“This Constitution” is the Constitution of September 17, 1787, which was produced in secret sessions in Philadelphia beginning on May 25, 1787.

The Preamble, which is not an official part of “this Constitution” states that “this Constitution” is for the United States of America.  There are two United States of America: one of the Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776 and the other of the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777.

Incompetent historians and an unscrupulous legal profession have perpetuated government propaganda that alleges the Constitution of September 17, 1787 replaced the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777, the second of the Organic Laws of the United States of America, which established the perpetual Union of the thirteen States that had signed the Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776, the first Organic Law.

Proof that the Constitution of September 17, 1787 neither replaced nor repealed the Articles of Confederation is found at the conclusion of the third Organic Law, the Northwest Ordinance of July 13, 1787.  At the end of the Ordinance, can be found the language of repeal, nullity and the voiding of the prior ordinance, the Resolution of April 23, 1784.  The absence of similar language in the Constitution of September 17, 1787 proves the Constitutional Convention consisting of many men trained in law never considered repeal of the Articles of Confederation.

The Northwest Ordinance of July 13, 1787 established a temporary government for the Northwest Territory, which was replaced by a permanent one to be found in Article I of the Constitution of September 17, 1787. On April 30, 1789, George Washington took the oral oath of office of the President of the United States making him both President of the United States of America and President of the United States.

The secrecy by which the Constitution of September 17, 1787 was created permitted Washington to pretend the office of President of the United States was bound by law “to support this Constitution.”  The only oath of office Washington ever took was to “”preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States,” which would only apply to the Northwest Territory and any others lands and property belonging to the United States of America.

The Constitution of September 17, 1787 became the Constitution for the United States of America, when nine States ratified “this Constitution.”  When George Washington took the oral oath to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States,” he accepted the employment of  administering the lands and other property belonging to the United States of America.

 To learn all the details of how the Constitution of the United States became the gospel of George Washington, you must enroll in the Basic Course in Law and Government, to do that contact me at edrivera@edrivera.com

Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera    

There is an Article I Section 7 office of President of the United States and there is an Article II Section 1 office of President of the United States of America.  George Washington was elected President of the United States of America on February 4, 1789 and took the oral oath of office of President of the United States on April 30, 1789.

To fill the office of President, George Washington had to be fourteen years a resident within the United States.  All federal official counts are taken from July 4, 1776.  No person could qualify to fill the Office of President until after July 4, 1790 and no President Elect has ever filled that office.

The President of the United States of America is not required to take any oath under the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777 and the President of the United States takes an oral oath to gain his office.

Any person who is to fill the Office of President under the Constitution of September 17, 1787 must take the Article VI written oath “to support this Constitution” by subscribing his name to that oath.

The only way to learn the historical, legal and political consequences of not filling the Office of President is to enroll in my Basic Course in Law and Government.  E-mail me at edrivera@edrivera.com to become one of my Students and a legal genius upon graduation.

Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera       

There are three Constitutions and three Offices of President.  There is a Constitution for the United States of America and a President of the United States of America.  There is a Constitution of the United States and a President of the United States.  And last, there is a Constitution of the United States of America and an Office of President.

The Constitution of the United States of America has not been adopted because the Article II Section 1 Clause 5 Office of President has not been filled:

No Person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.

George Washington the first person elected President of the United States of America, on February 4, 1789, according to the Constitution for the United States of America, wasn’t a natural born Citizen and couldn’t meet the “fourteen Years a Resident within the United States” requirement of the Constitution of the United States of America until after July 4, 1790.  Without a person who can take the Article VI oath to be bound “to support this Constitution,” there is no government bound by any constitutional  oath.

If all these Presidents and Constitutions are confusing, enrolling as a Student in my Basic Course in Law and Government will help you sort them out.  Contact me at edrivera@edrivera.com to get started.

Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera      

 

The President of the United States looks like the head man, but the Constitution makes the President of the United States of America the one with the executive power.  That executive power is not derived from the Constitution of September 17, 1787 it comes from the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777. 

The Constitution of September 17, 1787 looks like a contract, because the President of the United States agrees to work for the United States of America, when he takes the oral oath of Office of President of the United States in Article II Section 1 Clause 8.  When he takes that oath, everything that precedes it is part of his employment contract.

