Abstract

As he did with failure to follow the British model for the office of president, and the separation of power, Madison failed to follow the British precedent of reciprocal rights and mutuality between the wealthy and the common classes. The unwritten constitution of Great Britain is based upon the principles of reciprocal duties of the monarch and mutual obligations of the King and the commoners to defend British natural rights. In British law, allegiance to the rule of law is a reciprocal obligation of both common citizens and the King. Madison’s government ended in a centralized global tyranny, operated for the benefit of the few global elites, against the many. In the case of Democrat socialist subjugation, or slavery, the socialist political elite hold institutional structural power, derived from Madison’s rules, not from the consent of the governed. Rather than the voluntary allegiance to the rule of law, the structural power grants undelegated authority to socialist elites to compel, against a citizen’s sovereign will, obedience to the socialist state. The structural power denies the individual citizen the freedom to break away from the subjugation. In this instance, the sovereign life mission of the common citizen is subjugated to the greater glory of social welfare of the State.

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