Rattling off corporations spending tax dollars doesn't help us determine the State of the Union. Holding virtual hands with families that make $200,000 a year and think they're poor when at least 43 million make no money each year is a sham. Millions have been damned as persona non grata by corporations into oblivion using MITRE / MIT software like Unicru and insurance records that are illegally accessed in violation of HIPAA.
This is a government that wants you to let them govern. If you were so smart you'd be there. It's all about creating more websites, and showing you smiling faces holding hands in unity. Let's defeat enemies and build coalitions and have a moral example. The only time they give specifics is when they recite where they are going to send the military next to open credit accounts for Globalist banks. Darfur; North Korea.
It's like watching the episode of Cheers where the candidate running against Woody says he's concerned about the issues that affect "you"... the issues that affect you the most, and he never says what they are. Or when Frasier tells Woody:
"just say the word 'change' about a hundred times!"
You don't say.
In 1911, William Howard Taft delivered to Congress a detailed report on the United States activities of the last year... in four parts over four days. That's known as putting in effort, not submitting sound bites for the Mockingbird Media to process.
The present lawyers, who for the most part have never practiced a day in their lives, have no clue that the Constitution says what follows, even though they just read it.
Article II - The Executive Branch...
Section 3 - State of the Union, Convening Congress
He shall from time to time give to the Congress Information of the State of the Union, and recommend to their Consideration such Measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient; he may, on extraordinary Occasions, convene both Houses, or either of them, and in Case of Disagreement between them, with Respect to the Time of Adjournment, he may adjourn them to such Time as he shall think proper; he shall receive Ambassadors and other public Ministers; he shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed, and shall Commission all the Officers of the United States.
The present officers of the United States of America treat you like you're a moron listening to a speech with less actual content than Joseph Goebbels' works.
Third Annual Message
December 5, 1911
[On the Anti-Trust Statute.] To the Senate and House of Representatives:
THE ANTI-TRUST LAW-THE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS.
NO CHANGE IN THE RULE OF DECISION-MERELY IN ITS FORM OF EXPRESSION.
FORCE AND EFFECTIVENESS OF STATUTE A MATTER OF GROWTH.
THE REMEDY IN EQUITY BY DISSOLUTION.
SITUATION AFTER READJUSTMENT.
SIZE OF NEW COMPANIES.
CONFISCATION NOT THE PURPOSE OF THE STATUTE.
EFFECTIVENESS OF DECREE.
COMMON STOCK OWNERSHIP.
VOLUNTARY REORGANIZATIONS OF OTHER TRUSTS AT HAND.
MOVEMENT FOR REPEAL OF THE ANTI-TRUST LAW.
LACK OF DEFINITENESS IN THE STATUTE.
NEW REMEDIES SUGGESTED.
SUPPLEMENTAL LEGISLATION NEEDED--NOT REPEAL OR AMENDMENT.
FEDERAL INCORPORATION RECOMMENDED.
GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATIVE EXPERTS NEEDED TO AID COURTS IN TRUST DISSOLUTIONS.
FEDERAL CORPORATION COMMISSION PROPOSED.
INCORPORATION VOLUNTARY.
ONLY SUPPLEMENTAL LEGISLATION NEEDED.
IMPORTANCE OF THE ANTI-TRUST ACT.
PART II.
[On Foreign Relations.]
THE WHITE HOUSE, December 7, 1911
To the Senate and House of Representatives:
The relations of the United States with other countries have continued during the past twelve months upon a basis of the usual good will and friendly intercourse...
ARBITRATION .
CLAIM OF ALSOP & CO. SETTLED.
ARBITRATIONS-PANAMA AND COSTA RICA-COLOMBIA AND HAITI.
CHAMIZAL ARBITRATION NOT SATISFACTORY.
LATIN AMERICA.
VENEZUELA.
MEXICO .
CENTRAL AMERICA-HONDURAS AND NICARAGUA TREATIES PROPOSED.
PANAMA .
THE PAN AMERICAN UNION.
THE FAR EAST.
THE CHINESE LOANS.
NEUTRAL FINANCIAL ADVISER.
NEW JAPANESE TREATY.
SIAM .
EUROPE AND THE NEAR EAST.
COMMERCE WITH THE NEAR EAST.
CORONATION OF KING GEORGE V.
SETTLEMENT OF LONG-STANDING DIFFERENCES WITH GREAT BRITAIN.
PRESENTATION TO GERMANY OF REPLICA OF VON STEUBEN STATUE.
RUSSIA .
LIBERIA .
RECOGNITION OF PORTUGUESE REPUBLIC.
SPITZBERGEN ISLANDS.
INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONS AND CONFERENCES.
INTERNATIONAL PRIZE COURT.
FUR-SEAL TREATY.
LEGISLATION NECESSARY.
PROTECTION OF INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY UNION.
INTERNATIONAL OPIUM COMMISSION.
BUENOS AIRES CONVENTIONS.
INTERNATIONAL ARRANGEMENT TO SUPPRESS OBSCENE PUBLICATIONS.
FOREIGN TRADE RELATIONS OF TYTE UNITED STATES.
