Taking Back Our Stolen History
law
law

NY Times v. Sullivan Decision: The 1st Amendment Prohibits Damages to Public Figures for Defamation unless Resulting from “Actual Malice”

The 1964 decision in New York Times v. Sullivan has since protected many media outlets from lawsuits in spite of their intentional ‘hit pieces.’ D.C. Circuit …

John Rawlings Rees, Deputy Director of the Tavistock Institute for Medical Psychology, Speaks of Infiltration and Subversion of Education, Religion, Law, and Medicine

Printed in MENTAL HEALTH, vol. 1, no. 4, October 1940, one finds a speech by John Rawlings Rees (deputy director of the Tavistock Institute for …

A.G. Robert Jackson: “The citizen’s safety lies in the prosecutor who tempers zeal with human kindness, who seeks truth and not victims…”

Revered Attorney General Robert H. Jackson assembled the United States attorneys. In remarks enshrined in the hearts of all good prosecutors, he said: THE FEDERAL PROSECUTOR BY …

The Act of 1871 (titled “An Act To Provide A Government for the District of Columbia”) Enacted, Creating a New Separate Corporate Government

Webster’s dictionary defines “treason” as: 1. the offense of attempting by overt acts to overthrow the government of the state to which the offender owes …

Royal Assent to the Metropolitan Police Act was Given and the Metropolitan Police Service was Established in London as the First Modern and Professional Police Force in the World

At the same time that the lieutenant general of police was trying to maintain public order in Paris, the reactive and inefficient urban policing system of …