17 August 2010

terrorism the factor, not the phenomenon

Confer V. I. Lenin's conspectus excerpt, item 7, in dialectics one can separate component factors of a given phenomenon for analytical purposes, likewise can individual factors be correlated to identify [new] phenomena.

The incidents of September 11, 2001, have been presented as representing a phenomenon, in dialectics however, such incidents, would be a component factor, along with the United States government alleged predecessor incidents, the embassy bombings in Dar es Salaam and Nairobi, these taken singly or as a whole, are representing a factor, the phenomenon being the abuse of United States law-making rules.

Of special note are the abuses of congressional Public Law vs. Private Law bills' distinctions, in their extensive United States domestic and foreign policy manifestations.

To give two examples there is the Federal Reserve Act, Public No. 43, of 1913, and the House Joint [Public] Resolution "Favoring establishing in Palestine a national home for Jewish People", Pub. Resolution No. 73, of 1922, the latter as supporting the premise of the [British] Balfour Declaration.