The Nation Of Éire
A Draft Concept of a Traditionalised Ireland Organised into A Federalised, Constitutional Republic with an Elective Monarchy.
The
NATION
of
ÉIRE
Proposed by
Stephen J. Delaney
1st January 2022
We, the people of Éire,
Indebted permanently to the dead generations before and receiving their cause as our own, herby invoke the Proclamation of Independence in its entirety, as the fundamental document prescribing the Nation of Éire and its people,
Proclaiming the rightful independence, Sovereignty, neutrality and autonomy of this Nation,
Affirming that independence, Sovereignty, neutrality and autonomy as inviolable,
Preserving these principles immune from vote, judgement, treaty or perversion,
removing all claims to this Nation or against it, in full or part, by any other entity whatsoever, unincorporating the territory entirely making the people of Éire its true Sovereigns,
by these terms we grant ourselves this Constitution, adopting it, enacting it, for ever.
THE NATION
ARTICLE 1
The Irish Nation hereby affirms its inalienable, indefeasible, and sovereign right to govern itself, to determine its relations with other nations without threat or treaty, and to develop its life, political, economic and cultural, in accordance with its own genius and traditions.
ARTICLE 2
It is the entitlement and birthright of every person born to an Irish parent on the island of Ireland, its islands and seas, to be part of the Irish Nation. That is also the entitlement of all persons otherwise recognised in accordance with their contribution to this nation, through continued acts of courage, productivity, compatibility, and whom remain free from sin, criminality and degeneracy. Furthermore, the Irish Nation cherishes its special affinity with people of Irish ancestry living abroad who share its cultural identity and heritage.
ARTICLE 3
In recognition of the history of the island of Éire and its islands and seas, in line with our ancestral claim reaching back thousands of years, the general topology of the whole territory known as Éire, The Irish Nation strives to unite this territory, rightfully and peacefully, as one Nation, for ever.
THE STATE
ARTICLE 4
The name of the State is Éire, or, in the English language, Ireland.
ARTICLE 5
Éire, is a sovereign, neutral, independent, democratic state.
ARTICLE 6
All positions of government, legislative, executive and judicial, draw power, under God, from the people. We the people, who are masters of their own destiny, accept and uphold the rule of just laws, upon which we have final appeal.
ARTICLE 7
The national flag is the tricolour of green, white, and orange, symbolising the peace between the native christians and indeed, all beliefs.
ARTICLE 8
1. The Irish language is the national language Ireland.
2. The English language is recognised as a second official language.
3. The State will facilitate both languages in all public offices and processes of the state, without prejudice and within reason, and will endeavour to restore Irish as a spoken language widely around the territory of Éire.
ARTICLE 9
1.
(i) Upon enactment, all citizens of previous versions of Soarstát Éireann and Bunreacht na Éireann will become citizens of Éire.
(ii) The bestowing or stripping of Nationality will not be a matter of ideological persuasion or policy. We the people refuse to make a game with the humanity and dignity of those who seek to join us, rather, we will bestow or strip this most prestigious honour only where exceptional achievements or trespasses have been performed or committed inline with the customs of our people and the Law of the land.
(iii) No person may be excluded from Nationality on the grounds of sex.
2.
The benefits of citizenship are preserved for Irish Nationals. The State will endeavour to allocate resources inline with the charitable nature of our people, and therefore by the command of the people, will never prioritise non-nationals over ourselves.
Provision will be made in Law for the native Irish, known as the Gaels, distinguishable by genetics, appearance and tradition, and Whom also, are the majority of the Irish Nation, so that we will be protected under law and will never be compelled to compete with others for resources, or give up their own in times of crisis. Individuals are free to share their lot.
Provision will made in Law to protect the Irish Nation from replacement, diminishment and displacement.
Fidelity to the Nation and loyalty to the principles laid out in this Constitution are fundamental duties of all citizens, who will cooperate with the State in preserving the rule of law.
ARTICLE 10
All natural resources, including the air and energy in all its forms, within the territory of Éire, established by this constitution, are entrusted into the hands of the people, for the benefit of the people, and declared inalienable, for ever.
All lands, mines, minerals and waters which belonged to either Saorstát Éireann or Bunreacht na hÉireann, and any other assets declared or undeclared by these entities, are immediately taken into our possession upon enactment of this constitution.
Provision will be made in law for the management of said resources. Those most qualified, willing and able will be elected to their positions by the people, and be removable by the people in a manner that preserves the operation of said resources responsibly and for the benefit of the people.
ARTICLE 11
All revenues managed by the state on behalf of the people will be consolidated into one fund. Provision will be made in law for expenditure, never exceeding 92% of annual income in any given year, to be distributed proportionately throughout the four provincial governments. The state will use these funds for national and regional infrastructure development and upkeep. The justification for taxation is necessity, and so it shall be spent liberally on necessity and prudently on excess, striving to achieve a Nation, debtless, for the people.
THE HIGH KING
ARTICLE 12
There shall be a High King of the Irish Nation, whose role it is to maintain the principles of this constitution absolutely and objectively, and to represent us as head of State in an elective monarchy. The King cannot hold any other office and no other elected official can hold the office of King.
1. The King shall be elected by direct vote of the people.
2. Every citizen, that has obtained the right to vote, will have the right to vote for the King.
3. The method of vote will be by secret ballot. Proportional representation shall be obtained by means of the single transferable vote.1. The King shall hold office for seven years from the date upon which he enters upon his office, unless before the expiration of that period he dies, or resigns, or is removed from office, or becomes permanently incapacitated, such incapacity being established to the satisfaction of the Supreme Court consisting of not less than five judges and no more than twelve.
2. Each successful candidate can hold up to two terms in office.
3. A National election for the office of King shall be held no later than the 30th day before term of office is complete, for every King. In the event of resignation, removal from office, death or permanently incapacitated, as aforesaid, an election will be held within 30 days of such event.
4. The King-in-Waiting will have the title of Tanist. The outgoing King will hand over the Office of King peacefully.1. Every citizen of Ireland who has reached the age of thirty five is eligible for election to office of King. Each candidate must be ethnically Irish.
2. Every eligible candidate for election, must present a list of citizen nominations, of no less than 20,000 in number, to the provincial councils. These nominations will read as follows:
“I, ________________ hereby pledge my nomination for and do swear by _____________, that they be of good character and motive, and entrust in them to be fair to me and my neighbour, to them and theirs and so on, to take no side in quarrels whether they be political, geographical, familial or civil, to place their role as guardian of the constitution above all, and will hold to the office of High King in honour.”
3. All citizens are entitled to one nomination per election cycle and are also free to vote with their conscience in the election process, for any candidate they so wish.Subject to the provisions of this Article, elections for the office of High King shall be regulated by law.
The High King shall assume his duties immediately after his inauguration ceremony, which will be a public ceremony in line the traditions of the High Kings of the past.
The ceremony will take place with members of both houses of the Oireachtas, the judges of the Higher Courts, and shall consist of the following exchange between the Master of Ceremonies and the surrounding attendees whilst the Tanist remains silent at the edge of the Coronation Stone until he is asked to speak:
MoC will ask in Gaelic, his questions, and the surrounding attendees will respond in Gaelic:
MoC : “ Who comes before us the people of Éire?”
