1.
We Thee continue abused
(Negro) Race of (America) state, affirm and Declare before the “World Honorable
Justice”
the Defendant “The
United States of America” continual making false legal material claims of fact before
the “Entire World” that We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race of (America) were
free from such abused “captive free slave labor in a life of abused chattel” in
the
“Civilization” in the
Northern hemisphere of the World Planet “Earth” known to be “The United States
of America” as We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race of (America) were set free
from Defendant “The United States of America”, slave bondage and no more (KKK) death
by lynching, hanging, murder by police, false
imprisonment, mutilation, and bombing of
We Thee continue abused
(Negro) Race of (America), Life, Family, Churches, Schools, and Homes ended in
the year 1865 as claimed by Defendant(s) “The United States of America”,
timeline abused of we thee (Negro) Race of (America) provide said timeline
before the “World Honorable Justice” as follows:
1619
|
The first African slaves arrive in Virginia.
|
1787
|
Slavery
is made illegal in the Northwest
Territory. The U.S
Constitution states that Congress may not ban the slave trade
until 1808.
|
1793
|
Eli Whitney's
invention of the cotton gin
greatly increases the demand for slave labor.
|
1793
|
A federal fugitive slave
law is enacted, providing for the return slaves who had escaped
and crossed state lines.
|
1800
|
Gabriel
Prosser, an enslaved African American blacksmith, organizes a
slave revolt intending to march on Richmond, Virginia. The conspiracy
is uncovered, and Prosser and a number of the rebels are hanged. Virginia's
slave laws are consequently tightened.
|
1808
|
Congress bans the importation of slaves from Africa.
|
1820
|
The Missouri
Compromise bans slavery north of the southern boundary of
Missouri.
|
1822
|
Denmark Vesey,
an enslaved African American carpenter who had purchased his freedom, plans a
slave revolt with the intent to lay siege on Charleston, South Carolina. The plot
is discovered, and Vesey and 34 coconspirators are hanged.
|
1831
|
Nat Turner,
an enslaved African American preacher, leads the most significant slave
uprising in American history. He and his band of followers launch a short,
bloody, rebellion in Southampton County, Virginia. The militia
quells the rebellion, and Turner is eventually hanged. As a consequence,
Virginia institutes much stricter slave laws.
|
1831
|
William Lloyd
Garrison begins publishing the Liberator, a weekly paper
that advocates the complete abolition of slavery. He becomes one of the most
famous figures in the abolitionist
movement.
|
1846
|
The Wilmot
Proviso, introduced by Democratic representative David Wilmot of Pennsylvania, attempts
to ban slavery in territory gained in the Mexican War. The proviso
is blocked by Southerners, but continues to enflame the debate over slavery.
|
1849
|
Harriet Tubman
escapes from slavery and becomes one of the most effective and celebrated
leaders of the Underground
Railroad.
|
1850
|
The continuing debate whether territory gained in the Mexican War should be
open to slavery is decided in the Compromise of 1850: California is admitted
as a free state, Utah
and New Mexico
territories are left to be decided by popular sovereignty, and
the slave trade in Washington, DC
is prohibited. It also establishes a much stricter fugitive slave law than
the original, passed in 1793.
|
1852
|
Harriet
Beecher Stowe's novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin is published. It
becomes one of the most influential works to stir anti-slavery sentiments.
|
1854
|
Congress passes the Kansas-Nebraska Act,
establishing the territories of Kansas and Nebraska. The
legislation repeals the Missouri
Compromise of 1820 and renews tensions between anti- and
proslavery factions.
|
1857
|
The Dred Scott
case holds that Congress does not have the right to ban slavery in
states and, furthermore, that slaves are not citizens.
|
1859
|
John Brown
and 21 followers capture the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Va. (now
W. Va.), in an attempt to launch a slave revolt.
|
1861
|
The Confederacy
is founded when the deep South secedes, and the Civil War begins.
|
1863
|
President
Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation,
declaring "that all persons held as slaves" within the Confederate
state "are, and henceforward shall be free."
|
1865
|
The Civil War
ends. Lincoln
is assassinated. The Thirteenth
Amendment abolishes slavery throughout the United States. On June
19 slavery in the United States effectively ended when 250,000 slaves in
Texas finally received the news that the Civil War had ended two months earlier
|
2.
