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[CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION TEMPORARILY DECLASSIFIED - CIA]

Date of Publication: 05/20/2024

Sole Author: Shawn Dexter John

Legal and Political Tenets of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution

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Legal and Political Tenets of relation are as follows:

(1) The separation of Church and State, as a constitutional principle of the United States,
shall be maintained as traditionally articulated but shall not regress the country or its
ethics into a political space void of the sector of religion as fundamental to the United
States,
(2) The separation of Religion and State, as a constitutional principle of the United States,
shall be maintained as traditionally articulated but shall not regress the country or its
ethics into a political space depreciative of the fundamental and consequential nature of
religion in the United States, as a bonafide and pre-dominant element of the function of
its society,
(3) The religious community shall be protected as free from Government but privy to all
discourses and relations with Government with respect to the community’s constituents
and to organizations not unconstitutional or merely unlawful in nature,
(4) There shall be no priority of Government or Civil Society (or such) which shall negate the
supremacy of constitutional law as nominal and effectual aside adherent statutes, that
enacted by government via legislature, meaning all laws in compliance with the
Constitution of the United States under diplomatic safeguards in protecting fundamental
and supplementary elements of society, including religion and its customs,
(5) There shall be no condition which has any peculiar religion or philosophical belief
renounced as un-American, meaning in effect or popular perception; only unethical
activism or specific unlawful acts may be renounced as unacceptable by Government
and shall be engaged by the general public in this manner without breach of human or
civil rights (or any civil liberty),
(6) All purposes of Government and Civil Society, that which represents the interests of the
American people and their Government in respecting these only in adherence to
Constitutional provisions protecting and limiting their application and effect, shall respect
the right of any individual or social demographic group (or such) to renounce
participation within government and to dismiss all arbitrary claims that their ethical
resolve is in breach of the trust of the public as a unitary community,
(7) No religious organization or office, including any conceived faith-based office or such in
Government, shall decide the laws or public policies of any jurisdiction within the United
States or elsewhere, including laws on religious constraints,
(8) There shall be no decision made by any judicature, domestic or supranational, which
shall dissolve this conventional interpretation of the separation of Church and State other
than toward its refinement for human development and ethical purposes, that which
respects the inalienable right to the fundamental endowment of religion and its peculiar
and standard liturgies alike to all citizens and residents without popular or procedural
deviation amongst either stature, and
(9) Any and all laws and policies (and subordinate allowances and limits) shall reject all
religious rules or perceived internal [by-]laws or such which breaches, abridges, or
violates the private and/or public laws of the United States, especially those denoting
human and civil rights.

Re: The first amendment of the United States Constitution provides that the country’s
government may not establish or recognize any state religion. Inferred, no individual, as
a minister or non-minister advocate of religion, can be elected or appointed as
theocratically representative of the people of the United States. These facts do not
impart that no person of religious background may serve as any one [government]
representative or public servant type. These simply convey that our governments may
not act in adherence to any official religious mandate, may not act under directions
given by any official discriminately and formally serving institutional religion precisely.
However, the freedom of religion is protected by the amendment. Every individual is
free to practice religion, of any denomination, outside performing illicit activities.

Every individual is secured the right to free speech, meaning the right to broadcast or
communicate opinions and perspectives. Free expression is implied within this
protection ensuring that artistic, scientific, political, cultural, and theological expression
may be exhibited or transmitted when in absence of bona fide criminality. Of close
relation, free press requires that government not curtail the honest work of the press,
that government not prohibit [private] journalistic media. The press has the right to
communicate on government matters freely, to be impactful, and to refuse brutish
demands made by government propagandists.

In observing the political rights of the American people, government has to respect the
right of the people to assemble, though peacefully. The American people may
congregate, may form associations, may deliberate as subjective activists, and may
subsequently protest government or adversaries within reason.

Every individual has the right to protest and petition government for meeting his or her
needs induced with the violation of his or her right(s). The relevant government is to
provide courts, remedies, and public responders for addressing those breaches and
consequent needs non-discriminately.

Note:

1. The freedom of conscience is protected under the first amendment.

Special note:

1. The Constitution and other laws of the United States also protect non-citizen
residents non-discriminately (concerning human rights especially).

Reference:

1. Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421 (1962).

CIA-INTERPOL Partnership File Number: 7427BNWURHTW364

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