American Minute with Bill Federer
Women can Vote: History, Manipulation, & Price of Liberty is Eternal Vigilance!
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Six thousands years of humans writing down history reveal that the most common form of government has been a
monarchy.
The most powerful
monarchy
the world had ever seen was the globalist
British monarchy.
The
British Empire
at it zenith controlled 13 million square miles - almost a quarter of the Earth's land, and nearly half billion people - one-fifth of the world's population.
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In the British Empire, the most important
"vote"
was that of the
King.
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King James
explained March 21, 1609:
"Kings
are justly called
gods
... they have power of raising and casting down: of life and of death ... over all their subjects ... accountable to none but God only ... and make of their subjects like men at the chess."
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Americans
did not like being ruled by
the will of one man,
who was, in a sense, a one-world government-type leader.
Americans
separated from the British Empire in the Revolutionary War.
America's founders set up a system where citizens control the government.
They insisted the Federal government be limited by a separation of powers and the Bill of Rights.
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Soon other countries followed suite, rejecting their
kings
and replacing them with
representatives
elected by the
"citizens."
"Citizen"
is a Greek word meaning
co-ruler.
A
representative
form of government is called a
republic.
In a
republic,
the
citizens
are the
king,
ruling through
representatives.
When we
pledge allegiance
to the flag "and to the
republic
for which it stands,"
we
are pledging allegiance to
us being in charge of ourselves.
When someone
protests the flag,
they are effectively saying,
I do not want to be king anymore!
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In colonial America, first landowners could vote, then those owning a certain amount of personal property.
After the Revolution, men without land or property could vote, provided they paid taxes.
During the Civil War,
Republican President Abraham Lincoln
issued the
Emancipation Proclamation,
which was followed by the
Republican-controlled Congress
pushing through the
15th Amendment assuring that freed slaves had the right to vote.
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The momentum of the
anti-slavery movement
was channeled into:
- the temperance movement to prohibit alcohol (18th Amendment); and
- the women's suffrage movement, to allow women to vote (19th Amendment).
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In the late 1800s,
women's suffrage movement
s spread in many countries, including western countries:
- Sweden,
- Finland,
- Norway,
- Scotland,
- Britain,
- Iceland,
- New Zealand,
- Australia.
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Britain's women's suffrage movement was portrayed in the popular 1964 movie
Mary Poppins,
where Mrs. Banks sang:
"We’re clearly soldiers in petticoats
And dauntless crusaders for
woman’s votes
Though we adore men individually
We agree that as a group they’re rather stupid!
Cast off the shackles of yesterday!
Shoulder to shoulder into the fray!
Our daughters’ daughters will adore us
And they’ll sing in grateful chorus
'Well done,
Sister Suffragette!'"
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The
suffrage movement
gained support, creating a push to amend the
U.S. Constitution.
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There are
two ways
to
change the Constitution.
One way is to have
activist justices change the definition of existing words
in the Constitution or Bill of Rights by
broadening, expanding,
or
altering their meaning,
thus effectively
creating a new law
from the bench.
This is an example of the
will of a MINORITY
(5 justices) being
imposed on the MAJORITY,
which is the classic definition of a
tyranny.
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The other way to
change the Constitution
is through the
amendment process,
which
preserves the will of the people.
There have been
27 Amendments
added to the Constitution.
Amendments
must:
- first be passed by two-thirds of the Congressmen and Senators, who were elected by a majority of the people, (or, though it has never happened, two-thirds of the State legislatures calling for a Constitutional Convention);
- then the Amendment must be ratified by three-fourths of the states, again maintaining that it is the will of the majority of the people.
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In contrast to activist justices, the
Amendment process
insures
Americans
maintain a
"government of the people, by the people, for the people."
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Senator Robert La Follette
of Wisconsin stated:
"The
will of the people
is the
law of the land."
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After
World War I,
it was the
will of the majority of the MEN
in America was to have
WOMEN vote.
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The
19th Amendment
was ratified and declared a
part of the U.S. Constitution
on August 26, 1920:
"The right of citizens of the U.S. to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex."
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A leader in the
women's suffrage movement
was
Susan B. Anthony.
President Gerald Ford p
raised her, February 13, 1976:
"Susan B. Anthony
... with other dedicated women ... took the cause of women's suffrage to State capitals across our growing Nation ...
The irreversible change she wrought ... led to the ratification of the
Nineteenth Amendment."
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Susan B. Anthony
also fought to prohibit alcohol, stating in her address to the
Daughters of Temperance,
March 1, 1849:
"Ladies! There is no Neutral position for us ... If we sustain not this noble enterprise ... then is our influence on the side of
Intemperance.
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If we say we love the Cause and then sit down at our ease, surely does our action speak the lie.
And now permit me once more to beg of you to lend your aid to this great Cause,
the Cause of God and all Mankind."
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Women's suffrage
leader
Julia Ward Howe
was the first woman member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
She wrote
The Battle Hymn of the Republic,
stating in the 3rd verse:
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"I have read a fiery gospel
writ in burnished rows of steel;
'As ye deal with my contemners,
so with you my grace shall deal;
LET THE HERO, BORN OF WOMAN,
crush the serpent with his heel,
Since God is marching on."
