On July 29, a U.S. District Court in Wisconsin issued an opinion in One Wisconsin Institute v Thomsen, w.d. 15-cv-324. The opinion upholds the action of the legislature in 2011 in abolishing the straight-ticket device. There are many other issues in this case, and Wisconsin lost on most of the other points. Here is a copy of the decision. The Wisconsin court was aware that a U.S. District Court decision in Michigan last week had come to a contrary conclusion about straight-ticket devices.
For a discussion of the other issues in the case, here is a link to Rick Hasen’s blog post about the decision.
ALLEGIANCE chain —
4 July 1776 USA citizens (or a bit earlier in some States ??? – Mass – 19 Apr 1775 – Day ONE of the American Revolutionary WAR)
1776-1789 State naturalized persons
4 Mar 1789 onward – USA naturalized citizens (laws and treaties)
1868 – 14th Amdt, Sec. 1 citizens (i.e. blacks in USA – free and ex-slaves)
The above and their children via fathers.
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How many folks in the USA do NOT have ANY paper trail regarding the above ???
The paper trail stuff may become LIFE or DEATH due to the obvious coming W-A-R with Islam jihad folks.