In trying to do whatever I can to advance the people's Civil Purpose, and thus preserve the U.S. Constitution, . . ..
Let's stop here for a second. Did you notice the coma that I placed between the phrase "Civil Purpose" and the word-conjunction "and" that follows it? By a rule of grammar, this means I can remove every bit of the dependent clause written between the two comas without altering any of the readers ability to comprehend the sentence.
For example, if I held the legal document of the U.S. Constitution to be more important than the formal document of the Declaration of Independence, then I would have had to write it like this:
In trying to do whatever I can to preserve the U.S. Constitution, and thus advance this nation's Civil Purpose, . . ..
Or, I might have written it like this:
In trying to do whatever I can to advance the people's Civil Purpose and thus preserve the U.S. Constitution, . . ..
All Americans should believe that the formal order is more important than any of the legal laws. By formal, I mean the conclusion our Founding Father's obtained within The Declaration of Independence by the utilization of the scientific method of natural law.
In other words, laws exist as productive laws only when they stand upon the foundation of an order. When it doesn't do so, it becomes chaos. Most think of chaos as pure "spontaneity" devoid of all laws, but this is a fallacy.
To further explain this subtle point, in reducing scientifically, spontaneity as a force should be thought of as half of a natural law equation, as reality actually presents itself metaphysically in the form of (2+0)=1/2. .
With the variable 2 equal to numbers, the law, and structure,
With the variable 0 equal to no numbers, spontaneity, and motion,
And with 1/2 oscillating the two forces to the sum of 1.
Again, true chaos is the enactment of a structure of laws without first having beneath them the support of an underlying foundation of order.
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