Natural (Common) Law Vs Contract Law

Recently, we've been speaking a lot about some of the issues surrounding COVID-19 and the American election that came up last November and this is not to support Republicans or Democrats, but the general lack of law. This is not only seen in this election in COVID, but in many things, there's been lawlessness, in many ways, officials not brought to justice is a conflict of interest between private and public sectors between large monopolies.

It's an abrogation of the basic laws that undergird our societies, and then under also democratic societies. Community is not collectivism, collectivism is more than a communistic idea, in which we are forced into a so called common good to dictatorial concept in which our rights are taken away, there is no freedom for the individual sovereignty and for the individual.  And that is justified by a false appeal to the common good. And people who do this are not really a common good all the common good is not achieved by abrogating individual personal rights. That's a complete contradiction of the pursuit.

To have a constitution rewritten in terms of commercial interest is very bad for the people, because they won't have a voice, unless they're a billionaire, or they have diverse at all. And this is the exact opposite to what the founding fathers of America wanted. They wanted to protect the voice of the people, government of the people, for the people, by the people, not by the billionaires.

Again, since the Constitution, the original Constitution has been set in place in the 1800s, the very rich have done everything they can to overthrow it. And this is taken out of history. They've tried to overthrow the intent of the Constitution. Now to get to be so bold is out today to talk about rewriting it is amazing.

Our rights are not protected. Freedom is not protected. Under common law, if an injection is given you is bad for you, you have rights, someone should not do something that will harm you. The basic principles will come in law. No contract should be able to abrogate that.

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