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JB/038/214/001

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1823. June 10. E. 3
Constitut. CodeIII Rationale
Ch. 3. Constitutive
Publ. Opin. Tribunal
Sections

or 1.
From sinister aristocratical
interests & desires,
through do. declared
opinions, real or pretended
came legislative
arrangements.

or 2.
Aristocratical declared
opinions drew to them
those of democrats, who
avow aristocratical
opinions and tastes,
that they may be regarded
as belonging to that
Section, and accordingly
respected and courted.

or 3.
Aristocratic Section.
Opinions, Sentiments
and tastes held by it,
in opposition to universal
interest.
In Democrat Section,
opinion conformable
as it is to universal
interest, depredation and
oppression, by whomsoever
exercised, aristocrats
or democrats, are
alike disreputable and
odious.
Per Arist Sect, in these
cases alone where
detrimental to Aristocrats:
not so where
detrimental to democrats
only, but rather reputable
and laudable.

or 4. Aristocratical depredation
and oppression
distinguished into
1. Directly established.
2. Indirectly established.


---page break---
or 5.
1. Directly established,
that of which the
instruments or channels
are offices —
1. Sinecure.
2. Useless.
3. Needless.
4. Overpay of useful
and needful do.
offices, including
temporary as well as
permanent.

or 6.
2. Indirectly established,
the arrangements by
which property, in large
masses, such as
comparatively speaking is
that which has land
for it's subject, is exempted
from obligation of
being sold for payment
of debts.

or 7.
Of the judgments of
the Public Opinion
Tribunal, is composed the
moral law by which
conduct is determined.
Favorable to universal
interest is this moral
law, in so far as for
authors it has the section
of the many,
unfavorable, in so far as
the few.

or 8.
By directly exercised
depredation, as above, the
ruling few, by Governmt
powers in their hands,
extract the matter from
many and few together,
making compensation
to the few, and leaving
the many uncompensated.


---page break---
or 9.
Under the indirect
system, authority is
not given to force, but
exemption and impunity
to fraud. Unpunishable
were exercised
by the opulent few,
under favour of law, on
a large scale, swindling
is punished where
exercised by democrats,
without favour of law.

or 10.
By the impunity given
by Judges and Legislators
to swindling thus
committed, they give
a premium for the
commission of it, and
are accomplices in it.
The English Government
is a Government
composed of swindlers.




Identifier: | JB/038/214/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 38.

Date_1

1823-06-10

Marginal Summary Numbering

or 1 - or 10

Box

038

Main Headings

constitutional code

Folio number

214

Info in main headings field

constitut. code

Image

001

Titles

Category

marginal summary sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

e1

Penner

john flowerdew colls

Watermarks

c wilmott 1819

Marginals

Paper Producer

andreas louriottis

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1819

Notes public

ID Number

11851

Box Contents

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