Once the elected President of the United States of America takes the oral oath of Office of the President of the United States, what precedes that oath is the only part of the Constitution of September 17, 1787 that is relevant to the President of the United States and his administration of the United States.

The States of the new second Union of the United States have ratified the entire Constitution of September 17, 1787 and all the Amendments thereto, that ratification only establishes the Constitution of September 17, 1787 between the States so ratifying and does not bind the Article II Section 1 Clause 5 Office of President or the Congress of the United States.

To learn the rest of the secrets held by the Constitution of September 17, 1787, you need to enroll as a Student.  Contact me at edrivera@edrivera.com  to enroll

Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera        

 

Government doesn’t work because it had to be broken to even have a beginning.  George Washington did it, he broke it when he made an oral promise to “preserve, protect and defend” the Constitution of the United States.  The Constitution of the United States wasn’t a written plan intended to provide the solution to the grave problems of the day it was the inventory of the assets owned by the United States of America, the Confederacy established by the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777.  He was supposed to sign his name to a written agreement “to support this Constitution,” a written constitution for the United States of America.   It was like Lebron James promising on ESPN to play for the Miami Heat, but refusing to sign a player contract.  George Washington was such a star he actually did it and no one noticed.

If you will take out a one dollar bill, I will show you how Washington busted the government of the United States of America.  Those words: “United States of America” appear on the front and back of the dollar bill.  On the front of the dollar bill above United States of America the words “Federal Reserve Note” appears in capital letters.  Those United States of America are the United States of the Confederacy, the United States of America.  They are intact and so is the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777.

The United States of America and the word Federal in Federal Reserve Note refer to the Confederacy established by the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777.  George Washington was elected President of the United States of America on February 4, 1789 the Office which is vested with the executive power, but no power to tax or make laws.

This executive power did give the President of the United States of America the power to appoint both officers and employees of the United States of America.  For over 200 years everyone has believed the office of President of the United States of America and President of the United States were the same office.  I discovered that the President of the United States of America has executive power derived from the Articles of Confederation and not the Constitution of the United States.  Using this power, George Washington appointed himself President of the United States.

Close examination of the written constitution reveals that not only is the Office of President of the United States appointed there are no qualifications to be met nor is there a term set for that Office.  A President of the United States that is appointed with the advice and consent of the Senate and who is in office for no set time is an employee of the United States of America.

No one has found George Washington’s signature on any oath to either the Office of President of the United States of America or the Office of President of the United States.  No American President has ever signed any oath to be President of the United States of America or President of the United States.  Two signatures can be found on the right and left of Washington’s portrait: that of a Treasurer of the United States and that of a Secretary of the Treasury.  These two signatures have no value because the absence of a President’s signature to an oath proves the Federal Reserve Note is limited to the United States, the territory owned by the United States of America.

George Washington was elected President of the United States of America, which gave him all the executive power of the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777, which was very limited and extended only to the lands owned by the United States of America.  By appointing himself President of the United States, Washington became America’s first benevolent dictator, who as an employee of the Confederacy could collect its taxes and execute its laws even outside federal territory, if he could get away with it.

Washington and the Founding Fathers placed America under military house arrest, when he was able to take the oral oath of Office of President of the United States without raising any suspicions as to his real government take over motives.  Washington’s command of the 1787 Constitutional Convention that produced the written Constitution for the United States of America convinced everyone that the Constitution that secret meeting had produced had now replaced the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777.  Washington, also, wanted everyone to think he had finally gotten his revenge for his grievances against the Articles of Confederation and its Continental Congress during the American Revolution.

Taking control of government power by oral oath is the way of tyrants and monarchs.  There may be a script, as there is in Article II Section 1 Clause 8, but there is never a signature to hold the autocrat to account and so it has been with every American President after George Washington.        

Forget about Barack Hussein Obama’s foreign birth and concentrate on just the words that are in the Constitution.  What makes a person eligible to the Office of President keeps that Office from being filled until after July 4, 1790.  George Washington was elected, inaugurated and set up the Department of the Treasury all in 1789.  Washington never filled the Office of President and neither has any other person elected President of the United States of America or President of the United States.

