Canada A Country without a Constitution

Thursday, 21 April 2022

On June 9, 1893, Queen Victoria un-enacted the British North America Act.

 Now lets look at laws. What makes a law? The truth is, it appears Canada doesn't have a enacted Constitution. In short, a country has to have a Constitution to be a country, and to make laws, the Constitution must be in place.


On June 9, 1893, Queen Victoria un-enacted the British North America Act..BNA, 26 years after she formed it. The Dominion of British North America was removed by the queen with Statute Law Revision Act of 1893. This has been hidden since then, and most reading this do not know this fact. In 1982, Pierre Trudeau cleverly re-named the BNA (though not in place) to the Constitution Act. 

The Queen went along with this, PROVIDED Quebec agreed to item no. 59 of the Act, which had to do with french language and education. 

 Quebec  never accepted the language of the defunct Act.

Even the Governor General from 2001-2007, Iona Campagnolo said "I am supposed to be signing these documents (some laws) into law, but I am not, and therefore there is no law".




People this is HUGE. It sounds like a big shell game the authorities have over us. The Supreme Court demands that authority must be shown. The courts can be asked to show authority and when they claim the BNA, you can tell them it was un-enacted, its defunct. So the courts are betting on ignorance, and this approach (I'm told) is stopping judges in their tracks. They can't tell you what authority they work under. When Quebec accepts item 59 from the Constitution Act, its my understanding it will come back into force legally. Official opinions help... The Canadian Bar review, (I quote) the 'organ' of the Canadian Bar Association, had this to say over the BNA not being officially in place. "This odd group of amendments to our constitutional law provides another argument for those that believe that Canada should acquire a new constitution of her own - a single, complete, independent document superseding all previous statutes and deriving its authority solely from the assent of the Canadian people. UNTIL that occurs, we shall not have a Canadian constitution, nor a full sense of national status."

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