War Powers Series
A structured reading path through the Iran War constitutional crisis — from the Article I foundation through the 60-day clock, congressional abdication, the emergency powers playbook, and the remedies that remain available to the people of the Constitutional Republic.
60-Day Constitutional Deadline
The War Powers Resolution requires withdrawal of forces by April 29, 2026. The final article in this series unlocks automatically on that date.
What You'll Understand After This Series
Why Article I, §8, Clause 11 gives Congress — not the president — the exclusive power to declare war
How the War Powers Resolution's 60-day clock works and why it was triggered February 28, 2026
The two congressional votes that blocked enforcement and what that means constitutionally
How the Iran War fits the historical pattern of pretext crisis → emergency declaration → monetary restructuring
How to exercise your First Amendment right to petition your representative for constitutional enforcement
The constitutional limits on domestic military use under the Insurrection Acts
What remedies remain available after the 60-day deadline expires without congressional action
How 84 years of undeclared wars compare to the constitutional standard — and the $8 trillion financial accountability record
How RICO and the constitutional definition of treason apply to unauthorized war-making
The Reading Path
War Powers 101: What the Constitution Actually Says
The plain-language foundation. Article I, §8, Clause 11 gives Congress — and only Congress — the power to declare war. This explainer covers the War Powers Resolution, the 60-day clock, and why the Iran War is a constitutional violation of the first order.
Madison's Warning Fulfilled: The Iran War and Article I
On February 28, 2026, the executive branch launched a sustained bombing campaign against Iran without a declaration of war, without congressional authorization, and without any imminent threat to the United States. Congress voted twice to let it continue. This is the full constitutional record.
The Crisis Before the Consolidation: Iran, Emergency Powers, and the CBDC Endgame
The Iran war is not only a foreign policy event. Read through the Emergency Powers playbook this platform has documented — it is Phase One, the pretext crisis that historically precedes the emergency declaration, the executive order, and the transformation of the monetary system.
War Powers Demand Letter — Exercise Your First Amendment Right
Your representative has an Article VI oath obligation to respond to constituent demands for constitutional enforcement. This page provides a complete, ready-to-send demand letter invoking your First Amendment right to petition for redress of grievances.
Presidential Power Overreach: A Constitutional Analysis
A systematic analysis of how the Commander-in-Chief clause has been stretched far beyond its original scope. What the Founders actually intended when they divided war powers between Congress and the president — and why that division is the last structural safeguard against permanent executive war.
The Insurrection Acts Explained: Constitutional Authority & Limits
Understanding the three Insurrection Acts, their constitutional scope, and the strict limits on when the federal government can use military force domestically — a critical companion to any study of war powers and executive military authority.
The Banker Who Declared the Old Order Dead
In 2018, Mark Carney proposed replacing the U.S. dollar with a basket of programmable central bank digital currencies. In 2026, he declared the old order has 'ruptured,' backed the Iran War, and is building the replacement financial architecture. The playbook has not changed.
Action to Take: Presidential Treason, the War Powers Clock, and the Five Constitutional Enforcement Tracks
The 60-day War Powers clock is running. This action report identifies the five constitutional enforcement tracks available right now — War Powers Demand Letter, Oath & Bond FOIA, State Model Acts, Legislative Tracker, and Electoral Accountability — and explains how to deploy each one before the April 29, 2026 deadline.
Declaration vs. Military Action: The 84-Year Constitutional Record
The last formal declaration of war was issued June 4, 1942 — 84 years ago. Every military conflict since has proceeded without the constitutional prerequisite. This module compares the six legal effects of a formal declaration against what an AUMF actually authorizes, and documents the full post-1945 record of 16+ undeclared conflicts.
RICO & Treason: The Constitutional Case Against Unauthorized War-Making
Article III § 3 defines treason as levying war against the United States or adhering to its enemies. 18 U.S.C. § 1962 (RICO) applies to any enterprise engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity. This module applies both frameworks to the Iran War, identifies five RICO predicate acts, and documents six key precedents from Youngstown to Ex parte Milligan.
The 60-Day Clock Expired — The Constitutional Verdict
The War Powers Resolution deadline passed April 29, 2026. Congress failed to act. The hostilities are now doubly unconstitutional. This article delivers the constitutional verdict, documents the full record of congressional abdication, and identifies the remedies that remain available.
Constitutional Provisions at Issue
Article I, §8, Clause 11
War Powers Clause
"Congress shall have Power…To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water."
50 U.S.C. §1544(b)
War Powers Resolution — 60-Day Clock
"Within sixty calendar days after a report is submitted…the President shall terminate any use of United States Armed Forces…unless Congress has declared war."
Article VI, Clause 3
Oath Requirement
"All…Members of Congress…shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution."
First Amendment
Right to Petition
"Congress shall make no law…abridging…the right of the people…to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
Deepen Your Understanding
Emergency Powers Series
How pretext crises become permanent executive authority — the full historical pattern.
Blackmail Politics Series
How kompromat and leverage have shaped congressional behavior from Hoover to Epstein.
Breach of Trust Series
The constitutional framework for holding officers personally liable for oath violations.
Take Action Now
The War Powers clock has expired. Congress failed to enforce the Constitution within the 60-day window. The First Amendment right to petition for redress of grievances remains fully available. The Oath & Bond enforcement pathway remains fully available. The five constitutional enforcement tracks are built, documented, and ready to deploy.
A formally structured First Amendment petition grounded in Article I, §8, Clause 11 and the War Powers Resolution. Deliver to your Representative and Senators by certified mail, fax, and email.
FOIA Request for Oath and bond records for every officer who authorized or failed to stop unconstitutional war-making. The documented oath breach is the foundation for Quo Warranto.