cause some societal change, then they have made their own power.
You get it. It is really not that complicated, is it?
“Extremism in defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation in pursuit of justice is no virtue.” - Barry Goldwater
Does the Constitution give us our rights or do we have unalienable rights and the Constitution limits the power of government?
The Constitution recognizes rights and is a contract for governance that does so as well.
Originally Posted by Max Rockatansky
Cletus wanted to empower the Federal government to decertify all unions. Is that a power you want the Feds to have?
Do unions have a need for government certification? Why?
"An army, great in space, may offer opposition in a brief span of time.
One man, brief in space, must spread his opposition
across a period of many years if he is
to have a chance of succeeding"
~RZ67~