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Comment by PureTrust
Entered on:

The Nuremberg trials show us that it is not the office that an official holds that is fundamental. Rather, it is his position as a man/woman that is the major factor in his/her relationships with other people. --- If a cop does anything that breaks the fundamentals regarding how to treat other people, he is guilty, just like the the WW2 German officials were found guilty in the Nuremberg Trials of poor treatment of other people. --- A cop without a man/woman can't do anything. If the cop breaks the law, it is a man/woman breaking the law. Sue the man/woman, not the cop. The law is the 4th Amendment.


Comment by PureTrust
Entered on:

A police officer who breaks the fundamental law of the 4th Amendment has broken his oath of Office, no matter what subsequent laws are. Statute laws are not above the 4th Amendment. --- Police people applied for the job voluntarily. When they obey illegal and unlawful orders, they are doing so voluntarily. If a judge upholds their illegal and unlawful actions, the judge is doing so voluntarily, and needs to be sued if he will not change upon notice. --- The state governor is the Chief Magistrate for a State. If he will not discipline his State judges, he is voluntarily guilty. Same with the judge as with a cop.

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