CONGRESS Deletes Habeas Corpus: 2025 Constitutional SCANDAL Exposed!
In a bombshell discovery, critical sections of the U.S. Constitution—including habeas corpus protections and bans on nobility titles—vanished from Congress’ official website (Constitution Annotated) in August 2025. This video breaks down: 🚨 WHAT WAS DELETED: Article I, Sections 9-10—covering habeas corpus (the right to challenge unlawful detention), prohibitions on bills of attainder, and state power limits. ⏱️ TIMELINE: The text existed as of July 17, 2025 (per Wayback Machine archives) but disappeared by August 6, weeks after Trump ousted Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden and appointed former lawyer Todd Blanche. 🤖 OFFICIAL EXPLANATION: The Library of Congress blamed a "coding error," restoring the text after public outcry 58. ⚖️ POLITICAL CONTEXT: The removal aligns with Stephen Miller’s May 2025 remarks about "actively looking at" suspending habeas corpus for immigration crackdowns, and Trump’s self-proclaimed "king" rhetoric ⚠️ WHY IT MATTERS: While online edits don’t alter law, experts warn this could signal attempts to normalize eroding constitutional safeguards. Stay informed on threats to civil liberties—like, subscribe, and hit notifications to protect our rights.