What was once considered fringe paranoia is now quietly becoming a matter of national policy.
This article explores how the U.S. government is reviving centuries old emergency laws like the Insurrection Act of 1807 to grant the executive branch sweeping authority during periods of unrest.
These powers include the ability to deploy the military on U.S. soil, override constitutional protections, and circumvent both Congress and the courts.
Even more concerning: these actions can be taken without public oversight, using Continuity of Government (COG) protocols originally designed for nuclear war. Now, they’re being adapted for use in pandemics, protests, and contested elections scenarios far more common and politically charged.
It’s a legal framework that allows a sitting president to trigger extraordinary powers behind closed doors. No conspiracy needed. No accountability guaranteed.This isn’t speculation it’s statutory.