Attendees: “He who shall be King!”
MoC: “Will he be a Just King?”
Attendees: “He will deliver justice!”
MoC: “Does he desire the welfare of the Irish people?”
Attendees: “His will is good!”
MoC: “Is he a Sovereign man, in control of his own mind and body?”
Attendees: “He is free!”
MoC: “Is he worthy of the honour?”
Attendees: “The most worthy of all!”
MoC: “Will he be cultivator of Christian Piety and preserver of the ancient pre christian customs?”
Attendees: “He will sustain our reverence!”
MoC: “Tanist, place your foot upon this stone, proclaim your name and take your oath”
“I, ___________ of the family ____________ , hailing from (townland, county, province) accept the office of High King, and do solemnly swear to be the voice of the people, to sustain them and to preserve all the ancient customs and liberties of the Island inviolable, to remain free from the controversies of politics and the temptations of status, wealth and power, swearing to never use my position to further my own ambitions, to remain free from the covenant or secrecy of private clubs or societies, and to never recognise any institution but our own, or so help me God.”
The New High King remains on the coronation stone and a moment of silence is observed.A commission will be set up to carry out the ceremony with the Master of Ceremonies, elected to the role, for life, who will conduct the affair in total keeping with our ancient Customs. Provision will be made in law for the costs and commissioning of the affair.
The High King will not leave the territory of Éire while in office.
1. The High King will be challengeable by the mechanism of impeachment, consisting of a motion of no less than 60 members of the Dail, forwarded to the Supreme court for immediate review.
2. The High King will be compelled to appear before such a hearing, with or without representation.
3. If the Supreme Court finds grounds for the motion, that it not be frivolous, vexatious or reactionary, that it be free from political gamesmanship and treason, and that the measure of the fault warrants impeachment, they will find in favour of the motion and impeach the High King.1. Áras an Uachtaráin will be the residence of the High King.
2. The King shall have all official expenditure and compensation provided for in law.
3. The Kings entitlements cannot be diminished during his term.
ARTICLE 13
1. The King shall appoint a cabinet, from all the elected members of the Dail. The appointments will be each man to his strengths, each office will be filled by a man of the people, to the absolute best of the Kings judgement.
2. The King can, in the interest of the Irish Nation, request the resignation of a member of Dail Eireannor the Seanad, pending review by the Supreme Court, and if recommended by the court, remove the member from office.1. Dáil Éireann shall be summoned and dissolved upon the Kings request.
1. Every Bill passed or deemed to have been passed by both Houses of the Oireachtas shall require the signature of the High King for its enactment into law.
The King must apply temperance, reason and the principles of this constitution when signing a bill into law. The following controls should be used as a guide and will be a measure of the Kings faithfulness to the constitution and the Irish Nation:
(a) Quality
(b) Relevance
(c) Motive
(d) Accessibility
(e) Effect on Irish society
(f) Risk assessment
(g) Fairness
(h) Repugnancy
(i) Clarity
(j) Proportionality
(k) Scientific method
(l) Volume or frequency
(m) The overwhelming will of the informed people
(n) Urgency
2. The High King shall promulgate every bill he signs into law..The command of the Irish Volunteer Force is hereby vested in the the Army Council, with motions requiring the Kings signature of approval.
1. The Irish Volunteer Force are in service to the people and cannot be compelled to act outside the principles of this constitution.
2. There will be no tours of duty, whatsoever, in cooperation with the UN, NATO or the European Union, or any other war minded entity, consistent with this constitution. The King is compelled by this article to hold all members of the Irish Volunteer Forces within the territory of Éire.
3. If a serving member of the Irish Volunteer Forces vacates the Irish territory, without leave to do so in his personal capacity, he will be considered to be dishonourably discharged and exiled.The King has a right of pardon. This is subject to final review by the Supreme court and is limited to crimes where justice can be shown to have failed to protect the rights of the individual, the person in question is generally considered to have acted in good faith and fallen foul of poor process or sabotage.
1. The Kings Council, consisting of the leaders of the houses of the Oireachtas, minister for foreign affairs, the heads of the four provincial councils, select members of the IVF Army Council, Garda Commissioner, Chief of Resources will advise the King on official matters without threat, demand, reservation or deceit otherwise in such fashion to diminish his ability to lead with success.
2. The King must consult his council before addressing the Nation or the Oireachtas but is not subject to their recommendations.The King is answerable to nobody but the Supreme Court upon request as per Article 12.
The powers and functions conferred on the King by this Constitution shall be exercisable and performable by him exclusively. Government shall not petition or lobby the King, nor shall anyone else. Advice will be provided only when asked. and through official mechanisms.
The King will use his powers respectfully and wisely. He is unable to relinquish his power. No law can take away the Kings power even with his signature. The Kings power cannot be passed down, gavelled, split, dissected, delegated or bestowed to others through decree or legislation as is the nature of the Kings prerogative, which will remain whole and with him always. The apparatus of law, similarly, cannot grant the State or the King more power.
ARTICLE 14
In the event of the absence of the King, or incapacity of his being, mind body and spirit established in Article 12. (3, 12), the Kings Council will convene and hold the Offices of King and the Oireachtas in suspension until the King can recover his position or a new King is elected.
The Council will not be conferred with the powers of the King.
The Council will guide all departments of government and administer where needed without ruling, judgment or alteration normally reserved for the King.
The Council will dissolve immediately upon the election of a new High King.
THE NATIONAL PARLIAMENT
CONSTITUTION AND POWERS
ARTICLE 15
1. The National Parliament shall be called and known, and is in this Constitution generally referred to, as the Oireachtas.
2. The Oireachtas shall consist of the two houses: Dail Eireann and Seanad Eireann.
3. The Dail shall sit sequentially at Stormont, Leinster House, Cork City Hall and Galway, during Imbolg, Bealtaine, Lunasa and Samhain. The Seanad, permanently at the Seanad Chamber in Leinster House.The Oireachtas is the sole body that can write, propose and pass bills.
As per human nature, subordinate bodies of the past have served to gate-keep, manufacture consent and lobby the government. There will be no subordinate bodies or councils with any vestiges of power outside of Oireachtas and the Office of King.
1. The Oireachtas, upon enacting a law that has any element of intentional repugnancy, will be guilty, collectively, of treason, sparing only those who openly opposed the law for this reason.
2. Repugnancy, upon successful petition of no less than 100,000 people to the High Court, will lead to the cessation of any such law, and the removal of any elected officials responsible for it, and the return of properties or losses caused. In the event of false imprisonment based on these laws and remittence of no less than two years living wage granted to affected parties of such legislation.
3. No law enjoys the presumption of constitutionality, instead this article demands each law to stand on its own merit and measure itself against the scrutiny of the people and judgment of the courts.Capitol Punishment is outlawed.
The Oireachtas will hold no less than 40 sessions in a year, no less than ten in each province.
All sessions of the Oireachtas shall be public.
Each house of the Oireachtas shall elect a chair and deputy chair, who’s duty it is to hold the houses in order, who will be compensated for such, in line with the law around such matters.
Each house shall abide by the rules of their house, which will be set by them and accepted by the King. These rules cannot change unless by the Kings review and signature. These rules cannot change more than once per election cycle.
