Countering the Biden Crisis: Proclamation of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson and the Nations With Treaties
Researched by Amelia Gora (2021)
The following Proclamation was made by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson in May 1917, posted in the Honolulu newspaper THE HAWAIIAN GAZETTE.
Due to the ongoing issues with current U.S. President Joe Biden, there are points in the Proclamation below which may be Applicable today:
Note: The Ongoing Issues is that U.S. President Joe Biden and his son have accepted millions of dollars from the "enemy" China.
China has introduced a man made virus called the COVID19 which has killed 2.67 million people to date.
China is the number 1 enemy of the United States and U.S. President Biden friends them disregarding the health and safety of the American people.
U.S. President Biden is currently allowing unchecked Aliens into the United States and will continue to allow 11 Million people mostly unattended children ranging in ages from a year to 17.
See the following Proclamation which may be used/applicable to U.S. President Biden, et. als.:
and Supremacy Clause - Article 6 of the U.S. Constitution:
The nations that have Treaties with the United States up to 1781 when the U.S. went bankrupt and could no longer Treaty. Only Conventions were possible since.
The nations that can help Americans to protect the lives and safety are:
"These are treaties that the United States has made with other sovereign international states. This is mostly to distinguish them from the next category. Under the treaty clause of the United States Constitution, treaties come into effect upon final ratification by the President of the United States, provided that a two-thirds majority of the United States Senate concurs.[5]
1776–1799[edit]
- 1776 – Model Treaty passed by the Continental Congress becomes the template for its future international treaties[6]
- 1776 – Treaty of Watertown – a military treaty between the newly formed United States and the St. John's and Mi'kmaq First Nations of Nova Scotia, two peoples of the Wabanaki Confederacy.
- 1777 – Moroccan–American Treaty of Friendship – Morocco — first sovereign state to recognize the U.S in 1777, formalized in treaty signed in 1786; oldest unbroken U.S. treaty
- 1778 – Treaty of Alliance – American Revolutionary War alliance with the Kingdom of France
- 1778 – Treaty of Amity and Commerce (United States – France)
- 1782 – Treaty of Amity and Commerce[7][8] – with Dutch Republic
- 1783 – Treaty of Amity and Commerce (United States – Sweden)[9] – with Sweden
- 1783 – Second Treaty of Paris Ended the American Revolutionary War
- 1785 – Treaty of Amity and Commerce (Prussia–United States)[10] – with Prussia
- 1786 – Moroccan–American Treaty of Friendship – Morocco — first sovereign state to recognize the U.S in 1777, formalized in treaty signed in 1786; oldest unbroken U.S. treaty
- – trade treaty with Spain (not ratified)
- 1794 – Treaty of Canandaigua – AKA Pickering Treaty, negotiated by Pickering for George Washington with Red Jacket, Cornplanter, Handsome Lake, and fifty other Iroquois leaders by which they were forced to cede much of their land to the United States. Britain had ceded all its claims to land in the colonies without consulting the Iroquois or other Native American allies.[11]
- 1794 – Jay Treaty AKA Treaty of London – attempts to settle post-Revolution disputes with Great Britain. Provided the British Army to evacuate the Northwest Territory and to provide most favoured nation status between Britain and America in exchange for international arbitration of the U.S.-Canada border and wartime debts. Opposed by Jeffersonian Republicans.
- 1795 – Treaty of Greenville – Ended the Northwest Indian War and opened most of Ohio to white settlement
- 1795 – Treaty with Algeria
- 1795 – Pinckney's Treaty AKA Treaty of Madrid, Treaty of San Lorenzo – defines boundaries of U.S. with Spanish colonies
- 1796 – Treaty with Tripoli – tribute payments to Tripoli to protect Americans from seizure and ransom
- 1797 – Treaty with Tunis – increases tribute payments to Tripoli
1800–1849[edit]
- 1800 – Convention of 1800 (Treaty of Mortefontaine) – Ends the Quasi War between France and the U.S.
- 1803 – Louisiana Purchase Treaty – Acquire Louisiana Territory from the French First Republic.
- 1805 – Treaty with Tripoli[12] – Secured release of Americans being held in Tripoli, proclaimed peace and amity, and ended the First Barbary War.
- 1814 – Treaty of Ghent – Ends the War of 1812 between the U.S. and Great Britain, returning the two countries to the status quo ante bellum.
- 1815 – Commercial treaty with Great Britain – Established free trade between the United States, England, and much of the British Empire (Ireland was among the areas excluded)[13][14][15]
- 1817 – Rush–Bagot Treaty – The United States and Great Britain agree to demilitarize the Great Lakes.
- 1818 – Treaty of 1818 – resolved boundary issues between U.S. and Great Britain and demilitarized the border.
- 1819 – Adams–Onís Treaty – purchase of Florida from the Spanish Empire and established the border with New Spain.