A few dollars will enroll you in my Basic Course in Law and Government.  Contact me at edrivera@edrivera.com to find out how to start your legal education.

Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera     

Yesterday Commander in Chief Barack Hussein Obama relieved General Stanley McChrystal of his command in Afghanistan, but which President is the Commander in Chief?  Like every other President, Barack Hussein Obama was elected to the Office of President of the United States of America, but takes the oral oath of office of President of the United States.  

The President of the United States is charged by Article I Section 7 of the Constitution of September 17, 1787, with oversight of all the Bills passed by “the House of Representatives and the Senate.”

The President of the United States of America is vested with “the executive Power “in Article II Section 1 Clause 1 of the Constitution of September 17, 1787.

                                                                                        ***

Who is the Commander in Chief?  Title 3—The President of the United States Code makes provision for the election of the President and Vice President by State electors.  The President of Title 3 is officially the President of the United States.  We know that because the person elected by the State electors takes the oral oath to that Office.    The President of the United States of America is, however, the President with the Executive power. 

We can always ask the President, but before you do that maybe you should enroll in my Basic Course in Law and Government, so you can understand any answer you might get.  To enroll in the course and to get the rest of this post, contact me at edrivera@edrivera.com

Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera            

    

Before George Washington could become the first President of the United States, there had to be a United States he could preside over. 

The Declaration of Independence created a United States of America on July 4, 1776, but King George III was not sufficiently impressed to let the thirteen American colonies go free.   Great Britain would not let go of the Americans until the Treaty of Paris of 1783.  In the mean time, the thirteen States began organizing around the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777 and by March 1, 1781 all those States were perpetually bound into the Confederacy known to this day as the United States of America.

The Americans, of course, won the War of Independence and lands south of Canada once claimed by the British, the Northwest Territory.  The Northwest Ordinance of July 13, 1787 made this former British territory permanently part of the United States of America Confederacy.  These United States, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin and part of Minnesota were the first States of a new Union of States, which belonged to the United States of America and were, also, of the United States of America.

The Constitution of September 17, 1787 that comes out of a secret session of the Constitutional Convention of May 25, 1787 was part of the plan for there to be a “United States” for George Washington to be President of the United States of.  Before Washington can become President of the United States he has to be first elected to the Article II, Section 1, Clause 1 office of President of the United States of America on February 4, 1789, so he can appoint himself to the office of President of the United States.

As President of the Constitutional Convention, Washington knows that he must first be elected President of the United States of America by the State’s Presidential Electors before he can take the oral oath of office of President of the United States.  Those famous Framers of the Constitution have concocted an elaborate oral employment oath grander than the Article VI oath and almost poetic in its tone for the person, who is to fill the office of President of the United States. 

Only Washington and his confederates know that neither he nor anyone else will be eligible to the Article II Section 1 Clause 5 Office of President until July 4, 1790.  Anyone with any political influence is in on the conspiracy to take over the Confederacy and replace it with a Roman Republic.

Many of these confederates have been elected to the first Congress, which will meet for the first time on March 4, 1789 in New York City.  It will be the responsibility of this Congress that all Americans know that this Congress is preparing the new oath of office for the new government and the oath will be the first Bill Congress passes and the first one George Washington signs as President of the United States.         

George Washington has made it possible for anyone to be President of the United States.  Thanks to George there are no age, citizenship or residency requirements for the office of President of the United States.  To be a President of the United States all you have to have is a voice.  You can even whisper the oath as George Washington did the first time he took the oath.

Don’t want to President of the United States?  You just want your freedom?  Then you have to become a Student.  Contact me at edrivera@edrivera.com

Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera

President of the United States of America Barack Hussein Obama and President of the United States Barack Hussein Obama both allegedly taught constitutional law, but exactly what these two Presidents  taught remains unclear.  What is clear is this: Neither Lecturer in Law nor Professor of Law Barack Hussein Obama would ever teach you what you need to uncover and understand the secret corporate Constitution buried within the Constitution of September 17, 1787.  Do not despair your PC awaits your touch.

