Perry adds Molestations to Special Session
Related: Texas to Ban Legal Public Molestations
It appears that Texas will attempt to stop public molestations over the objections of the Federal Government. In the regular session of the Texas assemble this passed the House side with relative ease. It was when it reached the Texas Senate that problems cropped up. The US Justice Department sent a letter informing the State of Texas that they had no right to exercise their Constitutional right to protect their citizens and visitors to their state.
There was public outcry when the bill was pulled in the state Senate. Now Governor Perry has added it to work for a special session of the state Legislature. John E. Murphy, United States Attorney, that signed the, see below, claims that the United States government has the right, under the Constitution and the Supremacy Clause therein, to molest anyone of any age. Somehow he missed Amendment 4 “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated…”
Most reasonable people would think that the fondling of one’s sex organs is at minimum “unreasonable” if not molestation. It is the Feds that have overstepped their powers. Appearances lead watchers to continue draw the conclusion that this Administration has no regard for the Constitution.
It may be time that the Courts intervened in this issue. If it takes a Texas or another State to stand up and say that enough is enough, than that is the avenue that must be followed. It seems that those that have gone to Washington have forgotten that they have been authorized to carry out limited functions.
We have not surrendered all our rights to a federal government. They need to realize that it is the people and through the States that gave limited power to the Federal Government. The people did not give the power to molest child and grope the elderly to Feds.
Here is the letter:
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