Vatic Note:   It is important to know that this "Dick Act of 1902" exists.   We now know we have  recourse if they try to take our guns unless they try to overturn that act, but its built right into the act that they can't rescind the act.   That was a stroke of genius by whoever sponsored the act.  Obviously, they knew what and who the powers that be were and sponsored that act to thwart any attempt to -
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DICK ACT of 1902 . . . CAN'T BE REPEALED (GUN CONTROL FORBIDDEN) 
http://www.fourwinds10.net/siterun_data/government/us_constitution/gun_control/news.php?q=1237163642
By Admin,  Four Winds 10,  December 20, 2014 
The Dick Act of 1902 also  known as the Efficiency of Militia Bill H.R. 11654, of June 28, 1902  invalidates all so-called gun-control laws. It also divides the militia  into three distinct and separate entities.  
The three classes H.R.  11654 provided for are the organized militia, henceforth known as the  National Guard of the State, Territory and District of Columbia, the  unorganized militia and the regular army. 
The militia encompasses every  able-bodied male between the ages of 18 and 45. All members of the  unorganized militia have the absolute personal right and 2nd Amendment  right to keep and bear arms of any type, and as many as they can afford  to buy.
The Dick Act of 1902  cannot be repealed; to do so would violate bills of attainder and ex  post facto laws which would be yet another gross violation of the U.S.  Constitution and the Bill of Rights. The President of the United States  has zero authority without violating the Constitution to call the  National Guard to serve outside of their State borders.
 
The National Guard  Militia can only be required by the National Government for limited  purposes specified in the Constitution (to uphold the laws of the Union;  to suppress insurrection and repel invasion). These are the only  purposes for which the General Government can call upon the National  Guard.
   Attorney General  Wickersham advised President Taft, "the Organized Militia (the National  Guard) can not be employed for offensive warfare outside the limits of  the United States."
   The Honorable William  Gordon, in a speech to the House on Thursday, October 4, 1917, proved  that the action of President Wilson in ordering the Organized Militia  (the National Guard) to fight a war in Europe was so blatantly  unconstitutional that he felt Wilson ought to have been impeached.
   During the war with  England an attempt was made by Congress to pass a bill authorizing the  president to draft 100,000 men between the ages of 18 and 45 to invade  enemy territory, Canada. The bill was defeated in the House by Daniel  Webster on the precise point that Congress had no such power over the  militia as to authorize it to empower the President to draft them into  the regular army and send them out of the country.
   The fact is that the  President has no constitutional right, under any circumstances, to draft  men from the militia to fight outside the borders of the USA, and not  even beyond the borders of their respective states. Today, we have a  constitutional LAW which still stands in waiting for the legislators to  obey the Constitution which they swore an oath to uphold.
   Charles Hughes of the  American Bar Association (ABA) made a speech which is contained in the  Appendix to Congressional Record, House, September 10, 1917, pages  6836-6840 which states: "The militia, within the meaning of these  provisions of the Constitution is distinct from the Army of the United  States." 
In these pages we also find a statement made by Daniel Webster,  "that the great principle of the Constitution on that subject is that  the militia is the militia of the States and of the General Government;  and thus being the militia of the States, there is no part of the  Constitution worded with greater care and with more scrupulous jealousy  than that which grants and limits the power of Congress over it."
   "This limitation upon the  power to raise and support armies clearly establishes the intent and  purpose of the framers of the Constitution to limit the power to raise  and maintain a standing army to voluntary enlistment, because if the  unlimited power to draft and conscript was intended to be conferred, it  would have been a useless and puerile thing to limit the use of money  for that purpose. 
Conscripted armies can be paid, but they are not  required to be, and if it had been intended to confer the extraordinary  power to draft the bodies of citizens and send them out of the country  in direct conflict with the limitation upon the use of the militia  imposed by the same section and article, certainly some restriction or  limitation would have been imposed to restrain the unlimited use of such  power."
   The Honorable William Gordon
   Congressional Record, House, Page 640 - 1917
www.angelfire.com/retro/voices/page2.html#1902
The article is reproduced in accordance with  Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. 
 
 
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