Sunday, June 14, 2020

The Tale Of Gerrymandering & SCOTUS: How To Cloak The Residuals Of The Peculiar Institution - Stealin' The Children, Land & Vote By Blasphemy

New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, 1882 ...
Origins of Gerrymandering - CPS
There is a blog SCOTUS clerks use as reference when it comes to making decisions about gerrymandering cases.

This particular article, below, is about gerrymandering, which just so happens to be false advisement, which is used as obviation in generating court opinions and the law of the land because it omits to tell the tale of Child Protective Services as the Gerry Secret Society, to become so affectionately called in the United States, gerrymandering.

This is fraud because gerrymandering is the act of stealin' the children, land & vote, the residuals of the peculiar institution, whereby, SCOTUS has ruled is constitutional; hence, slavery was never abolished, due to the "Exception Clause" of the Thirteenth Amendment.

SCOTUS Realizes Gerrymandering Is Constitutional Stealin' The Children, Land & Votes Under The Thirteenth Amendment Exception Clause

Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
Appeal for National Society For The Prevention Of Cruelty To ...
The Allodial Title Holder of the Children's Trust Bonds
The following is the meaning of a bond and its many legal machinations of bondage, for children are immoveable chattels, attached to the allodial title of land, because children cannot be emancipated until the juridic age of 15 years.

15 U.S. Code SUBCHAPTER III—TRUST INDENTURES

The following is the factual, recorded, origins, found in multiple attestation, of Gerrymandering, and the Gerry Secret Society, the response to Emancipation Proclamation: the creation of - 

Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children

Company Number
16120
Status
Inactive Merged Out
Incorporation Date
1 December 1920 (over 99 years ago)
Dissolution Date
18 April 2000
Company Type
DOMESTIC NOT-FOR-PROFIT CORPORATION
Jurisdiction
New York (US)
Registered Address
  • 100 EAST OLD COUNTRY RD, BOX 510, MINEOLA, NEW YORK, 11501
  • United States
Previous Names
  • CHILDREN'S HOUSE, INC.
  • NASSAU CHILDREN'S HOUSE, INC.
  • NASSAU CHILDREN'S SHELTER, INC.
  • SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO CHILDREN, NASSAU COUNTY, INC.
The Response 1874-1875

SPCC Founding 1874
Henry Bergh and Elbridge Gerry, aware that the hour for children had finally come, recruited respected philanthropist John D. Wright and formally pledged themselves to the establishment of organized child protection.
Children's Protective Society
The undersigned, desirous of rescuing the unprotected children
of this city and State
from the cruelty and demoralization which
neglect and abandonment engender'
hereby engage to aid, with their sympathy and support,
the organization and working of a Children's Protective Society,
having in view the realization of so important a purpose.
On December 15, 1874, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children was founded and organized. Gerry annunciated its unique purpose:
"to rescue little children from the cruelty and demoralization which neglect, abandonment and improper treatment engender; to aid by all lawful means in the enforcement of the laws intended for their protection and benefit; to secure by like means the prompt conviction and punishment of all persons violating such laws and especially such persons as cruelly ill treat and shamefully neglect such little children of whom they claim the care, custody or control."
NYSPCC Incorporation 1875
On Tuesday, April 27, 1875, the SPCC was incorporated as The New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, the first child protection agency in the world. John D. Wright became its first president, Gerry and Bergh vice-presidents.

But this is what they were really doing:

Humanitarian reformers had expressed concern for children before the 1870s, organizing efforts to end the corporal punishment of school children, creating institutions to care for ORPHANS, and even sending orphans by train to foster families in the West. But reformers were reluctant to interfere in families, which had a recognized right to privacy. By the 1870s, the relative weights of the concern for children and the concern for family privacy had shifted. Mary Ellen's residence with foster parents (her biological parents were dead) may have eased her protectors' willingness to cross that boundary. Differences in class and culture also facilitated the creation of the SPCCs. The organizations were directed by wealthy, conservative, Protestant white men, whereas their clientele were mostly poor, Catholic immigrant families or poor black families. These were powerful distinctions during the late nineteenth century.
Their founders conceived of the SPCCs as law enforcement agencies. Agents were to find abused children–on the street or through tips made by concerned neighbors, relatives, and even the abused children themselves–investigate their families, and prosecute abusers. Many states gave the societies police powers, such as the right to issue warrants, or allowed the police to aid them. Most importantly, "the cruelty" (as SPCC agents were sometimes known in poor neighborhoods) could remove children from their homes.


