New-Hampshire General Court
Legislative Service Request of
Representative Henry McElroy, District 61, Nashua
Loss of sovereignty over their own land and the land entrusted to them by their forebearers concerns all free men, and attempts at involvement in the housing business are flawed and competitive with our free people,
All lands owned by inhabitants of New-Hampshire is theirs, free and clear as of the payment of any mortgage amount and their land is not to be encumbered by any lien or duty or pledge of surety to any form of trust with THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, or State of New Hampshire. Their land is theirs by right may not be taken from them to settle any tax matter with any authority located in the state or without, whether affiliated with the United States of America, United States or any alliance, treaty organization or other supra-state or international body.
All lands ceded or deeded to the United States as park or forest land is hereby reclaimed by the state of New Hampshire to be held in trust for the people of New-Hampshire, and all lands used for federal United States buildings, or ceded or deeded to them, are reclaimed by the state of New Hampshire and market rate rents are to be charged to the United States for those properties.
All lands constitutionally ceded to the United States and held by them as of the date of the proposal of this legislation, for Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards and other needful Buildings, may remain in that usage by the United States, but that usage and cession shall be reviewed every five years to determine if such cession still serves a useful purpose and is suitable to the General Court and the people.
All rivers and wathersheds within the borders of New-Hampshire remain under the jurisdiction of New-Hampshire as the sovereign power of for that area, and any assertion by any legislation of the Congress of the United States is null and void and of no effect in our state.
No agency, division, department or unit of government at any level, federal, state, county or local may own and operate housing units, whether houses, duplexes, apartments, condominiums, low-income housing projects or complexes, as this is in competition with our people who offer the same service and is not constitutionally within the scope of the function allowed to government. the only exception allowed to this is the housing provided to those confined as a condition of their adjudication of guilt for a crime or confined on the order of courts because of insanity. Such housing units as do exist will have to be disposed of over a period of time, with a preference being given of sale to present occupants on favorable terms.
Corporations, being fictitious privileged entities not allowed to own, but only to lease land from individual owners.
Part first, Art. 1
Part first, Art. 2
Part first, Art. 3
Part first, Art. 7
Part first, Art. 10
Part first, Art. 12
Part first, Art. 19
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To recognize land ownership as a supreme right that may not be taken away from for any reason, especially for tax reasons, to take back land given, sold or ceded to the federal government for any purpose except for those stated in the US Constitution, Art. 1, Section 8, para. 17 and to subject even that land to review periodically, and when desireable, to recover that land for New-Hampshire. To state clearly the state's sovereignty over New-Hampshire rivers and watersheds of those rivers. To eliminate government from the housing market and to give people housed in government housing to have an opportunity to purchase that housing.
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