BECKMAN BOOK SPECIAL IN LIMITED SUPPLY

We are sorry to announce that the Beckman book supply has run out! Please scroll down, however, to avail yourself of another valuable resource ~ The Law That Never Was (details below).

The perfect holiday gift for your confused children in high school or college.

$49 ~ WHILE THEY LAST ~

M.J. "Red" Beckman

M.J. “Red” Beckman

We recently came across a small cache of literary treasures that every freedom-loving American patriot will want in his or her library. It is for this special grouping that we have made them available in package-form only, and supplies are verrry limited. That is explained below.

Since discovering Truth, Red Beckman has spent most the past half century writing books, lecturing, producing television videos and being interviewed on various talk shows.

barRemembering his military oath during the Korean Conflict to defend his nation “against all enemies, foreign and domestic,” it took Mr. Beckman a few years after returning home to realize just who these “domestic enemies” were that were threatening the freedoms of the American people more than any foreign enemies. After a lengthy fight with the IRS that was still ongoing, Red authored his first book in 1979, Born Again Republic, to remind Americans of how the unconstitutional Internal Revenue Service was stealing their wealth and liberties.

Born in 1928, Martin “Red” Beckman just celebrated his 90th birthday during the recent Thanksgiving week. Known as “Montana’s Fighting Redhead,” “The Grandfather of FIJA” (Fully Informed Jury Association) and “America’s Oldest Living Patriot,” he says that the information therein is more appropriate and applicable today, forty years later, than it was when he wrote it.

Born Again Republic – Retail price: $15


tcdBorn Again Republic was so well-received by the American public that Red realized he was harboring more suppressed information and began to write again. A lifelong Christian, he admits that he was wrong when as a young man he trusted and believed what preachers from the 501(C)[3] corporate churches were teaching, and in 1984 published The Church Deceived, which defines the many lies spread from America’s pulpits as “gospel truth.” Deceived churches are a very serious problem,” says Red, “because they betray the trust and confidence of the people.”

The Church Deceived – Retail price: $15


wiomIn 1990, he followed with Walls in our Minds, a multi-chapter compilation of essays depicting the many other aspects and methods politicians are using to deceive us daily.

Walls In Our Minds – Retail price: $10

 

 

 


wtm1997 arrived with perhaps the most popular of all, Why the Militia?, whose title defines why. 

Why the Militia – Retail price: $20

 

 

 


lsfThen in 2015, Mr. Beckman, at age of 86, published his latest, Lost Sheep Found and sold it as “Two for the Price of One” because he was urging everyone to give a copy to his/her minister. We will do the same here. Two copies will be delivered with this package.

Lost Sheep Found – Retail price: $7 each

 


The package price for all five of these collector’s classics is only $49 delivered anywhere in the United States. That’s the good news.

The bad news is that there are only ten packages remaining, and the orders will be filled in the order that they arrive. Click the button below to place your order now!

 


And, here is another special offer…

 

tltnwTHE LAW THAT NEVER WAS ~ 8 x 11 hardcover, 366 pages $53 delivered

Certainly the most censored and government-suppressed book of the 20th century, if not in all the history of the United States.

In 1981, Red Beckman and Montana Historians organized and financed the research and travel of former investigator for the Illinois Department of Revenue, Bill Benson, to collect the records applying to the 1913 passing of the 16th Amendment from all the state capitals in the lower 48 states. The results of that research showed an astounding, documented fact: the amendment purportedly authorizing a tax on personal income had never been lawfully ratified by the states; in fact it had not even come close. The American people had been duped. One of the most blatant examples to catch Benson’s eye was the Kentucky Senate vote. The count of 22 nays to 9 yeas had been flip-flopped to the opposite in order to show it passing rather than failing. Further investigation showed similar discrepancies and vote twisting in all but maybe four states. 

Benson found variations in wording, punctuation, capitalization, and pluralization in the language of the Amendment as ratified by many states. He used the changes as part of the basis for his contention that those states had not properly ratified the Amendment. Benson further found documents suggesting that some states that had been certified as having ratified the Amendment never did vote to ratify it, or even voted against ratification. His evidence showed that no states, or only a few states (variously reported as two states or four states), had properly ratified the Amendment. The necessary number in order to achieve the constitutional requirement of three-quarters of the states to pass the amendment was 36 (out of 48).

