Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. : Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Justice Stephen G. Breyer, Justice Samuel A. Alito, Jr., Justice Elena Kagan. Justice Clarence Thomas,
THE PATRIOT ACT II: TERRORIZING THE
AMERICAN PEOPLE http://www.prisonplanet.com/the_patriot_act_2_terrorizing_the_american_people.html
Before The “World Court Justices of The Hague”, The
International Community, and His/her Honorable Court Justice of United States
District Court for the Southern District of Texas
“Plaintiff
Emergency Application for a TRO “Gag Order” and request for ASAP protection
order hearing.
As
the story goes ...... “The Trojan Horse”
A
long time ago, there was an ancient city-state on the coast of Turkey, across
the sea from Sparta. This city-state was named Troy. At one time, Troy and the
other Greek city-states were pretty good friends. But times had changed.
The city
of Troy was protected by a high wall built around the city. Some parts of the
wall were 20 feet high! There were gates in the wall to let people in and out
but it provided great defense for the people of Troy.
It
gave the Trojan warriors a relatively safe place to stand, while they rained
arrows down on the people below, who were trying to break into the city.
The
Greek warriors had been trying to breach the wall around Troy for about ten
years. The Greeks could not find a way in, and the Trojans did not seem able to
drive the Greeks away.
Odysseus,
a Greek general, had an idea. His plan was to build a horse, a beautiful and
huge wooden horse, and leave it outside the gate. Then, the entire Greek army
would pretend to leave, as if they had finally admitted defeat.
But
the horse would be hollow. Thirty men would be hiding inside. That's what they
did.
As
the Greek warriors sailed away, the people of Troy rushed outside, cheering.
They found the horse. Fortunately, they did not try to burn the horse. They dragged
the horse inside the city gates to keep it on display, which is just what the
Greek general thought they would do - gloat.
That
night, while the Trojan people were sleeping, the men hiding inside the wooden
horse climbed out and opened the gates.
The
waiting Greek army entered Troy. That was the end of Troy.
81%
of Isis-linked suspects charged in US are American citizens
As
politicians rush to curb refugee intake, research reveals 55 of 68 people
indicted over alleged Isis ties were born in US and none came from Syria
None
of the Isis-linked suspects who have ever been charged in the United States
came from Syria and the overwhelming majority were born in the US, research
reveals.
Sixty-eight
people have been indicted because of alleged involvement in Isis, of whom 18
have been convicted, with an average sentence of 10 years three months,
according to figures published this week by Center on National Security at
Fordham University.
Yet
despite a growing political clamour over a perceived security threat posed by
an influx of Syrian refugees, the data shows that only three of those indicted
in connection with Isis was a refugee or asylum seeker; none came from Syria.
Instead
55, or 80.9%, of the individuals concerned are US citizens, including 44 who
were born in America. The rest include six born in Bosnia, four in Uzbekistan,
three in Somalia and two in Sudan. Fifty-eight are men and 10 are women. The
average age is 26 and around a third are under 21,
The
typical alleged Islamic State adherent is intent on fighting abroad rather than
plotting attacks at home, research shows.
The
center classifies more than half arrested of those and charged as “foreign
fighters/ aspirants”, around a quarter are “domestic plotters” and about
one-fifth are “facilitators”.
Through
ISIS propagandists using social media, the Islamic terrorist group has been
able to attract hundreds more supporters in the United States.
“Based
on the evidence available, the number of ISIS supporters in the United States
measures in the thousands, rather than hundreds,”
the
United States is a primary target for ISIS and that ISIS has the necessary
supporters in place and the financial means to carry out such an attack,.
The
Southern Poverty Law Center estimates that there are 190 active KKK groups with
between 5,000 and 8,000 Klan members in the U.S.
active
U.S. politicians as active Ku Klux Klan members
Feb 17, 2016 - “The year saw an apparent comeback of
Klan groups,” the organization found, with a 164% increase in the number of
active groups.
On Sunday, CNN’s Jake Tapper asked Trump whether he’d
repudiate the support of David Duke, the former Grand Wizard of the Knights of
the Ku Klux Klan, or “other white supremacists.” Trump evaded the question:
Donald Trump: Well, I have to look at the group. I
mean, I don’t know what group you’re talking about.
You wouldn’t
want me to condemn a group that I know nothing about.
