Our Services
Our Services at Resolute Action are three fold in nature, integrated into a cohesive whole, and encompass educational, financial, and constitutional literacy.
All of our services are evaluated frequently ensuring our approach is effective and meets the practical needs of all participants. All information resources we utilize are well-established, well-respected, fact-based, and clearly documented.
Resolute Action services include educational workshops, identifying information resources, assistance for educators, and presentations in the private and public sectors including with the media.
Specifically, Resolute Action services also include the following.
Educational Literacy
a) Offer educational workshops clearly identifying different learning styles and approaches to consider when working with specific learning styles; differentiating between rural, suburban, and educational settings, and how these distinctions effect students' and educators' approaches, and; utilizing independent, self-reliant thinking skills (ISRTS, pronounced "eye-certus") and activities for students.
b) Offer presentations to school boards and state legislatures to share Resolute Action's approach and programs to better meet the educational needs of our students, and tailor our approach to best fit the requirements for each school district and state legislature.
Financial Literacy
Clearly and concisely identify - and evaluate - our current economic trends and conditions as they directly relate to our high levels of year-on-year inflation rate since the founding of our Federal Reserve system. We'll also assess how year-on-year, US historical inflation rates - since 1913 - compare to the watered-down, misleading core inflation rates used today. When the time arises, as our currency regime cycles through it's historical end of its effectiveness, we'll provide assistance with refining our financial system with safeguards to stem the blight of greed, and genuinely reduce our current, high levels of year-on-year inflation. We strongly favor the two provisions of the Glass-Steagall Act that restricts affliations between commercial banks and securities firms.
We'll also offer considerations for preserving your hard earned assets, and actions you might consider with state legislatures and Congress in moving our government towards more sound fiscal and monetary policies.
Constitutional Literacy
Resolute Action fully supports efforts to reinstate our Fourth Amendment privacy rights as stipulated in the US Constitution. Clear and concisely, the Fourth Amendment states:
Article IV
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
According to The Random House Dictionary, the term effect is defined as:
n. 1. something that is produced by an agent or cause. 2. power to produce or cause results. 3. operation or execution. 4. a mental impression produced. 5. main idea or meaning: He wrote to that effect. 6.in effect, a. virtually. b. essentially. c. in force. 7. take effect, to go into operation. –v.t. 8. to bring about or make.
With respect to the definition of effect, according to the Fourth Amendment, the air currents you generate when waving your hand is an effect you created. To track or search the air currents you created, a warrant is required. Analogously, surveilling your telephone records and computer usage, a warrant is also required because you created this effect by your actions. Because we live in the United States, seeking a warrant in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (also known as the FISA court under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 to oversee requests for surveillance warrants against foreign spies inside the United States by federal law . . .) makes zero practical or legal sense. This legal approach was previously justified to surveil your telephone records and computer activity. An odd legal justification because we are US nationals living in the United States.
The United States Constitution is the only legal, binding document weaving the fabric together of our diverse, fifty state governments, our citizens as a free people, and as a free nation. Quintessentially, the United States Constitution is our prenuptial agreement.
Honoring our Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments, are essential by any measure. Specifically, States’ rights and the will of the people are also paramount as succinctly stated in the Tenth Amendment,
Article X
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
Within the clear parameters of the Tenth Amendment, the federal government continues to operate beyond the rule of law. Resolute Action fully embraces legal, pragmatic efforts and the will of the people – within the rule of law – supporting efforts to fully comply with the Fourth and Tenth Amendments.
The United States Constitution was initially ratified in 1787 without the Bill of Rights in order to secure passage. Ratifying the US Constitution was essential. Endangering its successful passage for the inclusion of the Bill of Rights was a fundamental refinement to resolve after the Constitution - the framework for the US government - was secured. Enacting the Constitution with the legislature, the judiciary, and the president, passage of the Bill of Rights was the primary objective our first US administration. The Bill of Rights was ratified in December 1791.
In this same spirit, Resolute Action is fully committed to fully reinstating our Fourth Amendment privacy rights, and upholding our Tenth Amendment honoring States’ rights while legally curtailing federal government actions and programs transcending the rule of law.
We must support our rights or lose our character, and with it, perhaps, our liberties.
— James Monroe
Relevant Reading
Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution.
Source: The National Archives and Records Administration, The Charters of Freedom.
Educational prosperity through educational, financial, and constitutional literacy:
— Enhance our educational base;
— Support a more equitable and prosperous approach to our economy, quality of life, and self-determination; and
— Uphold “consent of the governed” where our federal government becomes more representative of our privacy rights as citizens, and honoring our States’ rights as clearly provided in our US Constitution;
is our heartfelt commitment, and our objectives at Resolute Action.
" . . . to better meet the educational needs of our students, and tailor our approach to best fit the requirements for each school district and state legislature."
Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.
— Benjamin Franklin, 1738