Further details in the book show such illuminating details as:

  • Seven states (Connecticut, Florida, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Utah, Virginia) did not ratify the amendment, and it was reported as such.

  • Two states (Kentucky and Tennessee) did not ratify the amendment, but Secretary Knox reported that they did.

  • Eight states (Delaware, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont and Wyoming) were reported by Secretary Knox as having ratified the amendment, but the States actually have missing or incomplete records of the ratification procedures or votes, and there is no conclusive record that they ratified the amendment or reported any ratification to the Secretary of State.

  • Six states (Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, Washington) did approve the amendment, but the Governor or another official who was required by their respective state constitutions to sign the legislation into law did not sign the legislation.

  • In twenty-five states (Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia and Wyoming), the legislature violated a provision of its state constitution during the ratification process.

  • Twenty-nine states (Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, West Virginia and Wyoming) violated “state law” or procedural rules during the ratification process.

Additionally, Benson asserted that:

  • Twenty-two states approved the amendment, but with changes in wording, and the inexact version was accepted as a ratification of the original version.

  • One state approved the amendment, but with variations in spelling, and the inexact version was accepted as a ratification of the original version.

  • At least twenty-six states approved the amendment, but with changes in punctuation, and the inexact version was accepted as a ratification of the original version.

Benson asserted that the Oklahoma State Legislature changed the wording of the amendment they approved so that it meant the opposite of the original amendment as it was submitted to the States by Congress, but that Secretary Knox counted Oklahoma as having approved the amendment.

Benson also asserted, as an example of a state’s violation of its own Constitution, laws, or procedural rules, the claim that the Tennessee State Constitution prohibited the legislature from acting on any proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution submitted by Congress until after the next state legislative elections. According to Benson, the Tennessee legislature acted on the proposed 16th amendment the same month it was received (prior to any new state legislative elections).

In 1983 and before The Law That Never Was got published, Red Beckman was called as an expert witness in a criminal tax trial in Fort Worth, Texas. He presented some of Benson’s documents to the court, but the judge not only refused to let the jury see them or hear his testimony but ordered marshals to remove Beckman from the courtroom, thereby displaying more collusion between the courts and the IRS.

It was in the fall of 1980 that Senate Document 240* was discovered proving that not only was the 16th Amendment a fraud but that Congress had known about it since 1931 and kept the cover-up in place anyway. It was the discovery of the document that prompted the Montana Historians into initiating the 48-state research that finally led to this priceless publication in 1985.

 *Readers who already have Pat Shannan’s Maybe the People have the Answers can find a reprint of Senate Document 240 as well as further information of the fraud and cover-up on pages 107-112.

Following publication, Beckman, Benson and the Montana Historians funded the delivery of 535 copies to the U. S. Capitol in Washington DC — one to each senator and representative. They are yet to receive even a “thank you” or any sort of acknowledgment from any single congresscritter.

Later that same year, however, Bill Benson did receive a threat and a bribe from a DC attorney and Congressional lobbyist named Warren Richardson, who was calling on behalf of none other than Sen. Orrin Hatch, offering whatever price Benson wanted to place in exchange for the remaining 17,000 copies of the book and his (Benson’s) pledge to never speak publicly about it again.

“I will make you a multi-millionaire,” said Richardson.

“Go to hell,” said the honorable Bill Benson. “My integrity is not for sale and America is not for sale.”**

**Affidavits and details of bribe found on pages 82-87 of Maybe the People have the Answers.

The certified documents of the proof of the fraud on the American people, the ongoing cover-up and deception of the 16th Amendment are the collector’s gem available here in The Law That Never Was. Your heirs will be proud of you for retaining it on your library shelf. Click the button below to place your order for The Law That Never Was for $53: (but before you do, see our very special offer in the next paragraph …)

As mentioned above, the retail price of $53 is a collector’s steal, but by including it in the above $49 Special, you may add this at only an additional $40 for a total of $89 for both packages. Please remember the limited numbers that are available. To hesitate is to miss out. Click the button below to order both a Red Beckman 5-Book Special and a copy of The Law That Never Was, for $89:

Remember, these offers also make great gift ideas.

Thank you!