Organizing



To return to the sense of community and local autonomy which Americans took for granted at the time of the Revolution we must organize locally and at each level from the precinct up to the legislature of our state.

Organizing your state militia should include people who are respected locally and understand the real meaning of the Second Amendment.  We have wandered away from the organizational structure intended by the Constitution.  We must return to the entirely lawful structure, which rests on control by the people vested in the oversight of the several states.

Contact us to sign up to receive the detailed instructions which will soon be available.

Go to Tools  for a short list of resources, including materials by Edwin Vieira, a Constitutional scholar, who has written extensively on the subject. 

Organizing in this way accomplishes multiple purposes because, as organizing takes place in the neighborhood and at the precinct level, we accomplish multiple goals. Along with restoring the militia we can organize for local control of the ballot process, answering other needs which confront us today.  These include ensuring health and security for everyone.

Organizing can take place though your connections in other organizations, for instance Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Elks, the Masons, the Lions Club, and the Library League.  These being just a few of the organizations which, when they understand what has happened, will want to support these essential local projects.

You can also have a block potluck, inviting your friends and neighbors to come together to discuss the project or just have them over for a cup of coffee.  

The people who govern themselves also protect themselves.  The Militia did not originate at the time of the Revolution but with the need to protect families from attack during the various colonial wars before the Revolution.

No danger was deemed to be more frightening by our Founders than the hazard of a standing army under the control of the Federal government.  The reason, then so well understood as to require no further enunciation, was the danger of an army not drawn from those people most committed to protecting the lives and property of the people they knew and loved. 

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