1963/06/17

       The supreme court, of the corporate United states, hands down Abington School District (pennsylvania) v. Schempp, declaring–via the fraudulent 14th amendment–government-run public school districts (government protected educational monopolies) may not impose recitation of the Lord’s Prayer or Bible reading on their conscript-students. 

       NOTE: In rendering this decision, the court ignored the pennsylvania constitution of 1873, article I, section 4.

       Questions:

  • Might one describe a totalitarian society as one in which everything that is not forbidden is required, and everything that is not required is forbidden?
  • Where in the Constitution does it explicitly state that it is the duty of the state to run the schools?

       [updated 6/7/2025]

       The supreme court, of the corporate United states, hands down Sherbert v. Verner: Via the fraudulent 14th amendment, Freedom of Religion overrides state regulations on jobless compensation claims.

       NOTE: In rendering this decision, the court ignored the south carolina constitution of 1895, article I, section 2.

       [added 6/7/2025]

Subsequent Events:

9/23/1966                    11/12/1968                    3/8/1971                    4/17/1990                    1/25/1996

12/8/2004                    6/27/2005                     12/22/2008

Authority:

“Law of the Jungle”
ccc-2point0.com/preface

References:

Gerald Gunther, Constitutional Law, twelfth edition, (Westbury, New York: Foundation Press, 1991), 1525, 1560-63.

“Today in History,” Orange County (California) Register, 17 June 2006, News:23.

Sherbert v. Verner – Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherbert_v._Verner

Abington School District v. Schempp – Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abington_School_District_v._Schempp

Current U.s. National Debt:

$38,857,671,304,563

Source