To members of the international community, members of Congress
and the Administration of George W. Bush:
Citizen of the United States of America Stephen M. St. John
mourns the death of Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and notes
an important -- but mainly overlooked -- legacy of his tenure at
the head of the Supreme Court of the United States; namely,
Rehnquist's affirmation of a truly democratic and integrated
society as a fundamental right. During Senate hearings on his
nomination for Chief Justice in 1986, Rehnquist repudiated
clauses found in his property deeds for homes in Vermont and
Arizona which prohibited sale to Jews and blacks. He argued
persuasively that he himself did not examine the deeds but had
left that task to his lawyers who considered the offensive
clauses to be of no effect as a result of the enlightened civil
rights legislation of 1964. Rehnquist had these apartheid
clauses deleted from the deeds and the Senate approved his
nomination and the people of the United States of America
learned an important lesson about discriminatory restrictive
covenants in property deeds. However, in practice, what members
of the Senate found so objectionable in their examination of
Rehnquist they have regularly condoned in matters pertaining to
the "inalienably Jewish" lands of the Zionist state, where
discriminatory restrictive covenants, overtly or covertly
expressed, have long prohibited sale of property to non-Jews,
especially the indigenous Arab population. From an historical
perspective, the Zionists have used these covenants as
instruments of ethnic cleansing. Wherefore, citizen St. John, in
an abundance of joy and in fond memory of William H. Rehnquist,
declares all Zionist land acquisitions since the days of the
Ottomans, whether by fraud or by force or by other means of
duress, to be null and void and actionable.
Stephen M. St. John
http://mysite.verizon.net/vze4wbps