Constitutional Analysis • Civic Education • Investigative Research
By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | MK3 Law Group(c) 2026 – All rights reserved. “The dupes of other men.” Noah Webster told us exactly what happens when people join a political party – they become mindless puppets of people in power. His timeless warning that “faction is death to liberty” is one we can’t afford…
By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | MK3 Law Group(c) 2026 – All rights reserved. “This can only end in despotism.” Benjamin Franklin didn’t offer that as a theory. He stated it as fact, plainly, without softening. He understood precisely what happens when a people trade virtue for vice: liberty dies and tyranny takes its place.…
By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | Margin Of The Law(c) 2026 – All rights reserved. The Oath and What It Means Every sworn defender of the Republic remembers the moment they raised their right hand and spoke those words: “to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”…
By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | MK3 Law Group(c) 2026 – All rights reserved. The phrase “Supreme Court is the law of the land” gets repeated so often it sounds like constitutional fact. It’s not. Article VI of the Constitution states plainly: “This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made…
Discover the core of American freedom with our civic education platform, offering deep constitutional law insights and clear explanations for government structure learning. A constitution is more than a document; it is the ultimate expression of a nation’s commitment to liberty, establishing a framework that limits government power and protects individual freedoms. This platform serves…
Understanding the Legal Foundations That Define The American Republic By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | MK3 Law Group(c) 2026 – All rights reserved. The United States Constitution stands as the central legal framework of American government. Written in 1787 and ratified shortly thereafter, the Constitution established a system designed to govern a large and diverse…
By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | MK3 Law Group(c) 2026 – All rights reserved. The Declaration of Independence, adopted July 4, 1776, tells the people why the United States of America and its republican form of government was founded, and why the Constitution and Bill of Rights were written. It is an important document that…
By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | Margin Of The Law Most civics classes deliberately obscure this. The Constitution does not grant you rights. It never did. It restrains government from touching the rights you already possess. The difference is not semantic. It is the entire structural logic of the American system. And somewhere between 1787…
The 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution, ratified in 1868, is often hailed as a cornerstone of civil rights and equal protection. However, a closer examination of its history, ratification process, and subsequent interpretation reveals a more complex and contentious narrative.
We’ve all heard the phrase “the states created the federal government, not the other way around.” That’s the very point that Jefferson was making. The states created a “general government for specific purposes”.
The words “independence” and “liberty” circulate freely in political conversation, often treated as synonyms. They are not. These concepts operate at different levels of human and political existence, and understanding the distinction reveals fundamental truths
When agencies ignore constitutional boundaries, courts must restore them. The alternative is government by bureaucratic decree…
By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | MK3 Law Group(c) 2026 – All rights reserved. “If the Second Amendment is read to confer a personal right to ‘keep and bear arms,’ a colorable argument exists that the Federal Government’s regulatory scheme, at least as it pertains to the purely intrastate sale or possession of firearms, runs…