Hospitals & Asylums
Constitution of Hospitals & Asylums Non - Government Economy
Hospitals
& Asylums (HA) was created in 2000.
The HA acronym was coined by
Alexander Augustus the African American surgeon who founded FreedmenÕs Hospital &
Asylum (HA) for President Abraham Lincoln, who also created the Columbia
Institution for the Deaf and populated Arlington National Cemetery.
HA
dates to the Naval Hospital Act of Feb. 26, 1811, that was
the work of Paul Hamilton secretary of the Navy under President James Madison. The codification
at Title 24 of the
Economic law demands that we work
together. Both the state and the private sector play an
important role. Everyone has the fundamental right to be free
of hunger, poverty and disease. It
is the equal right of men and women to the enjoyment of all the economic,
social and cultural rights; to read and write and thereby to grow
and flourish with equal rights, health, justice, truth, freedom and peace in
pursuit of eternal life, prosperity and happiness.
In all
our dealings we must be ethical. To
the government ethics is a matter of accounting for income, expenditure and
association. To the professional
ethics is a matter of profiting with the least risk of harm to anyone. Everyone has a professional responsibility to provide
adequately for the needs of those unable to pay.
The
golden rule provides that one must treat others as one wishes to be treated. Therefore
non-violence and the non-use of force are fundamental to all
dealings with all people and we must also reject all forms of hatred, bigotry,
discrimination, prejudice, violence, crime and disease. It is our duty to
defend the life and liberty of all people and treat
everyone fairly.
Believing that the codification, adjudication and progressive
change of HA statute will promote the maintenance of international peace and
security, the development of healthy and friendly relations and the achievement
of co-operation among all people.
Scholars should surpass 100 crunches, 100 push-ups and 10km run
daily and run a marathon on the Sabbath.
Chapter One (Arts. 1-9): HA has a 200 year
history of protecting veterans, the disabled, ill, unlawfully detained.
Armed Forces Retirement Home (AFRH), Battle Mountain Sanitarium Reserve at Hot Springs,
South Dakota, the Army and Navy Hospitals including the Tubercular Hospital at
Fort Bayard and the Army and Navy General Hospital at Hot Springs, Arkansas;
St. ElizabethÕs Hospital and District of Columbia Mental Health System;
Gallaudet University for the deaf; Arlington Memorial Amphitheatre; Gorgas
Hospital.
Chapter Two (Arts. 10-16): Practical Petitions. To encourage people
to litigate the statute the most usable sections are promoted. People are
promised up to $50 to donate blood. People are encouraged to say when an
invasion or violation of the rules and regulations is unlawful and up to $1,000
fine and 12 months in jail is due, People are sought to perfect bona fide
claims to land through private exchange and/or nationalization. Forms simplify
the repatriation and release of alleged mentally ill detainees and discipline
professional misconduct. Fines and forfeitures under
the Uniform Code of Military Justice are claimed by the Armed Forces Retirement
Home Trust Fund. Terms of admission to the Armed
Forces Retirement Home.
Chapter Three (Arts. 17-24): The Right to Write (Arts.
17-24). HA Text with questions will be available for publication in
2010. HA statute for Congress by 2020. HA has
been published quarterly, equinox and solstice, since 2001. Anyone can
subscribe to HA by email. The quarterly is unsolicited and monthly is for
subscribers. Copyright royalties uphold the moral and material interests
of the author mostly to be paid. Fair use is interpreted so the State has
a duty to respect, protect and fulfill. Legislative drafting is difficult
and must not generate conflict in the laws. Bills actually become laws by
a Member of Congress putting an Act in the hopper and winning the majority
approval of both the House and Senate and signature of the
President.
