About ACRU Staff

The American Constitutional Rights Union (ACRU) is dedicated to defending the constitutional rights of all Americans. ACRU stands against harmful, anti-constitutional ideologies that have taken hold in our nation’s courts, culture, and bureaucracies. We defend and promote free speech, religious liberty, the Second Amendment, and national sovereignty.

Jan LaRue: Democrats Double Down on the Sotomayor Race Card

By |2020-04-23T21:54:07-04:00July 9th, 2009|

Democrats are playing the race card with Sonia Sotomayor's nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court in more ways than one. The White House and Senate Democrats want a vote on Sotomayor's nomination before the August congressional recess. If Senate Republicans surrender to the Democrats' race pace card, it means a fast, uninformed vote on a lifetime appointment to the nation's highest court.

Ken Klukowski: Praying for Change

By |2020-04-23T21:53:02-04:00July 8th, 2009|

People are praying in a city hall in Michigan, and atheists are up in arms. People of faith should hope the secularists push this into court, because this time the believers should win. There's something happening in Warren, Michigan. This town has been hit hard by layoffs, like the rest of the state. (Michigan's unemployment rate is over 14%--the worst in the nation, thanks in no small part to Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm imposing big-government taxes, entitlements and union labor policies on the people there.)

NRA v. City of Chicago and Village of Oak Park

By |2020-04-23T21:54:07-04:00July 8th, 2009|

Last year’s watershed Second Amendment case of District of Columbia v. Heller was just the beginning of the fight over the meaning of the right to keep and bear arms. The most significant question now is whether the Second Amendment only applies to the federal government (because D.C. is directly under federal law) or whether it also applies to states and cities under the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution. This question of whether the Second Amendment is “incorporated” by the Fourteenth Amendment is now being offered to the Supreme Court. The city of Chicago has a law banning handguns similar to the law struck down last year […]

State Governments Doing What the Federal Government Won't

By |2009-07-06T15:44:11-04:00July 6th, 2009|

While the federal government is backing away from criminal enforcement of laws against hiring of illegal aliens, one state and one city have passed laws to do just that. The state and local laws requiring use of the federal E-Verify system have now been upheld over objections from the ACLU in two US Circuit Courts of Appeal that only the US can require usage of E-Verify by major employers.

Most of the facts for this article, but not the legal conclusions, come from an article published by Fox 4 in Kansas City apparently on 6 July. The article is a blog and is a little fuzzy […]

Ken Klowkowski: Justices Move Political Censorship Case

By |2020-04-23T21:53:02-04:00July 3rd, 2009|

Next year, the Supreme Court can throw open the doors for voters to learn the truth about those seeking power in America. Or not. In an unusual move, the Court declined to decide a case on Americans' right to speak out on candidates during presidential elections that was argued this year. Instead, they will rehear it this fall, focusing on a new legal issue in a case that will pit two legal heavyweights against each other.

Hans Zeiger: The Death of Dialogue?

By |2020-04-23T21:54:07-04:00July 3rd, 2009|

Cultural relativists like to talk about dialogue. They tell us that we need to engage in dialogue with people who are different from ourselves so that we can understand their perspective and become more tolerant. They tell us that we must listen to the voices of the marginalized and the excluded so that we can rethink our assumptions about the world.

Ken Klukowski and Ken Blackwell: Supreme Court Signals Major Change in Voting Rights

By |2020-04-23T21:54:07-04:00June 29th, 2009|

The Supreme Court's decision today in the racial preferences case Ricci v. DeStefano will be a major story. Less noticed but equally important, the Supreme Court's decision on voting rights last week heralds a sea change in racial politics in this country. Taken with the Ricci decision, it's clear that a new era is dawning on race in America.

Ken Blackwell and Ken Klukowski: A Religous Test

By |2009-06-26T11:32:15-04:00June 26th, 2009|

In Dearborn, Michigan, where the local mosque's call to prayer is broadcast over the town by loudspeakers, a group of Christian evangelists were told that they could not pass out Bibles on the sidewalk during a festival. This is part of a growing national trend to disfavor Christian expression and traditional speech, and reflects a disturbing direction in public policy in America today.

Jan LaRue: Sotomayor's 'Fundamental' Flaws

By |2020-04-23T21:53:48-04:00June 17th, 2009|

Supporters of Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor claim that her Second Amendment rulings are examples of "judicial restraint." The problem is that she's restraining the Second Amendment.

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