Constitutional Analysis • Civic Education • Investigative Research
The American Constitutional Republic was founded on a specific premise: government answers to the people. Rights are not granted by the state; they are held by the individual and protected from the state. What has been built over the past two decades inverts that premise. The state now holds the information, the infrastructure, and the…
The United States was built on a foundational commitment to limited government, individual liberty, and free-market competition. These principles did not emerge by accident. They were deliberate, hard-won, and codified through centuries of political thought, revolution, and constitutional design. Yet something has shifted inside the institutions responsible for transmitting those principles to the next generation.
The government refuses to secure your data By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | MK3 Law Group(c) 2026 – All rights reserved. The Only Transparent Window Into a Closed Industry California’s mandatory data broker registry is the clearest public signal available that some brokers are actively selling or sharing American personal data to actors outside the…
The Myth of Legislative Exclusivity By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | MK3 Law Group(c) 2026 – All rights reserved. Most Americans learned a clean version of government in school. Congress writes the laws. The President enforces them. The courts interpret them. That model is tidy, easy to teach, and fundamentally incomplete. What actually governs daily…
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.
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 Modern law enforcement operates within a legal and philosophical paradox: it routinely violates the very laws it is sworn to uphold, often with explicit legal protection. This contradiction is not an anomaly it is institutionalized. From entrapment tactics and undercover operations…