Preface from THE TRUTH HOUND–Hear Ye! Hear Ye! The dominant media-meisters act as if the mere mention of other political parties beyond “Democrats and Republicans” will cause their privates to fall off or their goldfish to die. Indeed, the big media are all about ABSOLUTE POLITICAL EXCLUSION, which is all the more galling when you consider their constant prattling about the precious “inclusion” of members of the LGBT community, etc. Why is there no mention of the other parties and their presidential candidates–the Constitution, Libertarian, Green, American Eagle, Natural Law and Socialist parties, just to name some–even as these party’s candidates are denied nationally televised debate time? THE REAL VOTE FRAUD starts here, long before the people cast their votes. Read on below about the Constitution Party, in the first of a series of TRUTH HOUND articles on other parties (and non-affiliated candidates)
By THE TRUTH HOUND — Mark Anderson
The big media’s constant misrepresentation of what constitutes a “conservative” political philosophy has given people the impression that “conservatism” can only mean the support of unrestrained militarism, toward a U.S.-led world imperium. But that false labeling peels off easily when you hear the views of Constitution Party (CP) presidential candidate Darrell Castle.
This article represents The Truth Hound’s established practice, in association with American Free Press, of reporting on most “other” political parties and their candidates, as well as on non-affiliated candidates, in order to bring some diversity to a “media-sphere” that, so far, has exhibited a worse-than-ever fixation on the pathetic “two” parties that animate the political circus known as the presidential election.
Castle, while accepting his party’s nomination at its recent national convention in Salt Lake City, Utah, inferred that the current regime in Washington is so constitutionally out of bounds that, in the final analysis, it’s illegitimate.
Speaking in support of the original American republic, he described the matter as follows: “The legitimate government was created by the sovereign states for a specific purpose—to protect our God-given rights.” Zeroing in on the crux of the matter, he added, “This purpose has been surrendered to a new government—a new global order that has enveloped us.”
And while reminding the audience that the Constitution was devised to delegate just 17 powers to the federal government, he noted that, today, there are so many government actions and programs outside constitutional boundaries that the current regime is nearly 100% illegal, constitutionally speaking.
And while noting that the states are at fault for allowing federal power to outgrow the Constitution, Castle then listed several “principles,” or planks, being espoused by the new global order’s promoters, as follows: world money, world taxation, world government, a cashless society (and related robbery and surveillance through negative interest rates and high-tech tracking of personal income and spending); and debt monetization.
By the time Castle shared more unwavering views—he’d also get the U.S. out of the United Nations, depart from NATO and end the Federal Reserve system—it became all-too apparent, comparatively speaking, that the policy positions of Republicans Donald J. Trump and Ted Cruz and Democratic contenders Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton are rather flimsy and open to broad interpretation—save perhaps for Trump’s seemingly firm conviction to build a U.S. border wall and Sanders’ animus toward Wall Street’s predatory economic ethos.
“There’d be no more begging for an ‘audit’ of this bank,” Castle added, about the Federal Reserve. “We need a different money system.”
Touching on the major-party presidential candidates—who are granted a media monopoly to the direct detriment of the CP, the other “minority” parties and the voting public—Castle noted that Sanders is a socialist but the Constitution is not a socialist document; and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is too close to the world-consolidation crowd in the Council on Foreign Relations and in the meddlesome investment bank Goldman Sachs which pads various establishment candidates’ campaign war chests (due to Cruz’s wife’s connections to both groups).
Castle added that Trump skirts the idea of a firm constitutional rule of law and makes policy statements off the cuff, based on “what he thinks is right.”; and Hillary, he noted, once said “unborn persons have no constitutional rights,” even though the Constitution is dead-silent on abortion but has two references that no one can be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.
Castle was joined by CP vice presidential nominee Scott Bradley. To learn more about the Constitution Party, go to www.ConstitutionParty.com. The party’s state affiliates sometimes have different names, such as the U.S. Taxpayers Party of Michigan. (For complete information see http://www.ConstitutionParty.com)
Bio snippets of Constitution Party team:
- CP presidential candidate Darrell Castle, 68, grew up in northeastern Tennessee. He became a commissioned officer in the U.S. Marine Corps, serving for four years and attaining the rank of first lieutenant. He cites his military service as fostering his belief that war should not be entered into capriciously nor without congressional approval. A lawyer by trade with a strong Christian ethic, he has opened firms in Michigan, Wisconsin and Missouri, focusing on consumer bankruptcy and personal injury while also representing Social Security/disability and workers’ compensation clients. He was the CP’s 2008 vice presidential nominee.
- His 2016 running mate, Scott Bradley, 64, is a university administrator from Utah who holds a bachelor of arts from Westminster College, a masters of public administration from Brigham Young University and a Ph.D. in constitutional law from George Wythe University. Bradley twice ran for U.S. Senate (2006, 2010). In 2010, he received 5.67% of the vote—the second highest percentage for a CP candidate for Senate against both a Democrat and Republican.