Members of each house, including a limited number of aides and consultants, shall carry out their duties unmolested by interference, political, financial or otherwise and shall have their paperwork, documentation and other relevant items privileged and will only have to produce them to :
(a) A member of An Garda Siochana, with a warrant, in the course of his duties
(a) The Chairman of the house
(a) Citizens Oversight CommitteeMembers of each house will be free to debate in their respective house, will be allocated time, equal to the rest of house members and will grant the same freedom to others.
1. All questions of each house shall be determined by majority vote of the members present.
2. in the event of a stalemate vote, all absent members of the House will be summoned and a vote held again. In the even the vote is split again, The bill will fail to pass.
3. The Quorum for Dail Eireann is 41 members, The Seanad 31. This too will be the minimum number of votes required for a bill to be valid. The King cannot sign any bill into law containing less the minimum number of votes.Official reports and publications of the Oireachtas, and utterances made in either house, are protected up and to the point of sedition and or treason, whereas if a member of the house promotes, encourages or otherwise alludes to the fact that the ideals within this constitution are in some way inferior to that of another nation or collective, with particular regard to the ideals of sovereignty, neutrality and freedom, then that member shall fall foul of the law and be removed from the Oireachtas.
Payment of compensation to the members of both houses will fall under the remit of the Office of the King.
DÁIL ÉIREANN
ARTICLE 16
1. Every citizen over twenty one years of age, of sound mind and body, shall be eligible for membership of the Dail.
2. Citizens who have reached the age of 18 shall have the right to vote in the Dail elections.
3. There will be one vote per citizen per election, which will be an Open ballot, reviewable by the public and guaranteeing fair and honest elections.1. Dail Eireann Shall be composed of 32 constituencies, one in each county, with no less than three seats per county, the remainder distributed proportionately.
2. The number of members in Dail Eirann is fixed at one hundred and sixty.
3. Constituencies shall be reviewed prior to election and as per the voter register, reshuffle the proportional seats accordingly.
4. The elections will be held using the method of Single Transferable Vote.1. Dail Eirean shall be summoned and dissolved as provided by Article 13.2.
1. Polling will be conducted on a single day, with exceptions only for people with an incredibly strong excuse, to be regulated by law, as far as practicable.
2. Dail Eireann shall be summoned no later than thirty days after polling day.The same Dail cannot sit for longer than 4 years.
The Chairperson of the Dail will hand the powers of the Dail back to the King, who will then elect a new Chairperson from the incoming Dail members after election.
Provision is vested here to allow laws to regulate the the election and nomination processes of all vacancies and must be written in such a way that they actively prevent cronyism and corruption, fostering meritocracy above all else.
ARTICLE 17
1. As soon as possible after presentation to the Dail Eireann of estimates of receipts and expenditure of the State, having been scrutinised by public oversight and, no report is made to An Garda Siochana for fraud, misappropriation or embezzlement, Dail Eieann shall consider such Estimates.
2. The legislation required to give effect to such resolutions shall be enacted within 3 months of consideration.The stated purpose or use of the revenues and moneys requested, shall be fulfilled absolutely with no exception or deviation.
SEANAD ÉIREANN
ARTICLE 18
Seanad Eireann shall be composed of sixty members with no more than 12 from Dublin county.
Seanad Eireann will sit for a period of no longer than 4 years without election.
The eligibility for membership of the Seanad follows identical criteria as with Dail Eireann bar the fact that they must have reached their 38th year..
The Seanad shall have its members elected from the following sectors holding their own elections amongst themselves, regulated by law, to nominate members. The King will select from the nominations 18 members of his choosing from any walk of life he so chooses.
(i) Universities
(ii) Religious orders
(iii) Legal profession
(iv) Unions
(v) Farming, Fisheries and Forestry
(vi) An Garda Siochana ( retired )
(vii) Irish Volunteer Forces ( retired )
(viii) Industry and Commerce
(ix) Banking
(x) Local Authorities
(xi) Irish Culture and Tradition
(xii) Conservation
(xiii) Volunteering
(xiv) HealthcareThe Seanad will not have its members selected based on racial quotas, gender quotas, or any other affirmative action of equity other than heritage and merit in their respective fields.
The above panels will be filled with 10 candidates respectively from those sectors and a general election held, with 3 members of each panel being elected by public ballot.
The public ballot for election to Seanad Eireann will be held on one day and will never be on the same day as a general election for Dail Eireann.
In the event of a casual vacancy the returning officer shall hold an election in line with the keeping of this article, electing a member from the category most in need or in the case of an equivalency all categories will be entitled to table a nomination for election.
LEGISLATION
ARTICLE 19
This constitution cannot be overborne by legislation. Legislation is, in the most absolute sense, regulation of society, and in the spirit of the social order that this social contract guarantees, only to ever be used to maintain and preserve the ideals and articles herein, entire.
ARTICLE 20
Either House of the Oireachtas can introduce a bill.
A Bill passed by one House, and accepted by the other, shall be considered passed by the Oireachtas.
ARTICLE 21
Money Bills can only be introduced by members of Dail Eireann.
A Money Bill refers to matters of taxation, loans and public moneys not including taxation, money or loans raised by local authorities for local purposes.
Seanad Éireann, by a resolution, passed at a sitting at which not less than thirty members are present, may request the President to refer the question whether the Bill is or is not a Money Bill to the High King.
The King will deliberate the bill for a period of no more than 7 days upon which:
(i) The bill will be declared a Money Bill
or
(ii) The bill will be declared not to be a Money bill
and processed accordingly.
ARTICLE 22
Both Houses will have a period of 90 days to deliberate a bill passed to them from the other House.
No bill can sit in any house for longer than ninety days.
Legislation presented to the Dail or the Seanad must be accompanied by a detailed report of the interactions between the proposed bill and existing legislation. This report will outline the intentions and expected outcomes.
Legislation that has an undeclared or unintended consequence because of its interaction or synergy with another piece of legislation will be valid only to the measure of its declared intentions.
The courts cannot punish an individual of unintended or undeclared restrictions or penalties constructed between two pieces of legislation.
No legislation can be raised by proxy, but only by the genius of the individual who proposes the bill, and any help, conflict of interest or contribution be declared and if necessary, scrutinised by public oversight.
Upon submission of a proposal to either House of the Oireachtas, the elected member of that House who bares such submissions will take the following oath:
“I swear before this House, its representatives and the people of Eire, that my will is good, that this bill is of my own genius and creation, that it does not fulfil a foreign or secret obligation and that if this bill fails to uphold the principles of this nation then I will be the first to speak, and declare it repugnant”.
ARTICLE 23
Any Bill that is not a proposal for constitutional amendment, and that is passed by both Houses, the Taoiseach will personally deliver that bill to the High Kings office at Aras an Uachtarain after the end of that daily session. Provision will be made in law for the protection and ferrying of the Taoiseach in his duties in this capacity.
The King will have 7 days to the minute, to sign a bill into law. Any bill not signed into law within the timeframe will be deemed as unconstitutional and rejected.
All Bills passed into law by the King will come into immediate effect unless otherwise stated within the Bill itself.