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President Richard Nixon
address the
League of Women Voters
on their 50th Anniversary, April 17, 1969:
"A year before the
19th Amendment
was adopted the
League of Women Voters
was founded, and that organization, in the past 50 years, has played a major role in this Nation on
a nonpartisan basis ...
Since about 1947, a tremendously escalating role of
women in politics
in the United States ...
I often say that men do the talking and women do the working in campaigns ..."
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Nixon
continued:
"As we look at the past 50 years we wonder what could happen in the next 50 years ...
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... As I look around the world and as I find that India has a woman Prime Minister, Ceylon has a woman Prime Minister,
Israel has a woman Prime Minister."
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To the
Daughters of the American Revolution, President Calvin Coolidge
remarked April 19, 1926:
"Who has not heard of
Molly Pitcher,
whose heroic services at the
Battle of Monmouth
helped the sorely tried army of George Washington!
We have been told of the
unselfish devotion of the women
who gave their own warm garments to fashion clothing for the suffering Continental Army during that bitter winter at Valley Forge.
The burdens of the war were not all borne by the men ..."
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Coolidge
continued:
"Since 1880 there has been a marked increase in the
tendency to remain away from the polls
on the part
of those entitled to vote ...
Election day
in the olden times was generally considered more or less
sacred
- one to be devoted to the discharge of the obligations of citizenship ...
If the people fail to vote,
a government will be developed which is not their government ... Such a system of government is doomed to failure."
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The Greek philosopher
Plato
stated:
"One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors."
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After World War II, nations recovering from war, and post-colonial countries,
allowed women to vote:
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- France 1944
- Italy 1946
- Venezuela 1946
- Japan 1947
- Taiwan 1947
- India 1947
- Kenya 1963
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Much later, some Islamic countries allowed
women the right to vote:
- Iraq 1980
- Qatar 1997
- Bahrain 2002
- Oman 2003
- Kuwait 2005
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A woman's right to vote
is still
limited
in varying degrees in nations practicing
Islamic Sharia Law,
such as Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Brunei and ISIS controlled areas of Iraq and Syria.
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The
increase
in the
number of people voting
gave rise to an
increase
in the number of ways to
sway voters,
including:
- media ignoring, censoring, or publishing "fake news" about a candidate;
- persuading more candidates to run to divide the opposing party's voter base;
- using community organizers, agitators, and agent provocateurs to foment riots;
- Antifa and Black Panther-type intimidation at polls;
- getting more voters to become dependent on government entitlement handouts;
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- street money to pay people to vote;
- psychological projection, where a candidate who secretly committed crimes publicly accuses their opponent of committing the exact crimes, thus putting their opponent on the defensive and muddying the waters so the public does not know who is telling the truth;
- "October Surprise" crises in the last week before the November elections: planned political attacks ads and mailers; saved up "shocking revelations" about a candidate are released;
- prepared "breaking news" stories to grab the headlines and disrupt the momentum of a winning candidate; or engineered financial distress and "national emergencies" intended to alter the outcome of an election.
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Voters
can be
swayed
by
public opinion molders.
Manipulation of
public opinion
occurs largely through the
media,
and increasingly through the
internet:
- Google altering search results;
- candidates Twitter accounts suspiciously suspended;
- YouTube mislabeling conservative sites as "hate speech";
- Facebook "throttling" conservative posts to have fewer views, etc.
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Being that
many elections
are often
determined by close margins,
if global
Tech Giants
can
sway
even a
small percentage
of
"undecided" voters,
they may potentially
alter elections results.
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The
power of public opinion
was observed by
George Orwell,
who wrote in "Politics vs. Literature: An Examination of Gulliver's Travels"
(Polemic:
September/October 1946):
"In a society in which there is no law ... the only arbiter of behavior is
public opinion.
But
public opinion,
because of the tremendous
urge to conformity
in gregarious animals, is
less tolerant
than any
system of law."
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Orwell
called humans "gregarious," meaning they
seek acceptance of others.
He continued:
"When human beings are governed by 'thou shalt not,'
the individual
can practice a certain amount of eccentricity (freedom to deviate from the norm):
when they are supposedly governed by 'love' or 'reason,' he is under
continuous pressure
to make him
behave and think
in
exactly the same way as everyone else."
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The
pressure
to
behave as everyone else
was confirmed by the
Asch Conformity Experiments
in the 1950s.
A room was filled with actors. Then one unsuspecting participant was invited in.
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All were asked to compare the length of lines.
When the actors intentionally choose the wrong measurement,
30 percent of the unsuspecting participants changed their correct answers
to the incorrect measurement in order to fit in with the group.
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A similar experiment was conducted by German sociologist
Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann,
who wrote "
The Spiral of Silence: Public Opinion – Our Social Skin.
In a controlled experiment, it was found that individuals denied their privately held values in
order to conform to perceived publicly held values,
thus avoiding "a negative social judgment."
