| Article 10: A. REMEDIAL INSTRUCTIONS TO CONGRESS |
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| Articles of Freedom - Article 10: Money + Article 1 of the Constitution |
1. The Congress of the United States, in the exercise of its power authorized by Article I, Section 8, Clause 5 of the Constitution for the United States of America, “[t]o Coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin,” shall enact a statute:(a) establishing a National Advisory Commission on Alternative and Competitive Currency, and2. That the sole purpose of the said Advisory Commissions shall be to study and recommend the means by which each State individually, and the several States and Congress collectively, can promote the adoption by both the several States and the United States, as rapidly as possible, of an economically sound and Constitutional alternative and competitive currency, which shall: (a) consist exclusively of silver and gold, the units to consist of 371.25 grains (troy) fine silver and 371.25 grains (troy) fine gold, which shall be subject to transfer from one party to another in both an electronic form measurable in any number of units, as well in tenths, hundredths, and thousandths of a unit, and the form of coins (whether of traditional or nontraditional shapes) of convenient weights consisting of multiples of the units or common fractions thereof;
Learn more about the subject matter of this Article. Read the Money Clauses of the CONSTITUTION. Read the PETITION for Redress of Grievances related to the Federal Reserve System. See the related CC 2009 video presentation: Tom DeWeese, First Delegate from Virginia – reading the submission from Dr. Edwin Vieira, The Power of the Purse; William Bergman, Analyst, Morningstar – My Experiences as an Analyst at the Federal Reserve System; and Robert L. Schulz, Chairman, We The People Foundation for Constitutional Education - comments on PETITION for Redress of Grievances related to the Federal Reserve System. Additional resources for consideration: PETITION to the Federal Court regarding the unconstitutional bailout of the Mexican Peso. There were four causes of action in this case by Schulz and other Plaintiffs. The fourth was the action by Schulz and others that the attempted $20 Billion bailout of the Mexican Peso by President Clinton and Treasury Secretary Robert Ruben should be declared unconstitutional, null and void. The case was dismissed by the Court for “lack of standing.”
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