π¨ ππ«ππππ’π§π π¬, ππ―ππ«π²π¨π§π! π¨
Thereβs something vital that many people are unaware of that I want to share with all of you, the immense power you hold as a citizen, a power that has been systematically hidden from view since the end of alcohol prohibition. When you are called for jury duty, you are not just fulfilling a civic obligation; you are stepping into the role of the π ππππ ππππππ of government.
As a juror, you possess the absolute right to ππππππ π any law enacted by the legislative branch, signed by the executive branch, and upheld by the judiciary(SCOTUS) if you deem it to be unjust, immoral, or unethical. This right is known as ππππ ππππππ πππππππ.
You, as a member of the jury, are the ultimate safeguard against tyrannical and oppressive laws. Even if a person is technically guilty of violating the law; whether it be a tax law, gun law, marijuana law, or any other statute, you have the authority to reject the law itself by rendering a "not guilty" verdict if you believe the law is unjust.
It takes just one juror, one voice of reason, to stop an unjust law in its tracks. When juries repeatedly refuse to convict under such laws, those laws become unenforceable. Just as the prohibition of alcohol crumbled when Americans sitting on juries refused to convict their peers for alcohol-related offenses.
No judge can override your decision to nullify a law, and no punishment can befall you for doing so. Regardless of who controls the government, Republicans or Demoncrats, or what laws they pass, you have the ultimate power to say, "No, we will not uphold this."
Remember, it only takes one juror to make a stand against unjust, immoral, and unethical laws.
πππ πππ πππ ππππ πππππ ππ ππππππππππ πππ ππππππππππ ππππ! ππππππππ ππππ πππ ππππππ ππππππ πππ ππππππ πππ ππππ ππππ πππππππππππ ππππππππ ππππππ .