All laws passed by the King will be promulgated by him in the Iris Oifigiúil an Ard-Rí notifying the people of the new law now in effect.
The King will sign Bills into law in both Irish and English or they will be deemed not to have passed.
The quality of the translation of the texts of the bills will be reviewed by language experts at the Kings disposal and he will be advised as to the accuracy of the texts to each others meaning and also any dangers and misconceptions that may occur, upon which the King will consider before signing of such bills.
Provision will be made in law to supply translation services to all members of the Oireachtas upon request in order to make their Bills compliant with the highest standards of translation and language quality.
As soon as a Bill is passed into law and promulgated, the Bill stalled be enrolled in the National Statute Book, The Senchus Mór, in the care of the Registrar of the Supreme Court as conclusive evidence of the provisions of such law.
All conflicts between translations of the texts will be resolved through the superiority of the Irish language.
The text of this Constitution will be preserved and updated, with absolute integrity, by the Registrar of the Supreme Court.
ARTICLE 24
All Bills that, if passed by the Oireachtas, but appear to contain avenues of repugnancy, must be passed to the Supreme Court for review on the Kings request.
The King will have seven days to refer to the Supreme Court, any Bill that he feels threatens the constitution, is repugnant, verbose, is convoluted in nature, or otherwise not reasonably suitable with the human spirit with no exceptions.
A Bill that fails the Supreme Court review is not fit for the people and therefore will never see the Kings Signature.
The Supreme Court, consisting of no less than 5 of its Judges, will deliberate on such a Bill a mentioned in this Article, and deliver a decision no less than 60 days after it has been referred to them.
The Supreme Court Judges are protected by this constitution from interference whilst in the course of their duties and in their personal lives, as are all Judges and Brehons. Provision will be made in law with reasonable and measured penalties rendered accordingly against those who interfere with justice.
Upon reaching a majority decision, the Supreme Court will elect one amongst them to pronounce the judgement to the court and the King. No opinion will be disclosed by any Judge in the assenting or dissenting view leading up to, during or within 4 years of such a decision.
The King will sign any such bill with assenting majority.
ARTICLE 25
Any petition for constitutional amendment, generated by the citizenry, which has reached two hundred thousand signatures, verified by mechanisms provided for in law, that is delivered to the clerk of the Dail will be raised in the house by the chair of the house and adequate time granted to the members for debate and vote.
The wording of such Constitutional amendments must be inline with the preamble of this constitution, the essence of the rest of this constitution and can never diminish, disenfranchise, defraud, subjugate or otherwise harm the Nation, the Land, The Sea, The Air or The People.
Petitions must contain overwhelmingly strong argument for their grounds upon which the request is based. The organisers of such Petition will be summoned to a public hearing held by no less than ten members of the Seanad, whom have no connection to the petition and selected by the King to scrutinise the petition and will decide if the matter needs constitutional amendment or if it can be resolved with legislation.
If the petition satisfies the Seanad Amendment Committee after such scrutiny that they feel this amendment can’t be solved by legislation they can refer it to the Dail for vote in regular session conditions for both houses. Once passed by the Oireachtas it will go the usual Kings discretion.
Any Bill proposing a constitutional amendment that is passed by the Oireachtas and signed by the King will proceed to Referendum no later than 120 days after the promulgation of such a Bill.
THE GOVERNMENT
ARTICLE 26
The Government Shall consist of 15 members who shall be appointed by the King in accordance with Article 13.1.
Each Cabinet minister will hold executive power over his designated departments and will see to it that their departments are not neglected, stagnated, coopted or politicised.
ARTICLE 27
The Irish State identifies war as barbaric, futile and repugnant to the Irish spirit. We will bestow, not the right of conquest on our leaders, but only the right to defend ourselves, within our borders by any means necessary.
1. The Government, under instruction of the Minister of defence with unanimous support from his Army Council, can arm the citizenry in the case of invasion or coup.
2. The Government will not engage in the arms trade with other nations or entities, instead, provision will be made in law for design and production of our own small arms, of which there will be available for every man and woman of age, the means to defend themselves.1. The Government shall be responsible to Dáil Éireann.
2. The Government must operate as individuals in cooperation, where possible, and not a collective hive mind.
3. Each Government minister’s primary focus is to be on performance of each department in their duties to the Nation.1. Conversations between government ministers are not considered protected by any mechanism otherwise already afforded to the the general public in regards to privacy, ownership of articles other than Bills and their workings etc. before they have been entered onto House record.
2. All meetings, official or not, between members of either House and another member of either House will be documented by the members in question and submitted to the Citizens Oversight Committee, no later than 7 days after such meeting.The Government will prepare an annual report of all receipts and expenditure and present it, first to the Dail, and then to the people through the Oireachtas publications, within 7 days of presentation to the Dail and no later than the 28th February of the following calendar year.
1. The head of the Government will be hereby known as Taoiseach and will be elected by the King.
2. The Taoiseach will report to the King regularly unless matters of urgency arise in which case it will be immediate and the King will prioritise his time to the Taoiseach in terms of his importance in regards to the state of the Nation.1. There will be a Tánaiste who will be a stand in when needed for the Taoiseach, and will be selected by the King.
2. The Entire Government must be members of Dail Eireann.
3. Every member of the Government has the right to attend and be heard in both Houses of The Oireachtas.All resignations from the Government are to be handed, in written form, from the individual to the Office of the King except in the case of the Taoiseach, who must place it in his hands. The individual(s) will proceed to continue in their office, if possible, until a replacement has been elected in.
Provision will be made in law for the regulation and management of government departments.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
ARTICLE 28
1. The role of local government is recognised as a fundamental pillar of representative democracy and will remain permanent, with its functions entire and powers immune from positive law, treaty or other outside force, and its members free from obligation to any other entity(s) than their local citizenry.
2. The powers of local government are administrative at local level in planning, maintenance upkeep and improvements.
3. The party system, conspicuous or clandestine is hereby disbarred from local politics. local government will be filled by local people whom desire to achieve greatness for their communities.
4. Members of local government will be directly elected.
5. Elections for local government will be held no later than 5 years and a day after the last election and never within 120 days of a General election.
6. Citizens, eligible to vote in the general election, are eligible to vote in local elections.
7. Citizens”born and bred” of a local area will be entitled to run for a seat on local government there.
8. Casual vacancies will be filled promptly by nomination and majority approval of the existing members of the local government.
9. Council rate/tax on shopfront businesses is not permitted. Shopfront's must be at least 75% local, family or unique businesses, ring fencing the vibrancy of the town centres.
10. All ancient rights attributed to movement of people, Markets and town boundaries are asserted and protected by local government. Citizens will be exempt from toll, lastage, passage, pontage while travelling towards, from, through, around, under, over the catchment area of a local government.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
ARTICLE 29
1. The people of Ireland, being sovereign, independent and free, shall not be bound by or encroached upon by international entities and agreements made by the State, therefore rendering any agreement made by the State on behalf of the people, null and void.
2. Foreign Relations will be nothing more than the promotion of tourism, international free trade, neutrality and the condemning of war and the displacement of peoples.
3. International cooperation will not be legally binding, influence policy changes or referendums but instead will be left to the free will of the people to act in accordance with their own conscience and finances.
