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FreddieUK · 70-79, M
Does removing it from the website remove it from the law? I imagine this is just part of the gaslighting strategy.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@FreddieUK It should not, because that only deletes a digital copy and there are likely others, as well as the original documents themselves.
The US Constitution is protected by declaring that only Congress can amend it, to the point that when written it held a couple of Amendments still to be ratified or rejected by the nation's parliament.
It is stronger than mere presidents!
The US Constitution is protected by declaring that only Congress can amend it, to the point that when written it held a couple of Amendments still to be ratified or rejected by the nation's parliament.
It is stronger than mere presidents!
MaBalzEsHari · M
@FreddieUK No removing it from view does not change what it is. You know.........like redacting trump's name from the Epstein list don't change the fact he's a pedo. That's called trump gaslighting.
FreddieUK · 70-79, M
@MaBalzEsHari Yes, my question was purely rhetorical. Of course it won't change the law that's what makes it so futile.
markinkansas · 61-69, M
@FreddieUK part is that removing it will not change the law. as of yet. however when a student looks and he is missing parts of it. it is like getting rid of the black airmen in ww2 from all the history places.. time will erase all