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BAMBA HAS SAID HE WON’T TAKE YOUR GUNS BECAUSE HE HAS ORDERED EACH STATE TO PASS THEIR OWN LAW. BELOW IS THE SITE FOR CALIFORNIA. CHECK YOUR STATE TO SEE WHAT’S PLANNED FOR YOU.
http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/09-10/bill/asm/ab_0951-1000/ab_962_bill_20090226_introduced.html
(AB 962)
BUT HE HAS A PROBLEM.
BELOW IS PROOF THE STATES DON’T EXIST.
IF THEY DON’T EXIST, WHO’S PASSING THE LAWS?
WE DON’T HAVE TO OBEY A LAW WHEN IT’S MADE WITH NO AUTHORITY!
YOU’RE ORGANIZED NOW.
LEARN THE TRUTH!
TAKE YOUR COUNTRY BACK
California’s Judges are NOT public officials. California has no Judiciary as designed by the constitution. California only has a Legislative branch and an Executive branch. Your state is the same. Our states have been destroyed, and yet oppressive legislation continues to come forth and we are expected to obey. Check the charters in your County Clerk’s office. You will see your State has been destroyed. Click the link below to see who your state lists as a public official!
JUDICIAL BRANCH. EIGHT STATES EXCLUDE MEMBERS OF THE JUDICIAL BRANCH FROM THEIR DEFINITION OF PUBLIC OFFICIAL. THESE STATES ARE CALIFORNIA, IOWA, MICHIGAN, MINNESOTA, MISSISSIPPI, MONTANA, OKLAHOMA AND SOUTH CAROLINA. South Carolina designates probate judges as public officials.
Ethics: Statutory Definitions of Public Official / Public Officer
http://www.ncsl.org/Default.aspx?TabId=15233
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Public employees. Less than half of the states include state employees in their definitions of “public official” and of those, most only include high-level employees. Effective June 2008, Illinois added “sworn law enforcement or peace officers” to their definition.
Definition. According to Black’s Law Dictionary a “public official” is “[o]ne who holds or is invested with a public office; a person elected or appointed to carry out some portion of a government’s sovereign powers.” “Public officer” is defined in a similar way. For this research, the terms “public officials” and “public officers” are interchangeable.
While each state has taken slightly different approaches, both terms usually include persons who have been elected to an office at the state or local levels. States differ on including appointed offices, judges and state employees.
Appointed offices. About half of the states also include offices which are appointed, instead of elected, in their definitions of “public official.” Georgia, Nevada, and Utah take a slightly more restrictive approach and deem appointive positions to be “public officials” only when the officeholder is authorized to exercise some portion of the government’s sovereign powers. New York includes appointed officials who receive minimal remuneration.
Definition. According to Black’s Law Dictionary a “public official” is “[o]ne who holds or is invested with a public office; a person elected or appointed to carry out some portion of a government’s sovereign powers.” “Public officer” is defined in a similar way. For this research, the terms “public officials” and “public officers” are interchangeable.
While each state has taken slightly different approaches, both terms usually include persons who have been elected to an office at the state or local levels. States differ on including appointed offices, judges and state employees.
Appointed offices. About half of the states also include offices which are appointed, instead of elected, in their definitions of “public official.” Georgia, Nevada, and Utah take a slightly more restrictive approach and deem appointive positions to be “public officials” only when the officeholder is authorized to exercise some portion of the government’s sovereign powers. New York includes appointed officials who receive minimal remuneration.
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