Your computer has been trying to teach how to think like a legal genius from the first time you turned it on.  Today, now, it is going to teach you constitutional law.  President of the United States Barack Hussein Obama took an oral oath at noon on January 20, 2009 that was supposed to be just like this:

“I, Barack Hussein Obama , do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.” “So help me God.”   

Chief Justice John Roberts gave Barack Hussein Obama the wrong prompts and words “faithfully execute” were reversed before millions of electronic viewers.  Later Barack Hussein Obama and John Roberts had a do over and got the oath taken exactly as Article II Section 1 Clause 8 requires.  To this date, no one anywhere has pointed out that English law requires a subscription to a written document.   

Since April 30, 1789 every person elected to the Office of President of the United States of America has taken an oral oath to the Office of President of the United States.  There is a difference.  Article II Section 1 of the Constitution of September 17, 1787 vests executive power in a President of the United States of America: “The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America. He shall hold his Office during the Term of four Years, and, together with the Vice President, chosen for the same Term, be elected, as follows”

Barack Hussein Obama has taken one oral oath to the Office of President of the United States at least twice, but there is no written record of any subscription to the document known as the Constitution of September 17, 1787.  Article VI of the Constitution requires an oath that binds the person swearing or affirming “to support this Constitution.”  When Barack Hussein Obama took the oral oath to “preserve, protect and defend” the Constitution of the United States, that oath was to a different constitution.

We don’t know which constitution was the subject of Barack Hussein Obama teaching, but we can learn a lot about the Presidents, the Constitutions and the impeachment of the Presidents.

To begin, you will need a searchable copy of the Constitution of September 17, 1787, which is one without the amendments.     My Students are provided all four Organic Laws of the United States of America in a searchable format.  If you can’t find a copy of the Constitution, I will e-mail you one upon your request.

Our first search will be for the many Presidents of the Constitution two of which we have already encountered.   Enter the word “President” and allow your computer to search the Constitution for the first “President.”   To preserve and better understand what we find, I suggest you print a copy of the Constitution just as it was completed on September 17, 1787.

The Vice President of the United States is the first “President” of the Constitution of September 17, 1787 and that Office is located in Article I Section 3 Clause 4: “The Vice President of the United States shall be President of the Senate, but shall have no Vote, unless they be equally divided.”   The Vice President of the United States is a kind of corporate legislative Officer, because the Constitution vests him with the power to cast a tie breaking vote in the legislative Senate as President of the Senate.  You wondered what Vice President Joe Biden was good for, well he’s a tie breaker

What kind of corporate legislative Officer is the Vice President of the United States?  There are two kinds of Officers: an Officer with discretion and one with none.  An Officer with discretion directs a corporation, which can be public or private.   An Officer without discretion is an employee.  The only discretion the Vice President has is to vote yea or nay.  That kind of discretion keeps him and the President of the United States out of real lawmaking. 

Article I Section 1 vests “All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives.”   Article I Section 2 Clause 2 sets out the qualifications for Representative:  “No Person shall be a Representative who shall not have attained to the Age of twenty five Years, and been seven Years a Citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be an Inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen.”   Article I Section 3 Clause 3 sets out the qualifications for Senator:  “No Person shall be a Senator who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty Years, and been nine Years a Citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be an Inhabitant of that State for which he shall be chosen.”

 As the Constitution of September 17, 1787 clearly vests discretionary power in the form of “legislative Power,” in the Offices of Representative and Senator and provides for their election upon meeting minimum qualifications, we can conclude that the Office of Vice President of the United States is an employment.   

That the Vice President of the United States is an employee is confirmed by an absence of qualifications for eligibility to hold that Office, no definite term of employment and no specific process for appointment to that Office.  Article I Section 3 Clause 5: “The Senate shall chuse their other Officers, and also a President pro tempore, in the Absence of the Vice President, or when he shall exercise the Office of President of the United States.”   The Vice President of the United States is definitely a non-elected Officer of the Senate and the “Office of President of the United States” is identified in Article I as an Office separate and distinct from the “Office of President of the United States of America.”  Do not forget to add the “President pro tempore” to your list of Presidents. 

