Dear John,
By now you've heard about last week's decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court. Conservative Review's Daniel Horowitz sums them up well:
...what some thought was the most conservative Supreme Court of all time concocted a fundamental right to transgenderism in the context of labor law, erased the Second Amendment, and interfered with a state death penalty case, but declined to interfere with a California law that criminalizes law enforcement cooperation with federal immigration agents.
Whatever you believe about each individual decision, you can't deny that the Court has -- once again -- significantly expanded the power of the federal government.
If you were hoping that Washington would fix itself, this should be your wake up call.
Washington will never limit its own power. The Court, no matter how "conservative," will never rule to eliminate judicial supremacism.
Worse still, their rulings have the force of a constitutional amendment. Each decision proposes and ratifies a new “amendment” without the approval of the states and the people.
Only a Convention of States can effectively limit the Court’s power, and you can learn all about our step-by-step plan in the Official Convention of States Pocket Guide.
The Pocket Guide explains how Article V of the Constitution allows We the People to propose and ratify constitutional amendments. These amendments can limit the power of all three branches of the federal government, mandate term limits for federal officials (including justices), and impose fiscal restraints on Congress.
We cannot let nine non-elected justices continue to dictate policy for all 330 million Americans. The Founders gave us a tool in Article V to end federal overreach, and it's time we used it.
You can learn all about this exciting movement -- and how to get involved! -- in the Official Convention of States Pocket Guide.
Click here to download your FREE Pocket Guide.
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