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Chuck Colson
commented on this adult version of peer pressure in his
BreakPoint commentary,
Nov. 2, 2011, "Breaking the Spiral of Silence":
"Simply stated, out of a desire to
avoid
reprisal or
isolation,
people go along with what they think is the
popular opinion
- even if they object to that opinion personally.
Instead of voicing their objections,
they remain silent."
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Classrooms
and
online social media
have become
communities
where individuals
feel pressured to conform to.
The Washington Post
article "Mass surveillance silences minority opinions according to study," by Karen Turner, March 28, 2016, revealed:
"A new study shows that
knowledge of government surveillance
causes people to
self-censor their dissenting opinions online ...
... The study, published in
Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly,
studied the effects of subtle reminders of
mass surveillance
on its subjects ...
Participants reacted by
suppressing opinions
that they
perceived to be in the minority ...
The
'spiral of silence'
is a well-researched phenomenon in which people suppress unpopular opinions
to fit in
and
avoid social isolation."
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Saul Alinsky
explained how people would
rather conform
than face
shame, humiliation
, or
ridicule:
"Ridicule
is man's most potent weapon."
"Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it."
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"Honor-Shame"
cultures have have used this method of conformity though most of world history.
In monarchies, as well as in most Eastern and Middle-Eastern cultures, there is not the
biblical concept of an absolute "right-and-wrong."
Instead,
"right"
is what brings
"honor"
to an individual, family, brotherhood, or community; and
"wrong"
is what brings
"shame."
In some Middle-Eastern communities, parents will even
kill their own daughter
if she brings
"shame"
to the family.
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China
is implementing a "social credit" system to
shame
those who do not conform to the communist state.
The fear of
public ridicule, shame,
and
humiliation
was acknowledged by
George Orwell
in
Nineteen Eighty-Four:
"Power
is in inflicting pain and
humiliation."
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It is interesting that the
Bible
continually calls believers to come out of the
world system's "fear of man":
- "The fear of man brings a snare, But he who trusts in the LORD will be exalted." Proverbs 29:25
- "You shall not fear man, for the judgment is God's." Deuteronomy 1:17
- "Then Saul said to Samuel, 'I have sinned; I have indeed transgressed the command of the LORD ... because I feared the people and listened to their voice.'" I Samuel 15:24
- "I say to you, My friends, do not be afraid of those who kill the body and after that have no more that they can do." Luke 12:4
- "In God have I put my trust: I will not be afraid what man can do unto me." Psalm 56:11
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In addition to silencing opposing viewpoints, there are many ways to manipulate the
"counting"
of votes.
Stalin
is attributed with saying:
"Those who cast the votes decide nothing. Those who
count the votes
decide everything."
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Would politicians stoop to voter fraud?
One only need ask, if a politician can justify an immoral agenda, such as killing an innocent unborn baby, could they justify using immoral means to get elected?
What is lying, cheating, slander, or voter fraud, in comparison to that? Referencing Machiavelli,
Saul Alinsky
wrote:
"In war, the end
justifies
almost any means."
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As the restraining influence of moral virtue decreases in a country,
voter fraud tactics
increase, such as:
- unsecured mail-in ballots;
- delay in counting military ballots;
- same-day registration fraud;
- inaccurate ballot preparation;
- allowing non-citizens to vote;
- refusal to purge voter rolls of deceased voters or those who moved;
- orchestrated computer glitches;
- rigging of electronic voting machines; and
- interference by those in power, as seen in allegations that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, itself, hacked into state election systems, which, as expected, they would deny and blame on foreign interference (Georgia, U.S. News, 12/18/16; Indiana, The Daily Caller, 2/21/17).
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Cyber security expert
John McAfee
explained how hackers within government agencies who had the skills to hack through firewalls, would also have the skills to leave a "fake" trail by changing their language, markers, or location, as he said in an interview (RT, 12/30/16):
"If it looks like the Russians did it, then I can guarantee you it was not the Russians ...
If I was the Chinese and I wanted to make it look like the Russians did it, I would use Russian language within the code, I would use Russian techniques of breaking into the organization."
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If, by chance, voter fraud was discovered, politicians promise to "investigate," and in the course of the investigation, they may have the opportunity to destroy evidence which could convict them.
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If public pressure mounts, excuses are made that the fraud was unintentional, unauthorized, or a result of ineptness.
A scapegoat is blamed, allowing the politicians to stay in office.
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Since the potential for corruption lies in each human heart, the remedy is for citizens to exercise
eternal vigilance.
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Irish politician
John Philpot Curran
(1750-1817) wrote:
"The condition upon which
God hath given liberty to man
is
eternal vigilance .
.. which condition if he break,
servitude
is at once
the consequence."
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President Andrew Jackson,
who took a bullet in a duel defending his wife's honor, stated in his Farewell Address, March 4, 1837:
"But you must remember, my fellow-citizens, that
eternal vigilance by the people is the price of liberty ...
You must pay the price
if you wish to
secure the blessing
... therefore ...
be watchful
in your States as well as in the Federal Government."
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Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
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