If the Vice President of the United States was, at the time of the framing of the Constitution of September 17, 1787 an Officer of the Senate, to which branch of government does the President of the United States belong?   Be warned this is a trick question because it assumes the President of the United States is a part of the government being created by this Constitution.  Is the President of the United States the head of the executive branch of government or is he the chief executive officer of a public corporation? The power of impeachment held by the House of Representatives resolves the question in favor of the public corporation lawmaking power.   Article I Section 2 Clause 5: “The House of Representatives shall chuse their speaker and other Officers; and shall have the sole Power of Impeachment.”   Just what is “the sole Power of Impeachment is revealed by a computer search of that word in Article I of the Constitution of September 17, 1787?  Article I Section 3 Clause 7 defines “Impeachment” in sufficient detail to distinguish an Article I “Impeachment” from an Article II “Impeachment.”  

Judgment in Cases of Impeachment shall not extend further than to removal from Office, and disqualification to hold and enjoy any Office of honor, Trust or Profit under the United States: but the Party convicted shall nevertheless be liable and subject to Indictment, Trial, Judgment and Punishment, according to law.

Impeachment of the President of the United States requires only that the Chief Justice preside at the impeachment trial:  “The Senate shall have the sole Power to try all Impeachments. When sitting for that Purpose, they shall be on Oath or Affirmation. When the President of the United States is tried, the Chief Justice shall preside: And no Person shall be convicted without the concurrence of two thirds of the Members present.” Article I Section 3 Clause 6.   

The President and Vice President of the United States are part of the non-discretionary law making division of the public corporation which has come to be known as the “federal government.” 

 

An Article II Section 4 Impeachment actually specifies the basis for the impeachment:  “The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other High Crimes and Misdemeanors.” 

 

     

 

            

The History Channel in its premier two-hour “Story of Us” managed to refer to the “unalienable Rights” of the Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776 as “inalienable Rights” and then concluded the episode by claiming that George Washington was inaugurated “President of the United States of America” on April 30, 1789.

The oral oath of office Washington took on April 30, 1789 was for the office of President of the United States, as anyone who bothers to read Article II Section 1 Clause 8 of the Constitution of September 17, 1787 will readily see.  For those, like the folks at the History Channel, too busy to examine the written record, this is what witnesses reported to be his spoken words:

“I, George Washington, do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.” “So help me God.”

Washington was elected President of the United States of America on February 4, 1789 and took that office immediately, as neither the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777, nor the Constitution of September 17, 1787 require the President of the United States of America to take any oath.  The Article VI oath of the Constitution of September 17, 1787 is required to be taken by the person who is to fill the Article II Section 1 Clause 5 Office of President.  Washington couldn’t take that Office until after July 4, 1790, the date the “fourteen Years a Resident within the United States” requirement could first be met.

The errors could have been easily avoided, if someone at the History Channel had enrolled in my Basic Course in Law and Government.  Don’t you make that mistake contact me at edrivera@edrivera.com to enroll.

Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera      

 

       

Today, Bill O’Reilly falsely claimed he proved Barack Hussein Obama is qualified to be President on the basis of a birth announcement in a Hawaiian newspaper.

In case you missed it, there is a controversy that Obama is not qualified to be President of the United States.  There is no substance to the so-called “birther” argument, simply, because there are no eligibility requirements for the offices of President of the United States or President of the United States of America, the two offices Obama legitimately fills.  And, while every President Elect since George Washington has been elected President of the United States of America and then taken the office of President of the United States by taking the oral oath for that office; no President of the United States or President of the United States of America has ever taken the written oath required by Article VI of the Constitution of September 17, 1787 to be President under that Constitution.

 That Constitution clearly vests the executive power “in a President of the United States of America” and imposes on the President of the United States the legislative duty of approving or objecting to Bills, which have passed the Senate and House of Representatives, but it imposes eligibility requirements only on the “Office of President.”  

In my younger days, I considered taking up the game of chess for the mental exercise, until I read that all I would learn was how to play chess.  Playing the Constitution of September 17, 1787 is a thrill a minute and I can teach anyone how to be a constitutional champion and a legal genius.  Contact me at edrivera@edrivera.com to enroll as a Student of the Constitution.

Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera  

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