The people have a duty of allegiance to the Queen and a right to protect their Constitution.
October 19, 2004 by Ken
Filed under The Best of the Rest
There is also a binding of the Crown in the Civil Contingencies Bill where the Government would remove the power from the Crown in announcing a state of “Emergency” which would give the Home Secretary the authority (sovereignty) to declare an “emergencyâ€, yet the Government’s definition of an “emergency” leaves much to be desired. The declaring of an ‘emergency’ would give the Government of the day the power to “disapply” any or all of our Common Law Constitution. There was no reference that the Queen had agreed to this. As these alterations hold such hazards for our Constitution, it would not only be right to put these proposals to our Queen, but also to the people, for they hold consequences of great magnitude and if the Government is not held to account, could leave our Constitution in jeopardy. The people have a duty of allegiance to the Queen and a right to protect their Constitution.
Much of our Common Law is a contract between the Crown and the people of this Country, (the Queen in Parliament represents the people), I am greatly concerned at these ‘constraints’ being placed upon our Gracious Queen. The Government have to obey our Common Laws in exactly the same way as the people, and they may not lawfully alter or remove Magna Carta, the Bill of Rights, the Act of Settlement, etc. What decent Government would want to remove the people’s RIGHTS anyway?
Anne Palmer.

























please send more info on the letter to the queen from ann palmer?