Editor’s Note: Hitler was elected. Now, it’s happening in Fascist America. What do Hitler’s Germany and the U.S. have in common? Read here. Are you aware that there are two political jurisdictions in America? A Republic, populated with real sovereign men and women, and a Democracy, populated with legal fictions, aka citizen/slaves. Read more at Morpheus Explains: What is a Person?
Tennessean Would it surprise you to learn that Americans are no longer free or equal, thanks to the new National Defense Authorization Act that President Barack Obama just signed into law?

The film, Eagle Eye, presents a frightning depiction of NWO capabilities
This act, which nullifies or ignores critical parts of the Constitution and Bill of Rights, seems eerily akin to similar acts used by the Nazis to imprison ordinary German citizens indefinitely, based on suspicion alone, without ever bringing forth charges or having a fair trial.
This horrendous new law seems to say that if someone accuses me of being a “terrorist,” I can be arrested by military police or quasi-military agents who can then imprison me for the rest of my life, denying me a fair trial, and even spirit me out of the country to some backwater nation where torture is “legal.”
If I’m correct in my interpretation, or reasonably close, the same terrible things can happen to you and your loved ones.
Suppose my son or your daughter met a charming person who talked them into handling money or carrying a bag, and that charming person turned out to be a terrorist? How would we feel if our children disappeared into some foreign prison, never to be seen again, because an overzealous NSA agent fancied himself the second coming of Rambo? Wouldn’t it be much better if our children’s rights were protected by American judges versed in the Constitution and American law?
I’m not the only person who interprets the NDAA as an incredibly bad piece of legislation. It has already been denounced by the ACLU and multiple articles in The New York Times and other major newspapers.

What do Hitler's Germany and the U.S. have in common? Indefinite Detention
Here’s a similar interpretation to mine, by Art Brennan, a retired New Hampshire superior court judge:
“Many Americans are concerned about the recent amendment to the NDAA bill that was signed into law by President Obama. We should be. This assault on our rights is very difficult to read and understand. The difficulty probably has more to do with sloppy drafting than intentional misrepresentation. Anyway, I decided to do a sort of John Yoo interpretation of the thing and write it out in one paragraph of plain language. Here it is:
“Congress agrees with the President’s claim that he can order the forcible seizure, transportation and endless military imprisonment of any American citizen without legal proof and without access to (American) courts. The President’s chosen Americans can be imprisoned in the U.S. or any other country or corporation the President chooses.
“I am a veteran and a retired judge. I know something but not everything about statutory interpretation. I have also been an advocate and know a little about how to play on that one-way street. For an American imprisoned under this act it really doesn’t matter what any real judge thinks about this law because the imprisoned American has no access to the courts anyway.”
Fast Tube by Casper



























