Sovereign is an independent authority over the territory. In Poland, in accordance with Article 4 of the Constitution of the Republic of Poland, the sovereign is the Nation which exercises power by its representatives or directly. He who does not admit the sovereign rights of a nation, and who is loyal to any another entity, should be regarded as a traitor, and the entity for whom he acts as a usurper. The case seems apparent and over the last fewer years we have been assured that we have yet regained sovereignty and it is now well secured. The president is on the defender of sovereignty, who, although included in the executive power, besides has, as defined in the Constitution, prerogatives regarding legislative authority (the right of veto), as well as judicial authority (names judges and has the right of grace).
All of this worked in little or greater harmony until we experienced, a fewer days ago, a shock erstwhile a man named Dean Spielmann, a spokesperson for an organization called the TEU and based in Luxembourg, did not announce his opinion that this organization might usurp itself as a sovereign in Poland, while those who deny it, like the Polish Constitutional Court, are in a state of “unprecedented rebellion”. specified a word was used, among others, by German Deutsche Welle, on her Polish language portal, most likely even with any satisfaction. Mr Spielmann, as I have checked, actually utilized the word "ultra vires", the legal meaning of which can be translated as an act outside the powers, which is simply a small more delicate word than the word rebellion, meaning an armed action against legal power. For now, the armed uprising against the claims of the TEU has not yet occurred in Poland, but I think Mr Spielmann wants to blow cold and in advance scare with his strong message of possible rebels. However, he does not know the nature of Poles, due to the fact that in us specified attempts to scare most frequently have the other effect and alternatively of intimidate us, they only provoke even more. A Pole would alternatively be a rebel than a humble servant of any abroad organization.
If you do not explain what Spielmann said, it is clear that the law established by the EU authorities is to have absolute precedence over national law. However, specified a rule cannot be derived from the Polish constitution, and the adoption of it would mean rejecting the sovereignty of the Nation and recognising that we are actually a dependent territory, in which sovereign power is exercised by an external organization. erstwhile signing treaties relating to accession to the EU, Warsaw politicians gave the EU bureaucrats a finger, and they just grabbed the full hand, and now they're holding our heads. For Poles, however, this situation is not hopeless and we have experienced it many times in history. After all, we were the top, not our stalkers.
Now the substance concerns a very crucial issue, namely our sovereignty, the presence against which it has always been considered treason and referred to in law as treason. The most severe punishments for this. Suffice to remind you that it was formerly a qualified death penalty, which, for example, in England meant hanging, disemboweling and dismembering, with these actions being done while the convict was inactive alive. This peculiar punishment was then replaced with a simple beheading that functioned there until 1973. The brutality of punishment for treason shows that sovereigns have always regarded this crime as the top possible crime that could only be committed. It should besides be added that, in the past, especially in the times of the monarchy, the substance of treason was more apparent and consisted in breaking the oath of allegiance that all subjects made to their ruler. Then, at the time erstwhile the republics became common, the oath of allegiance no longer referred to the monarch, but it was inactive common due to the fact that they laid it down alongside officers and officials, all soldiers called into military service. In fresh years, however, most likely due to the deliberate treatment of liberal elites, the work of universal military service has been abolished, causing only a fewer to take an oath to the state and the nation. For this reason, the very notion of treason has become even more abstract, resulting in the fact that what can be regarded as a claim against superior authority by organisations specified as the TEU no longer sparks widespread protest. However, this does not change the importance of the usurpation act and is understood by all, more aware, citizens of our country.
It is apparent to me that this cannot be allowed, due to the fact that otherwise Poland would cease to be an independent country and become a dependent and subordinate entity to external forces. possibly any supporters of the European Union would effort to say here that, yes, we have given our sovereignty to EU bodies, but our ability to act, through participation and influence on the work of these bodies, has increased considerably. This is, in my view, a double false claim, because, firstly, sovereignty is indivisible, and if we have worshiped it, it is as if we gave the whole, as Mr Spielmann has just made clear to us, and secondly, our ability to safeguard our interests by influencing the action of EU bodies is purely illusory, which we have seen many times and will experience even more erstwhile we are forced to accept migrants under the migration pact, or we will bear the immense costs of implementing the alleged green order. The announcement of the abolition of the veto will further deepen this state of affairs.
The upcoming presidential elections in Poland will besides address this most crucial issue. Everyone should ask themselves, whether he will elect the President, who, according to the Constitution, is to stand defender of sovereignty and represent the Nation, or whether he will support his voice the individual who understands the essence of this office as being the politician of a foreign, settled outside our country, power and willing to admit any of its claims.
Stanisław Lewicki