Tag Archives: reflexive law

How to Boost Your Immunities, 2020 Edition, Part 10–Hold Fast to Common Sense and Self-Evident Truth vs “Reflexive Law”

Phyllis Beveridge Nissila Access all articles in this series here Today’s discussion is aimed at helping the mind ward against so-called “post truth” aka “post-reality,” politics. Post-truth politics is “a situation in which people are more likely to accept an … Continue reading

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Guest Feature: “Standing Strong,” March 7, 2020, by Deana Chadwell

Today’s guest feature is by Deana Chadwell, a fellow blogger from Oregon. Her essay, below, presents a powerful snapshot of our currently tenuous hold on the twin foundations of the rule of law and our right to vote that have … Continue reading

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On Contempt for the (Real) Constitution, the House Judiciary Committee Hearing, 12/4/19, and Reflexive Law

Phyllis Beveridge Nissila As I listened to the House Judiciary Committee hearing yesterday where a group of three anti-Trump law professors made their arguably subjective cases for impeaching Trump based on a collection of behaviors they didn’t like and wild … Continue reading

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REVISITING “Reflexive Law”–RE the Electoral College and the Citizenship Question

Phyllis Beveridge Nissila UPDATE 6/28/19 While everybody’s attention is just now fixed on the swarm of Democrat presidential hopefuls attempting to outdo themselves in pandering to a far-left base; while emotions are kept in a tight spin over the crises … Continue reading

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On the Continued, Intensified, Effort to Destroy the U.S. Constitution via “Reflexive Law”

Since I published the post below, back in September 2016, on so-called “Reflexive Law,” aka the effort to sell the idea that our Constitution is a “living document,” that is, can be changed via the social and political norms du … Continue reading

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“Reflexive Law”: On How to Trash the U. S. Constitution and Get Away With It—for Now

Phyllis Beveridge Nissila Ever wonder how come certain members of the government seem to be getting away with overstepping their powers as defined in the United States Constitution, aka, the Supreme Law of the Land? [1]

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