4. The people of Ireland recognise no parliament or assembly but the Oireachtas and therefore no law, legislation, order, resolution or otherwise will hold effect within the territories of Éire that is passed outside it, or through the Oireachtas by proxy.
5. Citizens of Ireland cannot hold seats of office within transnational legislative bodies less they surrender their citizenship of Éire and leave the territory.
6. Transnational assemblies or legislative bodies will hold no office here and by extension no citizen of Ireland can hold membership of, or employment with, such a body.
7. Ireland agrees with the general principles of international crime prevention. Holding final appeal, we will cooperate, where the rights of the individual(s) affected are not a matter of concern, with international crime prevention bodies.
8. The people of Ireland recognise trade sanctions and manipulation as a form of financial terrorism. Ireland therefore declares and holds an understood, mutual free trade agreement, with all Nations, should they choose to accept it.
9. Ireland will not permit the movement of military equipment or personnel through our territories.
10. Espionage by foreign entities is outlawed. Those caught breaching this principle will receive maximum sentencing and their presence here officially denied.
11. The people of Ireland will not be represented, or misrepresented, within bodies, forums or otherwise where the purpose of said entity is to undermine the homogeneity of the Irish people, individual liberties, the principles of this constitution, or the nation as a whole.
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
ARTICLE 30
1. There shall be an Attorney General who will be the advisor to the Government, in service of the people, in matters of law and legal opinion.
2. The Attorney General cannot give advice that would amount to the subversion of, or diminishing of, this constitution.
3. The Attorney General may request the investigation of the government if he believes they have attempted to deceive him or use his services in such a way that contravenes this constitution.
4. The Attorney General shall be nominated by legal professionals registered with The Department of Justice, then appointed by vote which will be voted upon by members the the Supreme Court and upon majority decision, approved by final signature of the King. Similarly, The Attorney General can only be removed thereafter, by the Kings referral to the Supreme Court and then a majority held again in agreement.
5. Citizens of Ireland can petition the king for the Attorney Generals removal with a minimum of 200,000 petitioners required for the King to be compelled to refer the matter to the Supreme Court.
6. The Attorney General will be legally responsible, if legislation that he has advised upon, shows in constitutional challenge, to have been repugnant. This process will be automatic and immediate.
7. The Attorney General can resign by handing his resignation letter to the Department of Justice.
8. The Attorney General will be remunerated and provision made this in law..
THE KINGS COUNCIL
ARTICLE 31
1. There shall be a Kings council consisting of no more than 12 individuals who can demonstrate their heritage, lineage and fidelity to the ideals of this constitution, and they shall vow to preserve the territories of Éire for the Irish people.
2. The Council membership shall be selected by the King. The Council will hold court when there is five or more of their rank summoned by the King and will discuss the matters of concern such as legislation, public petitions and national security.
3. The Council shall swear fealty to the King and the King alone in his charge as servant of the people.
4. The Council will operate in total secrecy and isolation from other Nations, the Governments of the world, including our own, and are answerable only to the King save in accordance with matters of law regarding treason and sedition.
5. The Council will convene on the Kings orders and provide consultancy, insight and advise inline with the expectations laid out herein.
6. The Council cannot make demands upon the King.
7. The Council will fulfil its duties under Article 14 in line with the Kings wishes, if known, and inline, always and regardless, with this constitution.
ARTICLE 32
8. The King’s Council shall have the right to review and relay their ideas, concerns and opinions to the King regarding new legislation.
THE COMPTROLLER AND AUDITOR GENERAL
ARTICLE 33
1. There shall be a Comptroller and Auditor General to control on behalf of the State all disbursements and to audit all accounts of moneys administered by, or under the authority of. the Oireachtas.
2. The Comptroller and Auditor General shall be nominated by the Seanad and appointed by the King.
3. The Comptroller and Auditor General shall hold no other office or position while in service of the people.
4. The Comptroller and Auditor General shall formulate reports of all disbursements to the highest standard and make them available to the taxpayer in paper and digital format.
5. The Comptroller and Auditor General are subject to the law in the matters of fraud, malfeasance and corruption.
6. The King can remove the Comptroller and or Auditor General from office.
THE COURTS
ARTICLE 34
1. There shall be system of Justice, independent, inviolable and Supreme in matters of Law in the territories of Éire. This section will be taken to be understood that the English common Law system is no more.
2. The entity known as ‘The BAR’ shall be dissolved and in its place will be a regulatory body provisioned under the Department of Justice known as the Guild of Legal Professionals of Éire.
3. The GLPE will maintain a register of, and also regulate the education, practice and licensing of the following professions:
Judges
Barristers
Soliciters
Brehons
Legal Secretaries
Adjudicators
Arbitrators and Mediators in official capacity
Any other individual that handles documentation, consultancy guidance in his
occupation.
4. (1) The Irish people cannot be collectively guilty of any crime and therefore cannot collectively be exposed to punitive measures of an international or transnational nature. The Irish Nation therefore recognises the international courts but only in matters where the State is the defendant and not the People of Éire. This will be taken to mean that the citizens of Éire will not be liable for the crimes of the employees of the State. Instead full liability at international level lies with the individuals accused and they shall be extradited so far as the King sees fit.
5. The Irish Courts will facilitate no foreign laws.
6. The Irish Courts shall comprise:
Courts of Family, Adjudication and Mediation ( Brehon ): Community courts with agreements imposed by mutual consent designed to resolve minor disputes with minimal cost and damage to reputation aswell as fostering ownership and understanding.
(i) Court of Mediation ( non enforceable )
(ii) Court of Adjudication ( enforcement from Circuit and High court )
(iii) Court of the Family ( Family court with goal of solving family matters.
Enforcement of decisions can go to High Court )
Courts of Law ( Judge): Constitutional courts where Justice is administered in line with the constitutional principles herein. They shall comprise:
(i) Court of first instance ( District and Circuit)
(ii) Court of Appeal ( Circuit and High court )
(iii) Court of Final Appeal ( Supreme Court )
7. Justice shall be administered in the Courts mentioned in this article and provision made for in law for establishment snd operation of said Courts.
8. Appointments to positions within the Courts system will be nominated by the Department of Justice, forwarded to the King for Appointment and provision for such made for in law.
9. The Courts of Law will pass all judgment with this constitution as the fundamental basis of their decision. It will be understood that all matters before the courts, where a citizen maintains his rights are infringed, will be a constitutional matter, provided the person(s) in question can provide a reasonable argument for a breach of his rights. The Courts will proceed in legislative or constitutional context based on the decision of the Judge.
10. If a Judge rules against a piece of legislation, that legislation shall be scheduled for automatic judicial review in the Supreme Court.
11. The decision of the Supreme Court shall in all cases be final and conclusive.
12. The Courts shall not be used to torment or harass the citizenry or gate keep them from justice. Vexatious, reactionary, disingenuous or any other ulterior motive based summons’ or litigation will be rejected by the Courts and the offender issued with a penalty provided for in Law.
13. (1) Every person appointed a judge under this Constitution shall make and subscribe the following declaration:
"In the presence of Almighty God I do solemnly and sincerely promise and declare that I will duly and faithfully and to the best of my knowledge and power execute the office of Chief Justice (or as the case may be) without fear or favour, affection or ill-will towards any man or society, and that I will uphold the Constitution and the laws. May God direct and sustain me.”