RECORD OF HIGHEST AMOUNT OF FOREIGN TRADE.
FACILITIES FOR FOREIGN TRADE FURNISHED BY JOINT ACTION OF DEPARTMENT OF STATE AND OF COMMERCE AND LABOR.
CRYING NEED FOR AMERICAN MERCHANT MARINE.
EXTENSION OF AMERICAN BANKING TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES.
CHAMBERS OF FOREIGN COMMERCE SUGGESTED.
IMPROVEMENT OF THE FOREIGN SERVICE.
PART III.
THE WHITE HOUSE, December 20, 1911.
To the Senate and House of Representatives:
PART IV.
[On the financial condition of the treasury, needed banking and currency reform, and departmental questions.]
THE WHITE HOUSE, December 21, 1911.
To the Senate and House of Representatives:
The financial condition of the Government, as shown at the close of the last fiscal year, June 30, 1911, was very satisfactory. The ordinary receipts into the general fund, excluding postal revenues, amounted to $701,372,374.99, and the disbursements from the general fund for current expenses and capital outlays, excluding postal and Panama Canal disbursements, including the interest on the public debt, amounted to $654,137,907-89, leaving a surplus Of $47,234,377.10.
The postal revenue receipts amounted to $237,879,823,60, while the payments made for the postal service from the postal revenues amounted to $237,660,705.48, which left a surplus of postal receipts over disbursements Of $219,118.12, the first time in 27 years in which a surplus occurred.
The interest-bearing debt of the United States June 30, 1911, amounted to $915,353,igo. The debt on which interest had ceased amounted to $1,879,830.26, and the debt bearing no interest, including greenbacks, national bank notes to be redeemed, and fractional currency, amounted to $386,751,917-43, or a total of interest and noninterest bearing debt amounting to $1,303,984,937.69.
The actual disbursements, exclusive of those for the Panama Canal and for the postal service for the year ending June 30, 1911, were $654,137,997.89. The actual disbursements for the year ending June 30, 1910, exclusive of the Panama Canal and the postal service disbursements, were $659,705,391.08, making a decrease Of $5,567,393.19 in yearly expenditures in the year 1911 under that of 1910. For the year ending June 30, 1912, the estimated receipts, exclusive of the postal revenues, are $666,000,000, while the total estimates, exclusive of those for the Panama Canal and the postal expenditures payable from the postal revenues, amount to $645,842,799.34. This is a decrease in the 1912 estimates from that of the 1911 estimates of $1,534,367-22.
For the year ending June 30, 1913, the estimated receipts, exclusive of the postal revenues, are $667,000,000, while the total estimated appropriations, exclusive of the Panama Canal and postal disbursements payable from postal revenues, will amount to $637,920,803.35. This is a decrease in the 1913 estimates from that of the 1912 estimates of $7,921,995.99.
As to the postal revenues, the expansion of the business in that department, the normal increase in the Post Office and the extension of the service, will increase the outlay to the SUM Of $260,938,463 ; but as the department was self-sustaining this year the Postmaster General is assured that next year the receipts will at least equal the expenditures, and probably exceed them by more than the surplus of this year. It is fair and equitable, therefore, in determining the economy with which the Government has been run, to exclude the transactions of a department like the Post Office Department, which relies for its support upon its receipts. In calculations heretofore made for comparison of economy in each year, it has been the proper custom only to include in the statement the deficit in the Post Office Department which was paid out of the Treasury.
THE CREDIT OF THE UNITED STATES.
EFFICIENCY AND ECONOMY IN THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT.
MONETARY REFORM.
THE WAR DEPARTMENT.
MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER AT ARLINGTON.
THE PANAMA CANAL.
FURNISHING SUPPLIES AND REPAIRS.
TOLLS .
POWER EXISTS TO RELIEVE AMERICAN SHIPPING.
THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS.
NATURALIZATION .
FRIARS' LANDS.
RIVERS AND HARBORS.
WATERWAY FROM THE LAKES TO THE GULF.
THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE.
Removal of clerks of Federal courts.
French spoliation awards.
EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY AND WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COMMISSION.
MEASURES TO PREVENT DELAY AND UNNECESSARY COST OF LITIGATION.
POST OFFICE.
POSTAL-SAVINGS SYSTEM.
PARCEL POST.
THE NAVY DEPARTMENT.
ABOLITION OF NAVY YARDS.
AMALGAMATION OF STAFF CORPS IN THE NAVY.
COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE.
DEPARTMENTS OF AGRICULTURE AND COMMERCE AND LABOR.
COMMISSION ON EFFICIENCY AND ECONOMY.
CIVIL RETIREMENT AND CONTRIBUTORY PENSION SYSTEM.
ELIMINATION OF ALL LOCAL OFFICES FROM POLITICS.
The unidentified African man speaking at the front of the House Chamber operating under an assumed last name spoke of science fairs instead, and the usual go nowhere drivel of his handlers. They have decided for you that you are too stupid to care about actual facts and that government has become so complicated (through their own doing) that we have to talk abut Miss Waters wiping away tears in school.
Legiones redde !
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