- 1824 – Russo-American Treaty – gave Russian claims on land off the Northwest Pacific coast of North America (north of the Oregon Country)
- 1824 – Anderson–Gual Treaty – between U.S. and Gran Colombia; first bilateral treaty with another American country
- 1828 – Treaty of Limits – between Mexico and the U.S.; confirms the boundary agreed to with Spain in the Adams–Onís Treaty.
- 1830 – Treaty with the Ottoman Port[16][17] Also see Capitulations of the Ottoman Empire
- 1831 – Franco-American Treaty of 1831 – France agreed to pay reparations of 25 million francs for damage to American shipping during the Napoleonic Wars[18] (ratified in 1835 under Victor de Broglie's government – see July Monarchy)
- 1833 – Siamese–American Treaty of Amity and Commerce – a commercial treaty between the Kingdom of Siam and the United States, first treaty with an East Asian nation
- 1833 – Treaty with Muscat[19]
- 1835 - Treaty of New Echota – between U.S. government officials and representatives of a minority Cherokee political faction, the Treaty Party
- 1842 – Webster–Ashburton Treaty – ended the Aroostook War and settles boundary disputes between the U.S. and Canada
- 1844 – Treaty of Wanghia – between China and the U.S.; established five U.S. treaty ports in China with extraterritoriality
- 1846 – Mallarino–Bidlack Treaty with the Republic of New Granada (Colombia)
- 1846 – Oregon Treaty – brought an end to the Oregon boundary dispute by settling competing American and British claims to the Oregon Country
- 1847 – Treaty of Cahuenga – ends the Mexican–American War in Alta California
- 1848 – Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo – fully ends the Mexican–American War; sets the Rio Grande as the boundary between Mexico and Texas and cedes much of northern Mexico to the United States.
- 1849 – Hawaiian–American Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation – Treaty between the Hawaiian Kingdom and the United States
1850–1899[edit]
- 1850 – Clayton–Bulwer Treaty – U.S. and United Kingdom agree not to colonize Central America
- 1851 – Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851) – with the Cheyenne, Sioux, Arapaho, Crow, Assiniboine, Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nations
- 1851 – California Indian Reservations and Cessions – 18 lost treaties of California
- 1854 – Convention of Kanagawa – forcibly opens Japan to American trade
- 1855 – Canadian–American Reciprocity Treaty – with Canada on trade and tariffs
- 1855 – Treaty of Detroit (1855) – U. S. and Ottawa and Chippewa Nations of Indians which severed the link between the two Native American groups for further treaty negotiations and prepared the way for allotment of tribal land to individuals.
- 1857 – American treaty is kept with france- Treaty between American and Russia
- 1858 – Treaty of Amity and Commerce (United States–Japan), also known as Harris Treaty – forces the opening of treaty ports on Japan
- 1858 – Treaty of Tientsin – with China after the Second Opium War; established peace, amity, and commerce
- 1862 – Ottoman-American Treaty of Commerce and Navigation[17]
- 1864 – First Geneva Convention – established rules for the treatment of battlefield casualties and sick and wounded combatants
- 1867 – Alaska Purchase – U.S. buys Alaska from Russia
- 1868 – Burlingame Treaty – with China; established improved relations
- 1868 – Naturalization Convention – with North German Confederation; first recognition by a European power of the legal right of its subjects to become American citizens
- 1868 – Naturalization Convention – with Belgium
- 1868 – Treaty of Bosque Redondo – With the Navajo ending the Navajo Wars
- 1868 – Treaty of Fort Laramie – with the Sioux and Arapaho ending Red Cloud's War.
- 1869 – Naturalization Convention – with Sweden and Norway.
- 1870 – Naturalization Convention – with United Kingdom
- 1871 – Treaty of Washington – settles grievances between the U.S. and Canada including the Alabama Claims"
SUMMARY
A Review of this Proclamation could be useful and may be applicable to stop the actions of the current U.S. President Biden, et. als.
Also, Treaties with nations should be reviewed because according to Section 6 - in the U.S. Constitution, Treaties are the supreme law of the land and even the Judges have to adhere to it.
Reference: Supremacy Clause In essence, it is a conflict-of-laws rule specifying that certain federal acts take priority over any state acts that conflict with federal law, but when federal law conflicts with the Constitution that law is null and void. In this respect, the Supremacy Clause follows the lead of Article XIII of the Articles of Confederation, which provided that "Every State shall abide by the determination of the United States in Congress Assembled, on all questions which by this confederation are submitted to them."[3] A constitutional provision announcing the supremacy of federal law, the Supremacy Clause assumes the underlying priority of federal authority, only when that authority is expressed in the Constitution itself.[4] No matter what the federal government or the states might wish to do, they have to stay within the boundaries of the Constitution. This makes the Supremacy Clause the cornerstone of the whole U.S. political structure.[5][6]
Reference: Supremacy Clause - Wikipedia
U.S. President Biden Fails to protect the lives and safety of the American people.
For these reasons, the two (2) suggestions - (1) Proclamation of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson and (2) Supremacy Clause - are offered.
aloha.
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