(2) This declaration shall be made and subscribed by the Chief Justice in the presence of the King, and by each of the other judges of the Supreme Court, the judges of the Court of Appeal, the judges of the High Court and the judges of every other Court in the presence of the Chief Justice or the senior available judge of the Supreme Court in open court.
.
(3) The declaration shall be made and subscribed in public Court session by every judge before entering upon his duties as such judge, and in any case not later than ten days after the date of his appointment or such later date as may be determined by the King.
(4) Any judge who declines or neglects to make such declaration as aforesaid shall be deemed to have vacated his office.
ARTICLE 35
1. The judges of the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal, the High Court and all other Courts established in Article 34 shall be appointed and or removed by the King. All Judges are to be granted a robust process of Appeal should they be removed by the King.
2. All Judges will be autonomous in their duties, and will be subject only to this constitution.
3. Judges can not hold public office or receive emoluments from any other source other than their Judicial remuneration.
4. Provision will be made in Law for remuneration of those in service of the Courts. Such remuneration will subject to the general Laws of taxation.
ARTICLE 36
1. Those in service of the Courts are subject to general employment Law in the matters of pension, retirement and conduct.
2. Jurisdiction and business of the Courts will be managed by Law where the constitution allows.
ARTICLE 37
1. All powers of Judicial nature are inviolable to the mechanisms of the State and the office of King save where otherwise mentioned in the Constitution.
TRIAL OF OFFENCES
ARTICLE 38
1. No person shall be tried on any criminal charge save in due course of the Law.
2. Minor offences may be tried by the Courts under summary jurisdiction where the accused waives their right to trial by jury of their peers under this section.
3. A Special Offences Court shall be provisioned and prescribed for in Law and maintained for the trial of the following matters:
(i) Organised Crime
(ii) Political Crime
(iii) Terrorism
(iv) Treason
(v) Foreign agents
4. Military Tribunals may be established for transgressions against military Law alleged to have been committed by persons or groups of persons in military service so far as Military jurisdiction allows and the offence is related to military service.
5. There will be no trial without jury unless section 2 is invoked.
6. The Department of Justice will be provisioned with the means to operate Courts as outlined in sections 3 and 4. Articles 34 and 35 can be overborne by this section up to the point of necessity, justified by immediate threat to the nation or by ongoing societal upheaval.
ARTICLE 39
Treason, in all its forms, shall be regarded as the utmost sleight and betrayal against the people of Éire, The State and this constitution. So as to guarantee only those who distinctly commit treason are tried accordingly, we the people of Éire define it to be:
(i) The betrayal of, or conspiracy to betray, the ideas of sovereignty, neutrality and independence of the Irish people while in public office. This includes the conspiracy to enter public office with the intent of betraying these ideas. Betrayal in this context shall mean taking any position other than the maximal stance and actions.
(ii) The levying of war against the State, or assisting any entity or person or inciting or conspiring with any person to levy war against the State. War in this context means the the violent actions of persons or entities foreign or domestic intent on subverting Irish sovereignty, independence or neutrality.
(iii) The use of ones station, wether it be teacher, priest or politician etc, to advance the ideals of Globalism or any other tyrannical system that would subdue the Irish people and this constitution.
(iv) The participation in any undertaking that aims to alter the genetics or constituency of the native population of Éire including but not limited to, gene editing, food manipulation, atmospheric manipulation, water manipulation, soil manipulation or any other practice that interferes with the natural selection process of the Irish people
(v) Plantationism, meaning the act of facilitating the intentional displacement of the Irish people, replacement of us or, intentional suppression of the native population, in any way, in favour of non natives up to the point of Equal status and opportunity.
(vi) Sedition, meaning the organising of, or attempted organising of, opposition to the government, State King or people where the ultimate goal is the demise of the State, the King the people or this constitution.
(vii) Propaganda, foreign or domestic that generally encourages, sincerely, the aforementioned acts in this article.
(viii) Any other act, mostly matching the description of one or more of the aforementioned actions, where treason is apparent.
(viii) The breach of any article of this constitution where one of the aforementioned actions in this article is a factor.
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS
INDIVIDUAL LIBERTIES
ARTICLE 40
NATURE/BIRTH/CREATION
We hereby grant ourselves unenumerated rights and liberties, ancient, divine, and by birthright.These individual liberties acknowledged as the fundamental basis of the common good, cannot possibly be breached to obtain the common good, and that by this maxim, these rights are preserved without interference, Only through his own inadequacies, surrender or the transgressions of State should man fail to assert these rights generally outlined below:
Life
Liberty
Ownership of property and external articles
Livelihood
Procreation
Familial association
Association
Assembly
Societal inclusion
Barter
Freedom of thought
Propagation of faith and culture
Expression
Make shelter
To make fire
Collect rain water
Hunt wild prey
Forage
Animal husbandry
Produce food
Freedom of movement
Nomadism
Bodily Integrity
Mutual Combat
Natural Death
Defence of rights
1. All citizens, as freemen and as human persons, shall be held equal before the law.
2. There shall be no titles conferred, nor sustained, by the State.
3. (1) The State guarantees in its Laws, to defend and vindicate the rights of the citizen, never enacting a Law that places one right above another, one class of people above another, or a Law that preemptively decides matters that ought to be decided by a judge, or by the natural processes of discourse in society.
(2) The State shall, in particular, by its laws or the absence of them, protect the life, person, good name and property rights of every citizen and where injustices arise, vindicate said citizen accordingly.
4. No freeman shall be taken or imprisoned or disseised or outlawed or exiled, or in any otherwise destroyed; nor will we pass upon him nor send upon him but by the lawful judgement of his peers or by the law of the land. We will sell to no man, we will deny to no man, or delay, right or justice.
5. The dwelling of every citizen is inviolable. Laws intended to commodify or redistribute property are void. Where a warrant is issued for a person within said dwelling, or presumed to be within said dwelling, and the warrant issued is not arbitrary or vexatious, and is for a serious criminal offence, then a peace officer may enter the premises and conduct themselves in a manner consistent with the reason stated on said warrant. In situations of genuine emergency, any citizen may act in their good conscience and enter a dwelling in order to preserve life without reprisal.
6. The State agrees that the following rights are sacrosanct:
(i) Freedom of Speech - No word or utterance shall be illegal in its own right. No speech shall be mandated. There shall be an allowance in Law to tria offences of extreme harassment, intent to commit harm loss or injury and slander. Law can be enacted that manipulates the natural discourse of the population, preserving it as a fundamental principle to the common good nor shall any Law favour of any goal, political, religious, racial or otherwise involving behavioural change.
(ii) Right to Assemble, Peacefully without Arms.
(iii) Right to Form Associations and Unions where the aims of such organisations remain within this allowances and principles of this constitution.
(iv) Right to Privacy - Citizens are guaranteed to be free from State surveillance, social credit scores, compulsory digital currency use, biometric databases, stop and search without warrant ( unless Gardai have witnessed an illegal or offensive article in the possession of a person ), the provision of data or sharing of data with other foreign entities. The private bank accounts and day to day transactions of citizens are protected and inviolable.
