WOCA Radio Interview with Hagan Smith on the Common Law Grand Jury

Posted by Lisbon Reporter.

Hagan Smith Interview, click here.

Related:  Maine State Bar Association – 100 Years of Law & Justice (1891-1991), click here.

P. 33 – The Maine Bar admits “the younger members of the Bar had virtually no training in common law procedure.”
Maine is listed as a common law state.

P. 37 – The Maine Bar admits “a radical change taken place with respect to a fundamental body of learning, the old learning in common law pleading cast away and an entirely new system replacing it.”

P. 36- Maine Rules of Civil Procedure replaced common law pleadings.

This state cannot “cast away” the law due to the ignorance, uneducated attorneys.

Also related, click here.

 

Published in: on March 4, 2014 at 8:57 pm  Comments (1)  

Projects to Advance Creativity in Education (PACE)

“This is without a doubt the most destructive project ever conceived and carried out by the federal government using your tax money… development of values destroying programs disseminated by the National Diffusion Network, OERI, U.S. Dept. of Education. It resulted in the destruction of student AND teacher values over a period of 49 years!”

Pacesetters_In_Education-1969-567pgs-EDU.sml.pdf

To view copy of Pacesetters, click here.  In the search engine type in “Pacesetters”.

“PACESETTERS IN INNOVATION, Cumulative Issue, presents information on Projects to Advance Creativity in Education (PACE) which were approved during fiscal years 1966, 1967, 1968, and 1969, and were still in operation as of February 1969 . The PACE program is authorized and funded under title III, Supplementary Centers and Services, of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. This volume represents a compilation of planning and operational grants. The projects were abstracted according to the format followed by the Program Development and Dissemination Branch, Bureau of Elementary and Secondary Education, and were indexed according to principles developed in the Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC), a comprehensive information system operating within the Office of Education as a branch of the Division of Information Technology and Dissemination, National Center for Educational Research and Devlelopment.”

Check out “Child Abuse in the Classroom” also at  http://www.americandeception.com.  This book compiled by Phyllis Schlafly and myself contains information on many of the NDN programs.  These programs are still in use in the nation’s schools.

Charlotte Thomson Iserbyt 
Former Senior Policy Advisor
U.S. Department of Education

http://www.deliberatedumbingdown.com 

http://www.americandeception.com 

To order the updated abridged 2011 version  of “the deliberate dumbing down of america”, it is available from 3D Research at Amazon.com.

Published in: on March 4, 2014 at 5:28 pm  Comments (1)  

“An Act To Ensure That Legislators Share the Sacrifice with Civil Servants in the Event of a State Government Shutdown” Sponsored by Representative Diane Russell

LD 1541 HERE.

Summary LD 1541 HERE.

BDN reports “Maine House debates bill to dock lawmakers’ pay if state shutdown occurs, puts off vote.”

“If the state can’t manage to avoid a shutdown, then lawmakers shouldn’t get paid. That was the argument made Tuesday by Portland Democrat Diane Russell on the floor of the House of Representatives.

In the event of a state government shutdown, state employees throughout Maine’s 16 counties would go without pay until the government opens again. Rep. Russell said it’s only fair that if thousands of employees are suddenly left in the lurch, lawmakers should feel a pinch as well.

The Legislature’s State and Local Government Committee voted 11-1 late in February that the bill “ought not to pass.” That recommendation hit the floor of the House [today].

House Majority Leader Seth Berry, D-Bowdoinham, tabled the bill to give his members a chance to discuss the bill in a caucus.

The bill could be taken up in the House again as soon as Wednesday.”

Read more HERE.

Published in: on March 4, 2014 at 4:00 pm  Leave a Comment