Thursday, July 9, 2015

Chief Justice Roy Moore Says Supreme Court Justices Can be Impeached


English: August 2003 rally in front of the Ala...
English: August 2003 rally in front of the Alabama state judicial building in support of Roy Moore. Taken from the Re-taking America website, copyrighted by Kelly McGinley at Re-Taking America, from whom permission has been received to license this material under the GNU Free Documentation License. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


Chief Justice Roy Moore Says Supreme Court Justices Can be Impeached
  
Contact: Staff@VoiceOfResistance.com

MEDIA ADVISORY, July 9, 2015 /Christian Newswire/ -- Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice gives nearly one-hour interview with Randall Terry, host of Voice of Resistance.

In this sweeping interview, Chief Justice Moore explains why and how the five Supreme Court Judges who voted to extend marriage to homosexuals should in the Obergefell ruling be impeached.

Justice Moore and Randall Terry also discuss:
  • The possibility that this decision could lead to violence;
     
  • The coming persecution of Christians, including being sued and jailed because of this ruling;
     
  • The place of God's Laws in the political and judicial realm;
     
  • The legal principles used at the Nuremburg trials;
     
  • How and why Governors have the authority and duty to refuse to follow the Supreme Court's decision;
     
  • The fact that the Obergefell ruling is not the law of the land;
     
  • How this ruling could destroy the nation;
     
  • How religious liberty has in fact been taken away;
Toward the end of the interview, Judge Moore explains the phrase from the Declaration of Independence, "The Laws of Nature and Nature's God," as well as the possibility that this decision could cause the Union to unravel.

Permission is granted to use excerpts from this interview.

To interview Randall Terry, send request via email to: Staff@VoiceOfResistance.com.  
English: The United States Supreme Court, the ...
English: The United States Supreme Court, the highest court in the United States, in 2010. Top row (left to right): Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Associate Justice Stephen G. Breyer, Associate Justice Samuel A. Alito, and Associate Justice Elena Kagan. Bottom row (left to right): Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Associate Justice Antonin Scalia, Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy, and Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)