Are People Turning Against The “Two Party System At Last?”‏

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HORNING v. STATE OF INDIANA challenges discriminatory laws that grant special powers, immunities, access, money and rights to the Democratic and Republican parties, at the expense of all other parties and individuals.

This is the core issue behind most others today. Whether it’s the injustice of “Super Delegates,” the campaign donation/ legislative payback system that promotes corporate corruption, endless war and infinite debt, or the whole notion that corporations have human rights; it all starts with laws that elevate the partisan cronies above the rest of us.

By their nature, ballot access laws limit voters’ choices on Election Day. Ballot access laws proliferated in the 1930’s to suppress the surge in Socialist Party votes, and again in the 1970’s through 80’s to combat what came to be called, “third parties.” Partisan judges encouraged this preferential treatment by calling it “stare decisis” such that, today, most people think that our “Two Party System” is legal, moral, and what the founders intended all along.

In fact our founders warned us against the entrenchment of parties, and wrote parts of our constitutions to protect us against their inherent corruption. American citizens have become so disenfranchised by the corruption in our government that they are turning toward those they think are “outsiders,” or abstaining from voting entirely. Happily, this is having an effect on the courts.

On January 27, the Constitution Party won its case against Missouri’s county ballot access laws. Just last week, the Libertarian Party of Illinois won its case against the “full slate law.” But no recent reversals addressed the core issue that human beings have been separated into classes; and that individual humans are in the lowest class, below even the smallest corporate entities/political parties.

The timing is right to stop hacking at the fast-growing branches of our problems, and strike at the root. All citizens must be equal under the law at long last. The constitutions demand it, citizens are coming to demand it, and that is the substance of HORNING v. STATE OF INDIANA.

Contact:
Andrew Horning
cell: (812) 585-0545
andrewhorning@hotmail.com

1 COMMENT

  1. I actually no longer thing of the “Parties” as such, but more like “Sophisticated Gangs”.

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