Learn more: BEVERLY TRAN: SCOTUS Realizes Gerrymandering Is Constitutional Stealin' The Children, Land & Votes Under The Thirteenth Amendment Exception Clause http://beverlytran.blogspot.com/2019/10/scotus-realizes-gerrymandering-is.html#ixzz6PJ8lR5AB
Stop Medicaid Fraud in Child Welfare

The following is false information, intentionally manufactured to manipulate the public record, to control justice, in favor of the publishing blasphemer, because I just demonstrated that Jennifer Davis could have told the truth, if only she knew how to do a internet basic search, but, then again, blame could be attributed to Google, simply for the fact that they lied in testimony to U.S. House Judiciary Committee claiming they do not suppress searches, which obviouly they do, because the world is just finding out about the truth of the history of gerrymandering being the response to the Thirteenth Amendment:

#maytheheavensfall

Elbridge Gerry and the Monstrous Gerrymander

February 10, 2017

"The Gerrymander: a New Species of Monster" Boston Gazette, March 26, 1812, page 2, Newspaper, Serials and Newspaper Division. [//www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/trr113.html]
Gerrymander the Blasphemer
The first “gerrymander” was drawn on a map and signed into law on February 11, 1812. Elbridge Gerry, then governor of Massachusetts, signed into law a redistricting plan designed to keep his political party in power in the upcoming election. Upset that the Federalist Party was critical of James Madison’s foreign policy, Gerry signed the reapportioning plan that heavily favored his Republican party. Gerry, a man who staunchly followed his principles even against the popular actions of his colleagues, was hesitant to sign the law. The Republican legislators sponsoring and forcing through the bill redrew voting lines so that the Federalist vote was concentrated in a few districts, while the Republican vote was spread over many. ” The redistricting authorized by Gerry won 29 seats for the his Republican party, whereas the Federalists won a puny 11 seats.* Gerry’s district of Essex was a particularly odd shape, long on one side and curved along the north end.
“The Gerrymander: a New Species of Monster” Boston Gazette, March 26, 1812, page 2, Library of Congress Newspaper, Serials and Government Publications Division. 
When the law passed, reportedly the editor of the Boston Gazette posted the map with the newly drawn districts on his office wall, and in talking to a fellow editor, compared the shape of Gerry’s district to a salamander. The editor said, “Salamander! Call it a Gerrymander” — the portmanteau of Gerry + salamander. Gerry’s name, incidentally, is pronounced with a hard “g” as in “gary,” but over time the word “gerrymander” came to be pronounced with the soft “g” as in “jerry,” the pronunciation we use today. In any case, the picture of the cartoon gerrymander map was published in the Boston Gazette on March 26, 1812, with the caption: “The horrid Monster of which this drawing is a correct representation, appeared in the County of Essex, during the last session of the Legislature.” The word has since entered into national and international political language.
Gerrymandering is a current political topic today; as always, it is usually initiated by the incumbents to retain or increase their power. When gerrymandering is taught in U.S. history classes, it is likely students will be shown a picture of the original political cartoon drawn by Elkanah Tisdale for the Gazette and held here at the Library of Congress. Gerry did not win the 1812 election for his home district despite the reapportionment. He did, however, go on to become James Madison’s second vice president later in 1812. He was a signer of the Declaration of Independence, a member of the House of Representatives, twice governor of Massachusetts, and (full disclosure) he proposed the founding of the Library of Congress; he’d probably be dismayed to find this idea is how his name is remembered. Nevertheless, Gerry is forever tied to an important concept in American legal history.
If you’re interested in learning more about modern gerrymandering and the law, here is a shortlist of some of our recent holdings, and a map of Essex County:
KF4905.B85 2010 Bullock, Charles S., 1942-  Redistricting: the most political activity in America.
KF4891.S74 2004 Stephenson, D. Grier. The right to vote: rights and liberties under the law.
KF4557 .S74 2014 Stevens, John Paul,  1920-  Six amendments: how and why we should change the Constitution.
KF4886 .T65 2013 Tokaji, Daniel P. Election law in a nutshell.
G3763.E7F7 1812 .E8 Essex County; Worcester County.
*source: Selesky, Harold E. Encyclopedia of the American Revolution: Library of Military History2006
The following is the history of gerrymandering by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children:


The following is a video on the U.S. history of Gerrymandering.



Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

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