An Introduction To Unlimited Self-Government
Unlimited self-government was a gift to all Americans from the Founding Fathers who gave us the Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776 and the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777. What the first Founding Fathers gave us was lost when the second set of Founding Fathers conjured up the Northwest Ordinance of July 13, 1787 and Constitution of September 17, 1787.
The Declaration of Independence eventually freed us from one tyrant named George, King George III, only to be delivered into the hands of another tyrant named George, George Washington.
Article IV of the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777 required that the States of the newly created Confederacy, the United States of America, respect the right of its free inhabitants to govern themselves without becoming citizens.
The Northwest Ordinance of July 13, 1787 promised the settlers and inhabitants of the Northwest Territory the freedom of the free inhabitants of the United States of America, if they would temporarily become citizens of the United States until their territory could be admitted into the Confederacy.
The purpose of the Constitution of September 17, 1787 was to support the claims which would be made in the Federalist Papers that the Constitution, when fully ratified, would replace the Articles of Confederation, so that the Confederacy, the United States of America, could be administered by a strong executive, George Washington.
When the four Organic Laws of the United States of America are studied together, the right of the American people to unlimited self-government cannot be denied.