Chapter Four (Arts. 25-30): Political Privilege,
Political power is a privilege not a right. Every citizen shall have
the right and the opportunity to participate in the conduct of public affairs
directly or through freely chosen representatives, to vote and be elected and
to have access to public service. Political parties are a protected form
of freedom of association. Members shall
refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or
political independence. The political spectrum accepts free market
liberals and social conservative but regulates communism and fascism
administratively because there is a division between the public and private
sectors. Political organizations write annual reports to Congress,
publish newsletters and candidate committees. Non-Governmental
Organizations report quadrennial to ECOSOC. Non profit
organizations are tax exempt by virtue of their work. Everyone is
entitled to the highest achievable standard of health and proliferation of
ethics committees. Everyone has a right to enjoy the benefits of
education.
Chapter Five (Arts. 31-39): Economic Law The dual mandate for price
stability and maximum employment is based in Keynesian equations. The law
of supply of demand and the law of diminishing returns are the basis to
economics. The public sector is reliant upon the balancing of one
budget. Free trade is facilitated with an equation to devaluate
currencies with deficits. SayÕs law provides that there can be no demand
without supply. ParkinsonÕs law explains that work expands to fill the
time allotted to it. GreshamÕs law that bad money
drives out good. Iron Law of Wages states, that if wages rise
above subsistence level, they produce inflation, which in turn forces wages
down to subsistence level again. EngelÕs Law anticipates that with rising
incomes, the share of expenditures for food and other products declines.
PeterÕs Principle, in any organization every employee rises to his level of incompetence.
SandersÕ Clause provides that money spent is money earned and self-interested
saving by trust funds must be returned whereas only pro-poor administration is
sustainable. There are S Corporations and C Corporations. Wages must be
fair. The system of national accounts for Gross Domestic
Product.
Chapter Six (Arts.
49-49): The Rule of Law, Asylum is a
foundational principle. Common law is the evolution of the precedence of
the Supreme Court. Unjust laws can be ruled unconstitutional if they are
overruled. The inherent dignity and equal and inalienable rights of all
members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in
the world. The ideal of free human beings enjoying freedom from fear and
want can only be achieved if conditions are created whereby everyone may enjoy
his economic, social and cultural rights, as well as civil and political rights
as they determine for themselves. All people shall enjoy the protection
of the International Bill of Rights. Everyone is entitled to medical
immunity and those people virtuous to the progress of the human race are
entitled to legal immunity. The criminally accused shall enjoy a fair
trial.
Chapter Seven (Arts. 50-60): The Future is the largest government
reform in the history of the United States and United Nations ,
There shall be a 2.5% health annuity and social security COLA from January 1,
2016 and the without income limit law will tax the rich to end poverty by 2020.
U.S. Customs and Customs Court will be Foreign Relations (FR-ee). The USAID Bureau for Asian and the Near East (ANE) is
divided into the Bureaus for the Middle East and Central Asia (MECA) and South
East Asia (SEA). DoD is changed to the Military
Department (MD). DHHS changes its name to the Public Health Department (PHD).
The DEA is transferred to the health administration and renamed Drug Evaluation
Agency (DEA). The Alcohol, Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (ATTTB) changes its name to Alcohol, Tobacco and Marijuana (ATM).
The UN shall set down the Generals of the United Nations (GUN) and elect a
Secretary of the United Nations (SUN) and remove Drugs from the UN Office of
Crime. The Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC-k) shall change its name
to Socio-Economic Administration (SEA). The Permanent Membership to the
Security Council shall be abolished.
Chapter
Eight (Ars. 61-65) Amendments to HA are by the
author, the United States code by majority vote of Congress and signature of
the President, amendments
to the U.S. Constitution may be proposed by two thirds of both Houses or on the
application of two thirds of state legislatures and ratified by three fourths
of state legislatures, amendments shall come into
force for all Members of the United Nations when they have been adopted by a
vote of two thirds of the members of the General Assembly and ratified in
accordance with their respective constitutional processes by two thirds of the
Members of the United Nations, including all the permanent members of the
Security Council to be abolished.
Chapter
Nine (Ars 66-72) Annotation is different from the
current system of constitutional amendments authorized in the United States.
The psychological interaction between the first and second amendments to the
Bill of Rights (1789) must be corrected and old debts from the Confederacy
forgiven. The Second Amendment right to bear arms is
unusual and the militia is cruel treatment for people who sue the government
for a redress of grievances. The quartering of troops in people's homes is not
a constitutional law in any of the fifty states or hundreds of nations.
