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Bill of Rights

Obama “Very Interested” in Raising Taxes Through Executive Action

Obamacare’s negative tax is in violation of the Tenth Amendment constraints – when the US Supreme Court suggested that it be made a tax instead of fee – it was an extreme breach of trust by the US Supreme Court.
They handed the administration a power that is not enumerated in our American Constitution and thus violates the 10Th Amendment .

This created a broad and vague power to tax American citizens for anything we don’t do as specified by federal regulations – ridiculous, mean, anti-American – and an extremely dangerous breach of our Bill of Rights. Most Obama care and EPA regulations have not been included in the Federal Register and thus are not legally processed regulations by our representatives.
These regulations are sometimes referred to as “soft regulation” meaning they have not been approved by congress.
‪#‎BillofRights‬ ‪#‎AmConstitution‬

US President Barack Obama meets with Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter

Obama “Very Interested” in Raising Taxes Through Executive Action

THE FEDERAL REGISTER
– What is it?
– Where do I find it?

Some details most people don’t know about how our American government does business …

LINK TITLE: “When is this document going to publish?”
(https://www.federalregister.gov/…/when-is-this-document…)

A question we get asked pretty often is “When is this document I read/heard about going to publish?” And the answer seems a bit secretive. According to 1 CFR 17.1: “…Upon receipt, each document shall be held for confidential processing until it is filed for public inspection.” So until the document is made available to the public via Public Inspection, the Office of the Federal Register is not permitted to discuss anything about it to the public.

The issuing agency has its own communications timeline. Often an agency will notify the public that it has created a document and sent it for publication in the Federal Register. However, until it is officially posted on Public Inspection, our office cannot discuss it. With a typical publication timeline of 3 business days, usually we know about a document publishing about two days before the public does, but it’s not our document, so we can’t discuss it.

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