Know Your Rights- The Constitutional Amendments

by Staff


VN Celebrates 226 Years of Freedom


We have long considered it a shame that people don’t know their rights. Especially when the information is out there and all one has to do to drink of the divine knowledge is reach out and grab it: visit the library, learn to use the computer, to restart after a system failure, to use the internet, search for a page that references your rights, try to find a page that is actually still there so it doesn’t give you a “404 not found” error, and read up. And all this in the library computer access time limit.
Or, you could check out an old, dusty book, which will probably be out of date.
Research at your own risk.

Most people just know what they’ve managed to pick up on TV from various cop shows. Unfortunately, you learn all the wrong things there: I tell you, cops are always right; judges are always fair; and defense attorneys are really competent, even the court appointed ones.

The truth is you get the justice you deserve, so you’d better know your rights. At least that way you can be a pain in the ass. There is nothing quite as thrilling as one-upping a judge on proper court procedure, constitutional point, or precedent. It’s even worth the rubber hose beating from the goons he’ll send to your house to exact retribution later. Just be sure you don’t let them in the house without a warrant. They may be cops- but they have no right to be in your house beating you without a warrant. They can do it just as well in the front yard.

Now, when you look through the amendments, doubtlessly you will see some that are not as familiar as others. They can’t all be quotable quotables after all; some are just boring matters of procedure. Don’t worry- they will be there when you need them. Until then, you can put them out of your mind, just like the judge does.

It may seem to some that a few of the amendments are contradictory, such as twelve and nineteen, or one and fifteen. Don’t worry. This is the type of thing that the courts are there for- to judge on a case by case basis. Remember, all of these amendments have passed the scrutiny of the courts. They are the law of the land.

The first ten amendments are called the bill of rights, they were put there by the founding fathers; the ones following those have been added later. Amendments can be added at any time- that’s the reason why you may hear the constitution referred to as a living document; it can and will change with the mores of the times- reflecting the popular mood and prejudices of the population throughout the duration of the Nation.

Relax! When you know your rights, you’re protected.


The First Ten-
The Bill of Rights


The First Amendment
Congress shall make no law respecting establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech or the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for the redress of grievances.
Unless in time of war or to protect the greater health of the state.

The Second Amendment
You have the right to remain silent.
Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law.

The Third Amendment
You have the right to an attorney.
If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed to you, of varying quality; you have the right to appeal only what your original attorney has brought up in your first trial. All other evidence or motions will be disallowed. You will be considered guilty until you prove your innocence through proper court procedure.

The Fourth Amendment
The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

The Fifth Amendment
The right to Privacy.
Private property rights shall not be abridged for public use.

The Sixth Amendment
Thou Shalt not Kill.
Unless authorized by the state or the court.

The Seventh Amendment
Energy cannot be created or destroyed.
It can only be converted or transferred from one form to another, and then only from hot to cold- not vice-versa. This is known as “perpetual revolution.”

The Eighth Amendment
In a closed system, potential energy will always be less than what existed in the initial state.
This is commonly referred to as “entropy.”

The Ninth Amendment
If the thermal energy of molecules (kinetic energy) is removed, a state of absolute zero will result.
The universe will reach absolute zero (0 degrees Kelvin or -273.15 Celsius) when all energy and matter is randomly distributed; but America First!
This is commonly referred to as the “Free market system”


The Tenth Amendment
The Right to work.
Without the interference of unions.
This is to better support the free market system and lead to a greater state of entropy.


The Others- The later, lesser, amendments


Eleven
The right to a beverage of your choice, Coke or Pepsi, as long as you have the means to pay the tab.

Twelve
The right to smoke; and by evoking this right, you affirm a social contract that you, your heirs, or assigns will not hinder tobacco companies in their pursuit of continued profit.

Thirteen
The right to party.
So long as you are willing to fight for it.

Fourteen
Corporations are people.
In fact they are better than average people, and will be afforded special rights.

Fifteen
The right to drive; so that you may drive to and from your place(s) of work and your choice of place of worship mandated by your state or province.

Sixteen
The right to shop at Walmart or other discount stores for cheap plastic things made in China, by slave labor, stamped “Made in USA.”

Seventeen
The right to attend mandatory morning motivational meetings at your workplace.

Eighteen
The right to pay to park.

Nineteen
No smoking.

Twenty
The right of return.
Store purchases may be returned for store credit only at store branches in Israel, and only if you are not Palestinian.

Twenty One
Eighteen year olds shall have the right to vote for the democrat or republican of their choice, to join the military branch of their choosing for at least four years, to smoke, to play state lottery games, to star in pornographic films, but not to drink alcoholic beverages.

Twenty Two
The traditional office of Court Jester is hereby abolished. Joking will earn you a prison sentence of five to ten.

Landmark Court Decisions - affect you!


A lot of people don’t know Jack about the system, yet they are just so eager to denounce it.
What we call justice in this country is built on the back of many hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years of progress; where we have come up with the best of the past and the present through a system of experimentation and trial and error.