Sections 2-5 of the 14th Amendment (1868) must be repealed to
provide people born and naturalized in the United States the equal protection
Section 1. Prohibition in the 18th Amendment (1919) was repealed by
the 21st Amendment (1933) but set bad precedence,
enforcement must be abolished under the Slavery Convention (1926). Old debts must be repealed to make the
supremacy clause number 1 and oath of office 2 in Article VI of the U.S.
Constitution. The
second amendment would be replaced by a redacted Balanced Budget Amendment
so Americans would sue for money and the third amendment replaced with ŌNo
arbitrary arrest, detention or exileĶ.
Chapters
Ten, A & B (Arts. 73-90): The general principle of UN Charter reform is to set down
the Generals of the United Nations (GUN) in order to democratically elect a
civilian Secretary of the United Nations and ratify a Statement of United
Nations (SUN). Reference to the
Secretary General would need to be shortened to Secretary, General Assembly to
Assembly and ECOSOC to Socio-economic Administration (SEA). To de-colonize the
UN the Permanent Membership to the Security Council will be repealed. A. Chapter XII International Trusteeship System is amended
pursuant to paragraph 177 of the Draft Outcome Document of the World Summit
(2005) to establish an international system of 1% social security taxation that
appears on the pay-stubs of workers and beneficiaries worldwide. B. Chapter
XIII Trusteeship Council is amended as ordered the Outcome Document of the
World Summit (2005) called for the Human Rights Commission to change their name
to the Human Rights Council and adopt a parliamentary function in pursuant to
General Assembly Resolution in 2006.
Chapter
Eleven (Arts. 91-96): HA
is responsible for the federal budget and social security. The statute is
reviewed: Military diplomacy in Mary for Armed Forces Month, Attorney General
enforcement in July for Independence day, health and welfare in June, state
mental institution library education in March, Customs in September for the World
Assembly, Jury Duty in January, National Cemeteries as needed, Drug Regulation
in October, Public Health department in April, and the Armed Forces Retirement
Home for VeteranÕs day.
Chapter Twelve (Arts. 97-100):
Sleep outside and watch the Perseid meteor
shower.
Sanders, Tony J. Constitution of Hospitals
& Asylums Non-Government Economy. 20th
Edition. Hospitals
& Asylums HA-11-7-16 192 pgs. www.title24uscode.org/CHANGEXX.doc
Chapter Eleven (Arts. 91-96): To better serve the public there is a
HA Internet Office and Secretary to ensure the secrecy and confidentiality of
correspondence disseminate the literature and prepare documents for publication.
The agenda is: 1. Public health, 2. a balanced budget 3. human rights 4.
redistribution of wealth and 5. copyright royalties. The Curriculum is
primarily the good governance and balancing of the federal and international
budgets. The Plenary Perseid Party is on 11
August. The Conferences regarding
the annual review of Statute are as follows:
Chapter 1 Military Diplomacy in
May for Armed Forces Month
Chapter 2 Attorney General Ethics in July for Independence
Day
Chapter 3 Health and Welfare in June
Chapter 4 State Mental Institution Library Education in March for Social Work month
Chapter 5 Customs in September
Chapter 6 Judicial Delinquency in January
Chapter 7 National Cemetery Organizations as needed
Chapter 8 Drug Regulation in October for American Pharmacists Month
Chapter 9 Public Health Department in April for World Health Day
Chapter 10 Armed Forces Retirement Home in November for Armistice Day
Chapter Twelve (Arts. 97-100): Membership and Participation.
Hospitals and Asylums Day is at the height of the Perseid
Meteor Shower on August 11th and everyone is invited to watch the
shooting stars all night. Hospitals & Asylums has a no-membership policy,
Sanders, Tony J. Constitution of Hospitals
& Asylums Non-Governmental Economy (CHANGE). 19th Draft. 100 Articles. 10 Chapters. 50 pgs. HA-31-5-13 www.title24uscode.org/CHANGEXX.doc