De Facto vs De Jure: The Truth About the Government Claiming Authority Over You - Couverture souple

Shapiro, Adrian

 
9798181202788: De Facto vs De Jure: The Truth About the Government Claiming Authority Over You

Synopsis

Every American is taught that they live under a constitutional republic — a government of limited powers, deriving its authority from the consent of the governed, bound by a written Constitution that defines what it can and cannot do. This book asks a question the legal establishment has never honestly engaged: is that still true?

The distinction between de facto and de jure government is not a fringe theory. It is a real legal doctrine, found in Black's Law Dictionary and Corpus Juris Secundum, applied for centuries by American courts to foreign governments, defectively appointed officials, occupied territories, and revolutionary regimes. De jure means governing by right — authority that rests on the legal foundation that defines and limits it. De facto means governing in fact — authority that operates regardless of whether that foundation exists.

This book applies that doctrine, for the first time with this level of detail, to the government of the United States itself.

Sixteen chapters trace the specific legal record: how Article I, Section 1 vests "all legislative powers" in Congress — and how federal agencies now write rules that carry the force of law under a standard the Supreme Court itself has admitted bears little relationship to that text. How Article I, Section 8 gives Congress alone the power to declare war — and how the War Powers Resolution has been ignored by every president since 1973. How the same article gives Congress the power to coin money — and how that power has been exercised for over a century by a privately governed central bank whose creation began at a secret meeting on a Georgia island in 1910.

The book examines the Civil War's Lieber Code and the military governance of Reconstruction. The Fourteenth Amendment's contested ratification. The nondelegation doctrine's abandonment after 1937. The accumulation of national emergency declarations — one renewed annually for over forty years — that Senate investigators warned about in 1973 and that remain largely unaddressed today. The Federal Reserve's creation of trillions of dollars with no specific congressional authorization. And the Supreme Court's own recent acknowledgments — in Loper Bright, West Virginia v. EPA, and Jarkesy — that significant parts of the modern regulatory state may rest on foundations the Constitution does not actually provide.

This is not a book that tells you what to think. It does not call for resistance, withdrawal, or revolution. It does something more useful: it lays out, case by case and statute by statute, exactly where the government you live under matches the government the Constitution describes — and exactly where it doesn't. It shows you the surviving protections that still have real legal force, the areas where de facto authority has displaced de jure limits almost entirely, and the areas where the outcome is still being decided in courts and legislatures right now.

Every claim is anchored to a named case, a named statute, or a named historical document — over 150 specific legal authorities in all, fully indexed in the appendix for verification.

Read it. Check the sources. Decide for yourself whether the government claiming authority over you is the government you were promised.

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