When you walk into a court building you can feel the past at your back, following you, waiting.
It was just this feeling that led a recent prominent politician to say, “We have the best system of American justice in the world.”
And how can you argue with that?

Courts in America make decisions every day. And higher courts correct lower courts. And higher courts than that strike the corrections. And so on.
It is a meticulous and planned out system. A marvel of human reasoning.
Let’s get to know it.

Perhaps we will begin by looking at the Comstock law, which banned books in the US. In the first forty years, the Comstock law resulted in the destruction of 120 tons of disreputable literature.
And you thought the government was staffed by do-nothings!

The Comstock law remains on the books today (U.S.C. §1462) though it no longer applies to writing about birth control.
Since it is the job of the courts to review and reject unconstitutional law, we must assume that, given over 100 years to review this one, it has been proven to be American as apple pie.
Indeed, it’s the great grand-daddy to the “communications decency act” and the like, so we fail to see why the brouhaha about anti-speech laws. We’ve always had them.
It’s enough to call into doubt the Americanism of anyone who says otherwise.

Now, a lot of people out there know that all speech is not free, and few out there believe free speech means being able to say whatever you want. Many have heard the popular quote about not having “the right to yell ‘fire’ in a crowded movie house.”
A few people even know that it was Supreme Court Justice Oliver W. Holmes who said it.

Now, the context of that quote was that it was in regard to a decision about whether or not it was legal to jail those who spoke out against America’s involvement in World War I. Thus, to counter the war effort was to excite the crowd in the theater, and the court ruled that the jailing of such dissidents was both legal and necessary for the well being of the country- a precedent with far reaching implications- clearly notable, as you still hear Holmes’ quote so often in relation to where the limit to free speech lies.

Now, recently we have seen a lot of hand wringing about the supposed fairness of the death penalty in this country. Of course, these are serious matters that must have their day in court.
Just a few years ago, a federal appeals court made a ruling on this matter that has proven to be of great importance to the appeals of those on death row and their supporters.
The court ruled that while a defendant may be “factually innocent,” “innocence alone is not sufficient to grant federal relief.”
So at last we Americans can breathe free, secure in the knowledge that the courts are hard at work and that the innocent and the guilty are still guaranteed their day in court.


Through these past 200+ years the courts have always been there for us, and there is no sign that they will be going away soon.
So let us celebrate the current state of justice, from Florida to Washington state.
They are there and they are by the book, hardly pausing to raise their weary heads and look the steady line of the accused in the eye.
That’s the job, and they treat it as such.
Let the doubters doubt; but let’s hold them accountable for it. Court, we salute ye!


How to serve on a Jury


Just keep saying to yourself, “Five dollars a day, five dollars a day.”
That’s the wage for doing the most important job in America.

First, they torture you.
The notice comes in the mail, on official looking paper, in legalese, carrying vague threats. “You’ll show up on THE DAY or we will come looking for you. Penalty for throwing this paper away is imprisonment or fines or both.”
But the date on the paper is so far off from the time it comes in the mail that you’ve shuffled it away and darn near lost the thing, small as it is. You’re a busy person after all, not that the government appreciates you.

So there you are at the last minute, digging through papers, napkins, underwear, and all the other flotsam and jetsam of your complex modern life, looking for that thing, all the while thinking, “I didn’t sign for it, let them prove I got it. Slipshod bureaucrats.”
Then, there it is.
And that’s when the torture begins.

They use an arcane call-in system, invented by the Marquis De Sade, who in all other respects we admit a secret fondness for.
Reduced to a “jury pool group number” you must call in every night to see if you have to get up at some ungodly hour of the morning and go to the even more ungodly “hall of justice.”

Repeat this every night for a week, your life suspended in a spider’s web of bureaucracy and apprehension, Rod Serling poised somewhere in the background, ready to spring- and if you thought he was disturbing back on the Twilight Zone, just remember he’s still just like that... but also dead thirty years, which adds measurably to the spine tingling quotient.

So you show up. Just like in that story, the Lottery.
And they sit you in a sea of unwilling human flesh. And they make you watch a video about the importance of juries.

At this point several potential jurors die. It happens.

Now, a useful tip is to remember to bring something to read. You’re going to be here a while- and not a lot is going to happen so you can see and hear it. It’s kind of like a sensory depravation chamber- and a few in every jury pool go insane from it. We don’t recommend it as a choice, mind you, insanity doesn’t necessarily excuse you from service.
Then they herd you from room to room. You’re graded, branded, and whipped.
At last you arrive in court.

Here you are subjected to questions. “Can you be fair?” “You hate criminals, right?” “Are you now or have you ever been a member of the communist party?”
A few are excused and get to leave.

Everyone is quizzed on the matter of whether or not they are familiar with their rights under the constitution. Those who score well are excused and wiped from all future jury pool lists.

It is explained that you must be an illiterate and uninformed boob who does what is instructed. Just like the judge.
At last twelve people take seats.

Justice is served.


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