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VII. Law |
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7.2 Principles of Law |
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Article 219-Justice |
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Canon 2746 |
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Justice is to honor the essence of the living law through due process in rendering judgment demonstrating fair remedy. |
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Canon 2747 |
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The highest respect that may be given to the law of any society is to respect due process of law in recognition of the rights of the law as a living entity, having its own valid personality. |
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Canon 2748 |
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All Persons are considered innocent of an alleged controversy until due process is served according to the law and a liability (guilt) has been clearly established. |
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Canon 2749 |
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For Justice to be served, a judgment must represent fair remedy. The absence of fair remedy represents an absence of justice. Only when consent is given by both parties at the commencement of a case can fair remedy be properly served. |
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Canon 2750 |
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When due process is disrespected, the law suffers injury as any person may suffer harm from assault. All officers of the law are duty bound not to undertake such action that brings harm to the living law. |
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Canon 2751 |
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By definition Justice can never be present nor rendered within an Inferior Roman Court as by its very design only the Judge is usually permitted to understand the true definitions and meanings of fictions applied through Roman Law and Talmudic Law with all others taught deliberately false definitions and misleading knowledge. |
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