The Hour of Our Disunion

James Madison said, “Each State, in ratifying the Constitution, is considered as a sovereign body, independent of all others, and only to be bound by its own voluntary act. In this relation, then, the new Constitution will, if established, be a federal, and not a national constitution.”

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James Madison said, “Each State, in ratifying the Constitution, is considered as a sovereign body, independent of all others, and only to be bound by its own voluntary act. In this relation, then, the new Constitution will, if established, be a federal, and not a national constitution.”
The federal system, where more than one layer of government has jurisdiction over the same territory, is called federalism. In the United States, the federalist system emerged because the states evolved from separate colonies, which had diverse populations and different needs. The Framers of the Constitution envisioned that state governments, not the national government, would be the main unit of government.
Through this work of fiction Texit: The Hour of Our Disunion, we are to be reminded that while the overwhelming volume of information floods over us daily, as a firehose, we should not forget, as an example, that in the case of the recent pandemic, the “vaccine” was more harmful than the “virus.” Further, illegal immigration has facilitated the trafficking of children and importation of fentanyl, which has killed over 250,000 Americans since 2018- that we know of. If that is not enough, over two million unelected bureaucrats, immune from critique, constantly erect additional regulations to restrict commerce and erode personal freedoms. And to pile on, the public education system is designed to produce workers, not thinkers, their end product an effectively brainwashed citizen programmed to live an agnostic and self-serving existence. Culturally, we are urged to worship the Hollywood idols as opposed to the Almighty God, whom the founding fathers understood was the source of grace and wisdom that guided their miraculous separation from the largest and strongest empire then on the earth.
Joseph Anthony Wittrreich, in Feminist Milton, is quoted as saying, “History may not repeat itself but it rhymes.” It would be difficult indeed to find an informed American today who believes the federal government is performing adequately, much less properly. Daniel Miller, President of the Texas Nationalist Movement adeptly stated in Texit: Why and How Texas Will Leave the Union, that, “The people of Texas are tired of living under 180,000 pages of federal laws, administered by 440 separate federal agencies and 2.5 million unelected bureaucrats. The people of Texas are sick of having their lives dictated by politicians they didn’t elect forcing policies on them they don’t want.”
The end of the book is not the end of the story. The morass from which the “deep state, the fourth column, the industrial military complex, the World Economic Forum and other unauthorized ruling elites ascend, will not willingly hand over the power they have. It must be taken. Power is a zero-sum game.
This body of work is fiction, a creation, containing fictitious characters. If when reading this novel, you become offended or develop a feeling that you have been personally represented within, rightly or otherwise, you think too much of yourself and we hope you obtain professional help.

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