(v) The Right to Resist Tyranny - This can be enacted by the population upon sufficient build up of anger and vitriol against a hostile Government, King, or Judiciary. This exists within the confines of the constitution and if enacted must be enacted so with the sole purpose of restoring what was promised herein. Those who carry out Lawful Rebellion must do so to the highest standards of modesty, morality and patriotism.
Thus it shall be agreed among us that:
When the pillars of social justice fail us, the police, the media, the justice system, the elected representatives and even the King, we the people of the Irish Nation, so delivered to us by the generations before and promised by us to the generations to come, swear that we will enter a state of true rebellion against the traitors among us and that we will spare none in our wake. We will bear arms against those who strive against us and shall not cease until our constitution is restored and all perpetrators are removed or at our mercy.
This will be considered to be enacted when:
A Law, and in particular a series of Laws, being enacted that clearly breaches
or trivialises 1 or more articles of this constitution, where, the Justice system
fails, intentionally or otherwise, to rectify a clear breach in the constitution by
judicial review leaving no other avenue for redress,
where
The failure of the Judiciary, Oireachtas, police force or King to carry out the
course of their duties as demanded in the constitution to the point of
obvious contempt for the ideals herein or the people themselves,
where
State sponsored violence, widespread negligence, propaganda and corruption
in the police force or organs of the state that gate-keeps or denies justice to
the masses or ostracises the native people of Éire,
where
The general morality, decency and happiness of society is under extreme
pressure,
then
The people shall deliver their notice, containing the
signatures of no less than 100,000 people, of Irish descent, to the office of the
King who will announce to the government and the nation the state of
rebellion. The King, as the elected head of the Nation, shall generally be
expected to side with the people or remain neutral save in the event that the
rebellion appears to unreasonable, malicious or ill conceived.
THE FAMILY
ARTICLE 41
1. The Family is the natural primary and fundamental unit group of society possessing obvious, inalienable and imprescriptible rights, antecedent and superior to all positive law. The Family is the necessary basis of social order and is indispensable to the welfare of the Nation and the State.
2. The State, in its Laws and actions, guarantees to prioritise and favour the Family over any other unit of society, protecting it from the financial, ideological and societal pressures, protecting it from antagonism and immorality.
3. The definition of Family is synonymous with the institution of marriage, an institution the State has a duty to promote and protect. However, in the case of alternative or mixed families the definition shall, in some cases, encompass groupings of people who don’t fit that traditional context. This may arise in legal settings where the difficulties of the modern world form an almost impossible position for Judges, legislators and the people involved. These matters are civil in nature and mostly resolvable through common sense. Families that have naturally formed through freedom of association, adoption, guardianship, love and compassion will be generally free from state interference and granted equal status pending review provided for in Law, that will determine the genuine nature of said arrangement, the safety of the children involved, entitlements and rights etc in a fair, and common sense way. Such processes will use social sciences, marriage rates, single parent rates etc to inform their decisions. No child shall be endangered for the sake of Law, Political correctness or social construct.
4. 1. In particular, the State recognises that by her life within the home, woman gives to the State a support without which the common good cannot be achieved.
2. The State shall, therefore, endeavour to ensure that mothers shall not be obliged by
economic necessity to engage in labour to the neglect of their duties in the home.
5. The state recognises Religious and civil unions of persons. The State acknowledges marriage of man and woman as being of religious significance and as the start of a new family. Civil Unions are recognised in the eyes of the Law as equal in nature to benefits and rights and may be contracted by two persons regardless of sex. The State will guarantee both institutions are protected from unjust attack.
6. Marriage and Civil Unions shall have the same rights of annulment. Annulments may occur upon order of a Judge where mediation has failed between the parties. Such orders must, by law, include proper arrangements for any children involved.
EDUCATION
ARTICLE 42
1. The State acknowledges that the primary and natural educator of the child is the Family and guarantees to respect the inalienable right and duty of parents to provide, according to their means, for the religious and moral, intellectual, physical and social education of their children.
2. Parents shall be free to provide this education in their homes or in private schools or in schools recognised or established by the State without interference.
3. 1. The State shall not oblige parents in violation of their conscience and lawful
preference to send their children to schools established by the State, or to any
particular type of school designated by the State.
2. The people of Éire promise to educate their children to minimum expected
standard of understanding of society, to take responsibility for their moral,
physical, intellectual and social development and to raise their children in the
knowledge of our language, culture and history and to uphold this constitution.
4. The State shall provide, through taxation, free education for all children who seek it, in line with the needs and requirements of the job market and ever changing economy so that we have a correctly skilled and ready work force. Children will receive knowledge of the known world, religious and historical teachings, mathematics, Gaelic language, cultures of the world, taxation, finances, Law, ethics and science.
CHILDREN
ARTICLE 43
1. The State recognises and affirms the natural and imprescriptible rights of all children and shall, as far as practicable, by its laws protect and vindicate those rights.
2. In exceptional cases, where the parents, regardless of their marital status, fail in their duty towards their children to such extent that the safety or welfare of any of their children is likely to be prejudicially affected, The department of Education and Childhood Wellbeing shall, to preserve the child’s rights, intervene and provide supervised care, education and adoption, removing them from certain danger and neglect if necessary to preserve the life and wellbeing of the child, but never supplanting the role of the parent in society.
3. Section 2 of this article can only be enacted upon successful application to a Judged his order granted.
4. 1. Provision shall be made by law that in the resolution of all proceedings regarding
children in regards to this article, that best interests of the child are paramount.
2. Provision shall be made by law for securing, as far as practicable, that in all
proceedings referred to in subsection 1° of this section in respect of any child who is
capable of forming his or her own views, the views of the child shall be ascertained
and given due weight having regard to the age and maturity of the child while
protecting parents, and thus the family, from unnecessary, unreasonable, irrational,
immature or malicious behaviour of the child.
PROPERTY
ARTICLE 44
1. The State acknowledges that man has the natural right, antecedent to positive law, to the private ownership of private property and external articles he has inherited or acquired through his labour.
2. The Family home is inviolable from taxation, seizure or compulsory purchase. The Family home is the dwelling where an individual is normally housed or has housed himself. If a person lives between residences in some manner that appears to be generally reasonable then both homes shall be free from taxation for the periods of residency. Properties in addition to the Family home are taxable but only if they are used to generate income and shall be taxed through that income at a fair and reasonable rate so as not to diminish the the individuals ability to retain ownership of said property.
3. Agricultural land or dwellings that produce enough food to sustain their household will be inviolable from taxation.
3. Properties, in addition to the Family home, that are classified as housing and remain vacant for a period of 2 years shall be eligible for purchase orders.
4. Property that would generally considered to be housing, can not be vested in, accumulated or owned by a company, investment fund or any other entity other than the social housing departments of government, executor of a will for no longer than is necessary under regular procedure or citizens in their private capacity as outlined in this section.
5. Compulsory purchases orders shall be Lawful if:
(i) They do not breach this article
or
(ii) The order is in relation to a rare occurrence that it is necessitated by importance by
a critical piece of national infrastructure.
