The Titles of Nobility Amendment

The authors of the Constitution wanted the men who served in the Legislative, Executive and Judicial branches of government to owe their allegiance to the people, not to any foreign monarch or country.

In Article I Section 8 Clause 9 they prohibited individuals with ties to foreign powers from serving in positions of public trust. Lawyers who pledged their allegiance to the BAR Association became Attorneys and disqualified themselves from serving in any capacity representing the people.

The problem with the provisions in this clause is that there is no penalty assigned to the attorneys who owed their allegiance to a foreign power.

In order to assign a penalty, in 1810 Congress passed the Titles of Nobility Amendment and sent it out to the seventeen states for their consideration. The propose amendment was lawfully ratified by the necessary 13 states.

This amendment stripped lawyers who had sworn allegiance to the International Bar Association of their citizenship and their right to hold any office of public trust.

John Quincy Adams had sworn allegiance to the BAR Association would have disqualified  him from  serving in any official capacity in the United States.

All of the Presidents from John Quincy Adams to Abraham Lincoln were all BAR Association Attorneys except William Henry Harrison and Zachary Taylor. The vast majority of the members of Congress are BAR Association Attorneys that have sworn an allegiance to a foreign power and gave surrendered their citizenship.

Before the ink on the newly ratified Constitution was even dry, lawyers with an allegiance to a BAR Association began to seek positions in the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government. Any piece of legislation that received a single vote from a non-citizen lawyer would make that legislation unconstitutional.

Even though the Amendment was lawfully ratified men in high places have hidden the 13th Amendment from the American  people.

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