The Missing Thirteenth Amendment

3 years ago

When most people think about the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution they think of the Anti-slavery Amendment; the Amendment which was supposedly ratified after the Civil War; the one and which purports to prohibit involuntary servitude. However, a growing body of convincing evidence suggest that the Anti-slavery Amendment is an imposter.

The Original Thirteenth Amendment, which is known as the Titles of Nobility Amendment ("TONA"), was unanimously ratified by all thirteen states in 1810, after which time it appeared in every law book published by the several states until about 1870, when, for some reason, it was "memory-holed," and stricken from the law books of our America. Why this was done, and by whose order it was done, is still a mystery to this researcher as of this writing, but, what is clear, is that the TONA has not appeared in any "official" law book that has been published since 1870.

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