6. The people of Éire hereby acknowledge the need for a social contract around housing and the distribution of property. We hereby volunteer excess property being dwellings that are not the family home, being compensated accordingly, to the Housing distribution processes of the State whereby:
(i) We fail to sell our excess housing by private treaty within a period of 18 months of submission to the free market.
(ii) We voluntarily avail of a Social housing purchasing scheme before putting the house to market
7. We declare property monopolisation, accumulation and landlordism to be unconstitutional and against the general spirit of this nation. In light of this principle, the housing market will be restricted to first time buyers and those who wish to trade up or downsize their current dwelling.
RELIGION
ARTICLE 45
1. We acknowledge and agree that Religion, so far as morally practicable and within the confines of this constitution, is to be protected and cherished as a foundational building block of man and his understanding of, and appreciation for, the world around him. It is for these reasons we outline the following rights and guarantees:
(i) The Irish Church shall be free, and have all her rights entire and her liberties inviolable.
(ii) The practice of Religion is generally considered to be private matter however public worship is accepted to be a protected right so far as it is not practiced in a way that is, antagonistic, intrusive, competitive or invasive. Proselytisation of the public forum to the point of genuine nuisance will be subject to public order measures.
2. The State guarantees to protect the Irish church and the older ways of Éire from non native religious expansionism and also from atheistic aggression and bigotry.
3. The State accepts that dogmatism is a fundamental aspect of religious worship and will respect this fact wherever possible up and to the point where the rights of others or demonstrably infringed and, also, agree to refrain from allowing dogmatism to influence or guide public policy.
4. Every religious denomination shall have the right to manage its own affairs subject to this constitution. Established houses of worship are inviolable from taxation and purchase order.
SOCIAL POLICY
ARTICLE 46
1. The State acknowledges obligation to the people of Éire to remain in its place of servitude and dedication to their best interests inline with our traditions and culture and this constitution. The State shall maintain social order but not germinate it or allow the interferences or designs of any global order, singular, plural or multilateral to inform its policies.
2. The State shall reject partnerships between corporation and State.
3. The State shall endeavour to acquire, build and maintain nationalised infrastructure, bodies and services, at cost. The public accounts of the people of Éire, as stakeholders, shall not suffer the evil extortions of the monopolies of private enterprise nor will we supplement private enterprise whereas the people of Éire will ultimately receive no benefit.
4. The State will not rely on free enterprise to solve the problems that private enterprise serves to gain from perpetuating. It is the States duty to maintain the highest standards of social care and welfare through all its institutions.
5. The State will not suppress communities, groups or individuals from becoming self sufficient.
6. The manipulation of the national infrastructure, planning and taxation systems in order to arbitrarily manipulate demographics and population of areas is not permitted.
7. There will be special tax exemption for family owned businesses such as public houses, butchers, tailors, drapers, tradesmen, and people of skill and tradition in general. The State will endeavour to revive the high street and town centres with with genuine, quality Irish produce, skill and overall vibrancy.
8. In particular, the State will preserve the traditional Irish pub through incentives, exceptions and credits and initiatives that promote community, tradition and cultural propagation through the heart of every crossroad, village, town and city pub. Provision for such will be made for in Law.
9. The State shall endeavour to ensure that the strength and health of workers, men and women, and the tender age of children shall not be abused and that citizens shall not be forced by economic necessity to enter avocations unsuited to their sex, age or strength.
10. Official matters of all organs of the State will be conducted via the use of biological, scientifically informed sex and not gender identity. The State regards expression and identity as personal matters and non enforceable. All documentation and correspondence will be conducted in line with family values as guaranteed in article 41.
11. All human resource practices will be based on merit and not class.
REFERENDUM
ARTICLE 47
1. Referendums shall be driven by the people, not the State, as per article 25.
2. The State shall only proceed with a referendum if it does not threaten the integrity of the values and rights herein.
3. The people, the State, the King, the Seanad and the Supreme court shall only proceed with any such referendum should the argument for it, and the statistical data supporting it, be overwhelmingly obvious, understandable and convincing.
4. No Referendum can grant or remove rights or liberties or terminate a fundamental principle herein. Neither can a referendum terminate, repeal or otherwise demise this constitution.
5. We the people shall not suffer the consequences of statistical anomalies, outlier occurrences or genuine tragedies used to manipulate the public into surrendering our privacy and sovereignty. The practice of crisis driven referendums shall be strictly prohibited.
6. Behavioural change psychology, subliminal messaging through any medium or excessive pollution of the public discourse designed to drive a referendum or influence referendums artificially shall be strictly prohibited.
CURRENCY
ARTICLE 48
1. The Currency of Éire is the Punt, restored in full as it was prior to the Euro.
2. Physical cash is the primary method of payment required in Éire. Digital Currency will be considered a privilege.
3. The right to pay with cash for anything advertised for sale or lease is hereby asserted.
4. Under no circumstances, can digital currency be demanded, preferred or enforced. Digital currencies will be classified as generally unsafe in terms of the privacy of the citizen and the Nation as a whole.
5. Use of digital currencies for surveillance, nudging, or any other type of interference designed to control or manipulate any citizen of Éire shall be unlawful.
6. Citizens found with sums of cash shall be guilty of no crime, nor suspected thereof, unless there is another critical piece of evidence directly connected the sum of cash to proceeds of crime.
7. Éire will have no currency but one of its own making.
BORDER CONTROL, DEMOGRAPHICS AND INTEGRATION
ARTICLE 49
1. The State Guarantees to maintain Éire’s borders, as the fundamental demarcation of the Nation, in a manner consistent with the expectations of a sovereign Nation.
2. No undocumented persons will be permitted to travel freely within the territories of Éire, disenfranchising the Irish people. Such persons will be returned to their country of origin.
3. Éire will accept no more refugees, asylum seekers or economic migrants than is sustainable by way of rational, proportionate and fair policy. We herby set the limit of such persons to 5000 per annum. All asylum applications will be handled through our embassies abroad and anyone one who arrives pre-approved shall be returned to their country of origin.
4. The State guarantees to forcibly deport non-natives on a last in first out basis, should the native population dwindle below 86.5% of the total
5. The State guarantees through its policies to limit the occurrence of non-native parallel societies within the territories of Éire, thus guaranteeing successful integration into Irish society of persons who wish to join the Irish nation and also preserving the values and tradition of our Native peoples.
REPEAL OF FOREGOING CONSTITUTIONS, STATUTES, CHARTERS, TREATIES AND MONARCHY
ARTICLE 50
1. All Constitutions, Statutes, Charters, Treaties and claims, acknowledged or stated are hereby repealed and the Irish Statute Book of the bunreacht na hEireann removed.
2. The Senchus Mór is hereby enacted as the Statute book of Éire, being the sole source of Law of Éire, and its first entry shall be this constitution, allowing for no other document, other that enactments of the new Oireachtas described herein, signed and promulgated by the High King onto its record.
3. No powers shall be transferred from the previous two iterations of Irish constitutions. Their origins within the claims of foreign Kings and parliaments are hereby terminated.
4. All Power now comes from and resides with the people of Éire, for ever.
Signed and sealed by the people of Eire.
This will take me a few days to fully read but so far I like it. I vote John Waters for high king of Eire