Sinning in Haste, Repenting at Leisure: Standard Government Procedure May 31, 2011

by Will

Will Grigg?s Liberty Minute

May 31, 2011

In 1942, FDR?s Solicitor General Charles Fahy concealed an official intelligence report concluding that there was no evidence of espionage or widespread disloyalty among Japanese-Americans.

Fahy chose to perjure himself before the Supreme Court by describing the mass internment as a ?military necessity.? As a result, 120,000 innocent people were imprisoned, and their property stolen from them.

Fahy?s crime was recently uncovered by Fahy?s most recent successor, acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal. It?s difficult to believe that he is the first who held the post in the interim who became aware of Fahy?s deception ? yet it has taken nearly seven decades for the truth to emerge.

Major Neil Franklin, a retired 30-year police officer and director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, has an opportunity to make more immediate redress. In a dramatic speech, Franklin denounced the corrupt fraud called the ?War on Drugs,? and asked forgiveness for the role he had played in the assault on the Bill of Rights. Franklin insists that many active police officers share his views; hopefully he will help mobilize them to bring an end to this ongoing atrocity.

Let us take back the liberty wherewith Christ has made us free.

No feedback yet