I’d have to look. If you would send me a list of the
groups, I will do research on them, and certainly I would disavow if I thought
that there was something wrong.
Jake Tapper: The Ku Klux Klan…
Trump: But you may have some groups in there that are
totally fine, and it would be very unfair. So, give me a list of groups and
I’ll let you know.
Tapper: Okay, I’m just talking about David Duke and
the Ku Klux Klan here but…
Trump: Honestly, I don’t know David Duke. I don’t
believe I’ve ever met him. I’m pretty sure I didn’t meet him, and I just don’t
know anything about him.
In 2000, Trump was unambiguous about condemning the
intolerance of the Reform Party, because it “now includes a Klansman, Mr. Duke,
a neo-Nazi, Mr. Buchanan, and a communist, Ms. Fulani,” he said.
“This is not company I wish to keep.'' On Friday,
Trump was asked about Duke’s support, and replied, “I disavow him, OK?” But
somehow, by Sunday, he’d forgotten both who Duke was, and how repellent his
ideology is.
Most historians separate the Klan into three distinct
movements. The first was a terrorist insurgency that flourished after the Civil
War.
The third was active in the civil-rights era, and is
the direct progenitor of Duke’s group and other Klan factions that are still
active today.
Both of those
groups were most active in the former Confederate states, and made the violent
enforcement of inequality and segregation their primary aim. The second Klan,
though, was something else.
In the 1920s, it enrolled millions of members,
crusading for the restoration of a white, Christian, Protestant
America—targeting Catholics and Jews as well as blacks, and enjoying particular
popularity in the lower Midwest.
It even caught on in the cosmopolitan entrepôt of New
York City. In 1927, Klansmen planned their first open parade, in Jamaica,
Queens. Alerted to the plan by the editor of a Catholic paper, the police
commissioner issued an order against wearing Klan regalia. The Klan defied that
order, appearing clad in white robes and hoods in a Memorial Day parade.
It gave its versions of events in a handbill, which
read, in part:
Liberty and democracy have been trampled upon when
native born Protestant Americans dare to organize to protect one flag, the
American flag; one school, the public school; and one language,
the English language; also when they march peaceably
through the streets in honor of their forefathers.
We charge that the Roman Catholic police force did
deliberately precipitate a riot and did tear down American flags and did
unmercifully beat and club defenseless Americans who conducted themselves as
gentlemen under trying circumstances.
It’s hard not to hear echoes of this rhetoric of the
1920s in the current presidential campaign. There’s the anxiety about
immigration; the fear that white, Protestant culture is being displaced; the
rallying around patriotic symbols; the appeals to a mythic past.
Seven men were arrested by the New York police that
day, according to a New York Times report. There’s no proof that any were
Klansmen; they might’ve been bystanders, or entirely innocent. Six were
charged; one was released.
As BoingBoing
first noted, that man was listed as having the same name and address as Donald
Trump’s father: Fred Trump.
Most historians separate the Klan into three distinct
movements. The first was a terrorist insurgency that flourished after the Civil
War.
The third was active in the civil-rights era, and is
the direct progenitor of Duke’s group and other Klan factions that are still
active today. Both of those groups were most active in the former Confederate
states, and made the violent enforcement of inequality and segregation their
primary aim.
The second Klan, though, was something else. In the
1920s, it enrolled millions of members, crusading for the restoration of a
white, Christian, Protestant America—targeting Catholics and Jews as well as
blacks, and enjoying particular popularity in the lower Midwest.
It even caught on in the cosmopolitan entrepôt of New
York City. In 1927, Klansmen planned their first open parade, in Jamaica,
Queens. Alerted to the plan by the editor of a Catholic paper, the police
commissioner issued an order against wearing Klan regalia. The Klan defied that
order, appearing clad in white robes and hoods in a Memorial Day parade.
It gave its versions of events in a handbill, which
read, in part:
Liberty and democracy have been trampled upon when
native born Protestant Americans dare to organize to protect one flag, the
American flag; one school, the public school; and one language, the English
language; also when they march peaceably through the streets in honor of their
forefathers.
We charge that the Roman Catholic police force did
deliberately precipitate a riot and did tear down American flags and did
unmercifully beat and club defenseless Americans who conducted themselves as
gentlemen under trying circumstances.
It’s hard not to hear echoes of this rhetoric of the
1920s in the current presidential campaign. There’s the anxiety about
immigration; the fear that white, Protestant culture is being displaced; the
rallying around patriotic symbols; the appeals to a mythic past.
