Legislators Faced with Critical Issues: Some Left-Over, Some New
Georgia General Assembly Convened January 9, 2012
The Georgia Republican Party controls both House and Senate in the General Assembly. In the House are 115 Republicans, 62 Democrats and one Independent. In the Senate there are 36 Republicans and 20 Democrats. With that majority, Republicans can pass or defeat any bill.
Of 2,692 pieces of legislation introduced in the 2011 legislative session, 1,799 passed and nine were defeated, leaving 868 to be carried into the current session. Some of them would be extremely detrimental to our nation, society and culture, if they were to pass.
Two bills carried into 2012 from 2011 session address the importance of protecting the constitutional rights of U.S. citizens. The bills provide that rights guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States must be protected in the judicial systems of the U.S. and the state of Georgia. The bills require the use of American Law in Georgia Courts, which would have been a perfect title in the past, but not in the current political atmosphere of globalism.
Since the official name of this country is the “United States of America (U.S.A.),” the title of those bills must be changed to “United States of America Law for Georgia Courts.” That’s imperative, considering the pressure to obliterate borders and combine the U.S., Canada and Mexico into a North American Union. If the NAU becomes a reality, “American Law” could be interpreted to include U.S., Canadian and/or Mexican law, since all three nations are located on the North American Continent. Actually, countries in South America could identify as “America,” as well.
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