Two Forms of Government

We just talked about two forms of administration.  Are these two forms actually two different governments?  Most people are unaware that two years after the Constitution of the United States was ratified Congress created a new form of government in this country that is based upon the Roman style of law.

The Roman style of law is Executive Law that is voted upon by representatives and encoded by the Executive power into statutes.  In other words Legislative Law is a set of rules created by a group of people, interpreted by Magistrates, to regulate “entities” or corporate forms, i.e. not common people.

On the other hand, at the time of the signing of the U.S. Constitution, our legal process was an extension of the old English Common Law.   The Common Law was developed by the ancient Israelites and started with the Ten Commandments, continuing through the Magna Carta, and concluding with the Bill of Rights in the U.S. Constitution.


The Judiciary act of 1789 was where congress legislated the creation of
judicial power.  By this act, the legislators created a Supreme Court
that would be subject to congress and would not be an independent power
as the Article III of the Constitution is created.

So
technically, congress can create inferior courts, and they did so under
the rules of the Constitution and called it the Supreme Court.  Of
course they could not get rid of the “one” Supreme Court created by the
Constitution and the ability of each person to access that Court.

So
eventually all government and business legal problems were directed to
this “administrative” or legislated “Supreme Court”, and all lawyers
joined the club.  This “one” Supreme Court gets very little business. 
Very few people know how to access it.