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…
Something significant is happening to the legal definition of terrorism in the United States. What began as a narrowly scoped framework targeting foreign actors with demonstrable ties to organized violence has been systematically broadened. The trajectory is not subtle. Post-2001 legislation, executive orders, and internal agency reclassifications have steadily expanded the category of “domestic terrorist”…
By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | Margin Of The Law The Illusion of Sovereignty For generations, Americans have operated under a specific assumption: that they govern themselves. The republic is real, the consent of the governed means something, and the institutions built to protect individual rights actually do that. This assumption is not cynicism bait.…