Beers With Our Founding Fathers
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Book Chapter of the Week:  Get your FREE complete chapter – Tunnel Intelligence

7/8/2017

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Book Chapter of the Week:  Get your FREE complete chapter – “Tunnel Intelligence” - why the uninformed citizen is a dangerous voter and why the uninformed citizen is a danger to government.  There are four sections and over 40 small chapters. The four sections are – ‘Our Pre-Colonial and Colonial History in Documents and Actions’, ‘Our History of Independence in Documents and Actions’, ‘History and Quotes of our Revolutionaries, Founding Fathers and Framers’, and ‘A Patriot’s View of the Direction of our Country’. There are also four free preview chapters FREE to download – ‘Loss of Direction’, ‘Bill of Rights’, ‘Second Amendment’, and ‘Loss of Direction’.

www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/tunnel-intellligence.html
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Book Chapter of the Week:  Get your FREE complete chapter – Second Amendment – Protection of Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness

7/8/2017

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Book Chapter of the Week:  Get your FREE complete chapter – “Second Amendment – Protection of Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness” at www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/second-amendment.html
 
“The Second Amendment was written to protect the private, personal and unrestricted rights to carry and possess firearms.  This right protects its preceding First Amendment collective rights; and it ensures the subsequent amendments.  It protects the individual from the government.  It provides for the individual to protect their right to Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.”
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Book Chapter of the Week:  Get your FREE complete chapter – Bill of Rights

7/8/2017

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Book Chapter of the Week:  Get your FREE complete chapter – “Bill of Rights” at www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/bill-of-rights.html

"The preamble to the Bill of Rights serves one essential purpose: to affirm that the earlier ratifying of our Constitution was predicated on the passing of several clauses that would declare individual rights and limit the powers, and abuse, of the government. Before reading each of the following amendments, the above paragraph should be included in context."
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Book Chapter of the Week:  Get your FREE complete chapter – Loss of Direction

7/8/2017

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Book Chapter of the Week:  Get your FREE complete chapter – “Loss of Direction” at
www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/loss-of-direction.html
 
This chapter describes how the events of a depressed economy lending to the oppression of our Country, the encroachment of socialism and people who voted on emotion were not an intelligent act, but their own Tunnel Intelligence).   Tunnel Intelligence over being informed, and how those same people are: 1) propagating the unearned taxpayer funded government handouts mentality; or 2) self-perpetuating victims – continue to be victimized into believing the propagation of the handout mentality; or 3) voted for hopes of selfish unearned taxpayer funded government handouts – all eventually shaped the thought processes of this work.  We are all the players in a Ponzi scheme of indescribable proportions and consequences.
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Founding Document of the Week:  Bill of Rights

7/8/2017

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Founding Document of the Week:  Bill of Rights – First 10 Amendments to the Constitution of the United States
Get your copy at www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/founding-documents.html
 
Amendments Proposed September 25th 1789 and Ratified December 15th 1791

“The Conventions of a number of the States, having at the time of their adopting the Constitution, expressed a desire, in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of its powers, that further declaratory and restrictive clauses should be added: And as extending the ground of public confidence in the Government, will best ensure the beneficent ends of its institution.”

The preamble to the Bill of Rights serves one essential purpose:  to affirm that the earlier ratifying of our Constitution was predicated on the passing of several clauses that would declare individual rights and limit the powers, and abuse, of the government.  Before reading each of the following amendments, the above paragraph should be included in context.
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Founding Document of the Week:  Constitution of the United States

7/8/2017

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Founding Document of the Week:  Constitution of the United States
Get your copy at www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/founding-documents.html
 
Convention May 15th 1787 to September 17th 1787; ratified by the states June 21st 1788.
 
Our Constitution was not the first document defining our Country and government, the first was the failed Articles of Confederation. The Constitution has survived over 200 years and the preamble is definitive:
 
“We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”
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Founding Document of the Week:  The Anti-Federalist Papers

7/8/2017

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Founding Document of the Week:  The Anti-Federalist Papers (1787-1788)
Get your copy at www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/founding-documents.html

Like the Federalist Papers, the Anti-Federalist papers were a series of published essays written by anonymous authors, and are also quite extensive, at approximately eighty-five papers. Unlike the Federalist Papers, the movement was not organized and did not capture the wide audience of the Federalist Papers. Several key figures of the revolution, particularly leading up to it, came forward in opposition to the Constitution and central government it proposed.
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Founding Document of the Week:  The Federalist Papers

7/8/2017

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Founding Document of the Week:  The Federalist Papers (1787-1788)
Get your copy at www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/founding-documents.html

The Articles of Confederation were a failure, and our Founding Fathers were determined to learn from that failure – as they had from their collective study of history. They believed the Constitution was the result of learning from those failures.

The Federalist Papers were a series of eighty-five essays published from 1787 to 1788, at the conclusion of the American War for Independence. These eighty-five essays were signed ‘PUBLIUS’ and were believed to have been authored by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay and James Madison. Published in various newspapers throughout New York, the purpose was to persuade voters to ratify the constitution proposed before them, and why the type of government proposed was the best for the new United States of America.
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Founding Document of the Week:  The Articles of Confederation

7/8/2017

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Founding Document of the Week:  The Articles of Confederation (1789)
Get your copy at www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/founding-documents.html
 
The Articles of Confederation were the first governing laws of the new United States of America. The Articles were replaced by our present Constitution in 1787. Articles detailing a government were introduced six times, a full year before declaring independence. Recalling that not until early 1776 did the Continental Congress propose separation from England, it is asked why the Continental Congress would undertake drafting a document?
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Founding Document of the Week:  Declaration of Independence

7/8/2017

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Founding Document of the Week:  Declaration of Independence – July 4th 1776
Get your copy at www.beerswithourfoundingfathers.com/founding-documents.html
 
In the preamble is the principle statement of separation.  This is the right to a revolution, the right of an oppressed people to disband or separate from their government when their natural rights and the natural laws are violated.  The statement of human rights are probably the most recognized words in the free world, and is as important as the statement of separation.
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