Vision Of The Parchment Papers

Angelina

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Vision Of Parchment Papers
This morning while in prayer outback, I saw a vision of a stack of sepia-coloured parchment papers tied with string. The string was removed, and a hand began to flick these papers individually, dispersing them. Each parchment paper had old-fashioned cursive writing written in ink on both sides. As they flew off the top of the stack, they floated down to the ground.

Vision Ended

Angelina 21/04/2025
 
Vision Of Parchment Papers
This morning while in prayer outback, I saw a vision of a stack of sepia-coloured parchment papers tied with string. The string was removed, and a hand began to flick these papers individually, dispersing them. Each parchment paper had old-fashioned cursive writing written in ink on both sides. As they flew off the top of the stack, they floated down to the ground.

Vision Ended

Likely refers to all the laws the US President is currently circumventing through executive order. US law specifies that all enrolled bills and resolutions of Congress must be printed on parchment, with the Joint Committee on Printing deciding on the quality necessary. This is outlined in 1 U.S. Code § 107.

Trump has issued more executive orders than any President in history. The following Wiki goes on to state that several of them countermand existing US law, and as such have been blocked in the courts for that reason.

*Moderator's note: This is not a negative or positive commentary, simply a statement of the facts and what the vision likely refers to. The hand in this vision is likely that of the US President, and he is going through US law to restructure things at a faster pace than anyone in office before him.

List of executive orders in the second presidency of Donald Trump

As the 47th president of the United States, Donald Trump has relied extensively on executive orders. In the first 100 days of his presidency, Trump signed 143 executive orders (an average of over one per day), more than any other president had signed in their first 100 days in office. Franklin D. Roosevelt previously held the record, signing 99 executive orders back in 1933.[1] On his first day in office, he issued 26 executive orders, the most of any president on their first day in office. The executive orders rescinded many of the previous administration's executive actions, began the withdrawal process from the World Health Organization and Paris Agreement,[2] rolled back federal recognition of gender identity,[3] founded the Department of Government Efficiency, reaffirmed the existing constitutional right to free speech, reversed the withdrawal of Cuba's designation as a state sponsor of terrorism, reversed sanctions on Israeli settlers, rolled back policy on artificial intelligence, reversed the Family Reunification Task Force,[4] pardoned over 1,500 January 6 rioters,[5][6] designated Mexican drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, attempted to end birthright citizenship for new children of illegal immigrants and immigrants legally but temporarily present in the U.S. (such as those on student, work, or tourist visas), delayed the government's ban of TikTok, and declared a national emergency on the southern border, triggering the deployment of the U.S. military.[7][8]

Several of Trump's orders have been considered to have ignored or violated federal laws, regulations, and the Constitution.[9][10] Some have been blocked in court for these reasons.[11]

 
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