Without early intervention, History does repeat itself – in Texas!

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Alexander Research & Consulting

By Ron Alexander Ph.D.

(U) Scope

(U//FOUO) This assessment examines the coordination of special interests between elected entities and public influencers by restructuring a state’s legal recommendations or instructions to legitimate partisan interference regarding possible client medical needs. Avoiding Texas’ required fiduciary responsibilities of nonenforcement vis-à-vis interstate commerce, it has set aside that and has released an unethical modification of suitability obligations, specific to and dependent on the profile of the citizenry of Texas. Thus, demanding that the United States Constitution recognize Texas’s sovereign strategy.

The Governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, and its state legislature camouflaged S.B. 8  “Relating to abortion, including abortions after detection of an unborn child’s heartbeat; authorizing a private civil right of action,” reconciling it with a previous attempt to authorize civilians to give aid to the state and receive bounties, during the American Civil War.

Using volunteers, anti-abortion vigilantes, or partisans, realigns Texas to a standard developed during the American Civil War. Due to critical contingencies, the once named Confederate States of America voted in favor of the formation of militant bands. Thus, the rebellious anarcho-state passed the Partisan Ranger Act (“PRA”) on 21APR1862. Before this petition, it conferred a payment to any armed vessel that “sunk or destroyed” a Union ship as well as trafficking in forced labor.

The Partisan Ranger Act gives direction to this 2021 Texas law. The former act “created a private cause of action…” while, similarly, the latter law authorized “a private civil right of action.”

As stated: “Section 171.208.  CIVIL LIABILITY FOR VIOLATION OR AIDING OR ABETTING VIOLATION. (a)  Any person, other than an officer or employee of a state or local governmental entity in this state, may bring a civil action against any person …”, considered a defendant under this statute, giving the plaintiff a misguided capacity to seek redress.

“S. B. 8 can be enforced through civil lawsuits by private citizens against anyone who performs, aids and abets or intends to participate in a prohibited abortion.”

“S.B. 8 … meant to empower anti-abortion vigilantes and target those who support abortion care in Texas.”

While at the same time granting immunity to all state officials, addressed in “Section 171.211. SOVEREIGN, GOVERNMENTAL, AND OFFICIAL IMMUNITY PRESERVED.” This law pressures other like-minded legislatures to extend the notion of the “castle doctrine” or “stand your ground laws.” Giving immunity to some who will believe that they have the legal right to remain in place when confronting others will lead to “sidestep the Federal Government.”

From 30MAR to 13MAY2021, not one Republican voted no, and only one Democrat voted yes in the passage of this statute. Odd that Representative Dade Phelan, the Republican Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives from District 21, did not cast a vote, staying present. Viewing his status as a board member of the “historical” Jefferson Theatre in Beaumont, Texas, he would recall that, north of District 21 locates District 19 and then District 9. District 9 has State Representative Chris Paddie.

District 9 finds the town of Jefferson in Marion County. In June 1862, Col. Walter P. Lane established his headquarters at Jefferson. His recruiting strategies in East Texas provided conflict simulation, inaugurating the First Texas Partisan Rangers. He, and his successor, R. Phillip Crump, a businessman from Jefferson, continued their terrorist activities years shadowing Appomattox and a declaration of peace on 20AUG1866.

As the “2019 Mental Health Champion” by Mental Health America, Phelan’s reception causes pause for those now undergoing emotional, financial, and medical concerns. S.B. 8 “allows suits based on “rape, sexual assault, [or] incest, ….”

Due to that devastating conflict, President Abraham Lincoln missioned the Union “to bind up the nation’s wounds …” Lincoln’s Code of War steps far from anecdotal precepts and did not conflict with enlightenment humanitarianism. Limited War did not espouse assassinations or fratricide as handled by those who did not represent a state. Laws of War proscribes “unconventional combat,” where professional armies at least recognized certain protections.

Within Nardone v. United States, 308 U.S. 338 (1939), “Fruit from the poisonous tree” disallowed evidence from unlawful electronic surveillance. In similar form, the Partisan Ranger Act inscribed on a previous axis, the formation of bands to serve the state revealed a figure of criminality outside of sovereign intent.

After the Civil War, and following capture, on 20OCT1865, the U.S. Government hanged Champ Ferguson. Ferguson had operated as a partisan raider in Virginia and Tennessee. The verdict cited his guilt based on war crimes, legally supported by Lincoln’s Code of War.

Yet, another militant operative, Lewis Thornton Powell, a soldier who joined John S. Mosby’s Partisan Rangers, then the Confederate Secret Service, had intended to assassinate Secretary of State William H. Seward. He had joined the conspiracy of John Wilkes Booth to murder Lincoln.

Resources:

  1. THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, v. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Defendant.1:21-CV-796-RP. Document 68 Filed 10/06/21. https://www.docketalarm.com/cases/Supreme_Court/21-588/United_States_Petitioner_v._Texas_et_al/10-18-2021-Application_to_vacate_stay_submitted_to/1018120221664-Other/
  2. B.No.8, 2021, Legislative Session 87(R) (TX. 2021). Relating to abortion, including abortions after detection of an unborn child’s heartbeat; authorizing a private civil right of action. https://legiscan.com/TX/text/SB8/id/2395961
  3. Winthrop Rutherfurd, “The Partisan Ranger Act: The Confederacy and the Laws of War,” 79 La. L. Rev. (2019)
  4. “Here’s who voted for (and against) Texas’ new abortion law in the House and Senate.” Austin American-Statesman Staff. Published 3SEP2021.
  5. James T. Matthews, “First Texas Partisan Rangers,” Handbook of Texas Online, accessed October 31, 2021, https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/first-texas-partisan-rangers.
  6. Texas House of Representatives, https://www.house.texas.gov.
  7. Ronald Alexander Ph.D. The Kennedy Codes. https://deverboinverbum.com/2013/07/22/the-kennedy-codes-2/