[UA-discuss] The U.S. DOJ/FBI's Attempted Enslavement of Apple Employees

Ron Baione ron.baione at yahoo.com
Thu Feb 18 05:42:13 UTC 2016


Jeremy, Thank you for your reply:

I would also like to add that regardless of whether or not Apple employees, of a private company, are ever forced to perform any action for a government agent, they are already victims of attempted enslavement by the U.S. government.  The reason why Josh Earnest stated publicly that the White House is not demanding that Apple build anything new for the government, is because Josh Earnest knows that any such demand if it occurred was a criminal act, and Josh Earnest wants to distance himself and the President from that attempted enslavement of Apple's employees which in fact already occurred by the time Josh Earnest spoke.

Beginning with the Emancipation Proclamation, Enslavement of American citizens has been unconstitutional for well over a century in the United States, and anyone who has participated in the attempted enslavement of Apple employees in this instance is a criminal-at-large at this time, in my opinion which I believe is consistent with the U.S. Codes as I understand them, as enslavement is unlawful as stated in the U.S. Codes.  I ask the internet community to speak out against the attempted enslavement of Apple's employees by the criminal participants in that attempted crime, and for the relevant law enforecement entities to arrest all those who have participated in the attempted enslavement of Apple's employees.  Barack Obama, as a direct participant in the attempted enslavement of Apples Employees, should be impeached by the U.S. Congress immediately for his administrations support of that unlawful action of attempted enslavement. 

Any DOJ employee who has already acted as a participant in the attempted enslavement of Apple employees who are American citizens should be charged with treason and deported.  As members of the law enforcement community who know or should know the laws against enslavement in the United States, those participants therefore willfully and knowingly committed the crime of attempted enslavement, and are in the process of committing that crime until such demand is withdrawn.  

Even if the participating DOJ and FBI do withdraw their demand to enslave Apple employees, that should not absolve those who have already participated as criminals committing the crime of attempted enslavement from being prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, so as to set an example to all Americans that the human rights crimes of slavery and attempted slavery will not again be tolerated in the United States.  Anything less than prosecutions and deportations of all the DOJ/FBI participants for their attempted enslavement of Apple's employees will allow, at the very least, for the future opportunity of a reversal of the humane and civilized precedent against slavery established by Abraham Lincoln.

Ron
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