Seven men were arrested by the New York police that
day, according to a New York Times report. There’s no proof that any were
Klansmen; they might’ve been bystanders, or entirely innocent. Six were
charged; one was released.
As BoingBoing first noted, that man was listed as
having the same name and address as Donald Trump’s father: Fred Trump.
“We are seeing a galvanization of support for a
mainstream candidate. In three decades,” says Levin, “I can’t remember this
kind of support gravitating toward one candidate, except perhaps George
Wallace, maybe Pat Buchanan. But none of them was a leading candidate in his
party.” Levin adds that while Trump has been on the rise, the KKK has also
enjoyed a renaissance of sorts this past year.
The Southern
Poverty Law Center, one of the leading organizations for tracking the
activities of hate groups, warned last month that the number of KKK chapters in
the United States had grown significantly in 2015, from 72 to 190; it also
estimated that the number of Klansmen is now between some 5,000 to 8,000.
The organization has also been spotted in areas where
it had not been witnessed for many years. Levin, who has studied the group for
30 years, was surprised to hear last month that the KKK was planning a rally in
California – a state where the white robes and hoods have not been seen in a
long time.
But even though the group’s activities are on the
rise, the number of KKK members at the actual rally was less than the number of
protesters demonstrating against them.
When they appeared, the Klansmen were
attacked by protesters, and Levin himself was forced to protect one of the
extremists. “You know you’ve fallen on hard times when you need a Jewish man as
your wingman,” Levin laughs.
He says
that although the support for a leading mainstream presidential candidate by
groups such as the KKK has historic importance and mustn’t be ignored, the
immediate danger actually comes from other, more powerful organizations.
In California, for example, the real danger comes from
white supremacists, neo-Nazis and others who are unaffiliated but with similar
beliefs, Levin explains.
“I want to put
this in perspective: there are more rotary dial phones in the United States
than Klan members. We have much more danger from unaffiliated haters, skinheads,
and neo-Nazi and white supremacist criminal syndicates” says Levin, noting that
these groups are smart enough not to have rallies.
He says that
although the support for a leading mainstream presidential candidate by groups
such as the KKK has historic importance and mustn’t be ignored, the immediate
danger actually comes from other, more powerful organizations.
In California,
for example, the real danger comes from white supremacists, neo-Nazis and
others who are unaffiliated but with similar beliefs, Levin explains.
At a time when the KKK and its support for Trump is
attracting headlines, it is important also to examine the Republican
candidate’s influence on other hate groups in the United States – those who
don’t shield their delight that the New York billionaire has made statements
against minorities part of the mainstream political discourse.
Commander and Chief and High ranking official and all
upon which finally “one Donald John Trump and Donald Trump Jr. usage of both of
their foundations to hide taxes, and usage money to support the Knights of the
(KKK) and engaging in all (KKK) terrorist Legacy actives since 1865 described
herein continual onward to the dark Knight road to
Violation of United States of America 18 U.S. Code
Chapter 115 - TREASON, SEDITION, AND SUBVERSIVE ... of treason · § 2383 -
Rebellion or insurrection · § 2384 - Seditious conspiracy · § 2385 ...
Treason against the United States shall consist only
in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid
and Comfort. No Person shall be convicted of Treason unless on the Testimony of
two Witnesses to the same overt Act, or on Confession in open Court.
To Wit:
As the story goes
...... “The Donald John Trump Sr. Trojan Horse”
Running for Presidential election of (USA) and seeking
election for the position of acting “Commander in Chief” of the United States
of America with intent committed by Donald John Trump Sr. admitting being 1000%
in direction Violation of UCMJ Article 104 –
Aiding the enemy
Commander in chief over the Knights of The Klu Klux
Klansmen Chief Defendant Donald John Trump Sr. running for Presidential
election of (USA) in 2016 and seeking election for the position of acting
Commander in
Chief” of the United States of America with direct hostile intent committed by
Donald John Trump Sr. being 1000% in direction
Violation of UCMJ Article 104 – Aiding the enemy
“Trump's 'Trojan Horse' Prediction Comes True | The
American Spectator
The American Spectator
Nov 17, 2015 - As Donald Trump predicted a month ago?
... A little over a month later, a massive ISIS attack on Paris has killed 129
and wounded at least 350.
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