We Thee continue abused
(Negro) Race of (America) “State”, “Affirm” and “Declare” before the “World
Honorable Justice” that in fact Defendant “The United States of America”, herein
“slave bondage and no more (KKK) death by “lynching”, “hanging”, “murder by
police”, and “bombing” against
We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race of
(America), Life, Family, Churches,
Schools, and Homes never ended and continual in 1995 in fact Defendant “The
United States of America”, state namely Mississippi didn’t
officially outlaw slavery against We Thee continue abused
(Negro) Race of (America) until 1995
While the “Thirteenth
Amendment” laws of Defendant “The United States of America”, was set into law,
thus outlawing slavery against We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race
of (America)
anywhere in the “Entire
Jurisdiction of The Defendant United States of America, on December 6, 1865
when it secured the needed 27 of 36 states’ approval (3/4), it wasn’t until 130
years later on March 16, 1995 that Mississippi finally got around to ratifying
the
Thirteenth
Amendment” of The Defendant United States of America outlawing slavery against We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race of (America) As this made The Defendant United States of America state
namely
“Mississippi” the
last state to ratify it, with the previous state of the initial 36 being
Kentucky in 1976 and before that Delaware in 1901
All three of those
states, along with New Jersey, initially rejected the amendment in 1865, though
just 9 months after rejecting it, New Jersey changed their mind and ratified
it.
3.
We Thee continue abused
(Negro) Race of (America) state, affirm and Declare before the “World Honorable
Justice” that in fact Defendant “The United States of America”, Thirteenth Amendment specifically states on December 6th 1865
Neither slavery nor involuntary
servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been
duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to
their jurisdiction.
Congress shall have power to enforce this
article by appropriate legislation.
But none the less Defendant “The United
States of America”, state namely Texas the Eleventh Legislature produced these black codes
in 1866 in which We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race
of (America) were not allowed to “vote” or “Hold Government” office of Defendant
“The United States of America, not serve on juries, only testify only in cases involving
other We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race of (America)
Nor could We Thee continue
abused (Negro) Race of (America) marry white race while still being subject to more
(KKK) Ku Klux Klan paramilitary death by lynching, hanging, murder by police, and bombing of We Thee continue abused (Negro)
Race of (America), Life, Family, Churches,
Schools, and Homes
Between the year of 1882 and
1968, more than 3,400 of We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race
of (America) were lynched in the Defendant “The United States of America”,
Most of those lynchings -- 539 – against We Thee continue abused
(Negro) Race of (America)- took place in Mississippi, followed by
Georgia with 492.
In North Carolina, there were at
least 86 lynchings of We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race of (America) during that period and the last lynching’s occurred in the Defendant “The United States of America” against We Thee continue abused
(Negro) Race of (America) as follows:
a. Raynard Johnson, 17, of Kokomo, MS found hanging by his own belt in 2000
after he and his friends dated white girls in the Defendant “The United States of America”
b.
James Craig Anderson, although not subject
to lynching was attached, beaten and deliberately run down and killed by three
white teens, Darryl Dedmon, Dylan Butler, and John Rice in 2011 in Jackson, MS
they had been assaulting against We Thee continue abused
(Negro) Race of (America) resident of that city for some time.
c.
Roy Veal of Washington State in 2004,
found hanging in Porterville, MS, whereby he was laying claim to his family’s
land.
d.
Nick Naylor in 2003, found hanging by
one of his dog’s leashes in Portervillie, MS after he took his dogs for a walk
in an area frequented by white hunters.
Notwithstanding 130 years from December 6, 1865 when the Defendant “The United States of
America” secured the needed 27 of 36 states’
approval (3/4), it wasn’t until 130 years later on March 16, 1995 We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race of (America), Life, Family,
Churches, Schools, and
Homes still under a state of continual hostile “siege”, “abuse” and “death” thereof for
being We Thee continue abused (Negro) Race of the Defendant “The United States
of America”.
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