natural law principles (1)

 

TEACHER ENOCH BURKE IS IN PRISON FOR REFUSING TO CALL A BOY A GIRL.


Teacher Enoch Burke is in prison for refusing to call a boy a girl. Females have an XX pair of sex chromosomes, and males have an XY pair of sex chromosomes in every single cell in our bodies. If a boy decided to wear a dress and ribbons in his hair he is both morally and legally entitled to do so but he is not entitled under natural law to call himself a girl ever because in every single cell of his body there is an xy chromosome.
If a law maker enacts a law stating that two plus two equals three it would never make it true. Abdication of personal responsibility by obediently following false laws will eventually generate harsh experiences for all subservient order followers. Natural law states that morals are not relative. Natural law states that morals are absolute. Moral relativism is one of the four evil tenets of Satanism. Natural law is the only fixed and immutable law on this earth so therefore it is the only law on earth. Natural law is a knowable, testable and proveable science.

You must stand up for the truth which is that men are men and women are women. A teacher from Castlebar, County Mayo in the Republic of Ireland called Enoch Burke is a hero for aligning with his own conscience and for refusing to adopt a poisoned world view mindset which is based on Satanic principles. Our rights are inherent. They are granted by creation itself. They are a birthright which we have that can never be separated from us. They are unalienable. They can not be made foreign to us. Our rights can not be taken from us regardless of what anything scribbled down in a law book may happen to say or regardless of any claims which might be made by people who think that they are God in this world, and can take whatever power that their ability to wage violence affords them.

Please read the news article included herebelow which is taken from www.independent.ie and which is called "Teacher Enoch Burke spent his first night in custody isolated from general prison population"

Enoch Burke is brought into the Four Courts by gardaí, accompanied by his father, Sean Burke (left). Photo: Collins Courts
Robin Schiller, Shane Phelan and Aodhan O’Faolain

September 06 2022 06:30 PM

Teacher Enoch Burke, jailed for contempt of court stemming from a school transgender row, spent his first night in custody isolated from the general prison population.

Burke was committed to Mountjoy prison in Dublin yesterday by order of a High Court judge.

The initial stages of his incarceration will be spent in the jail's C-Base where all newly committed prisoners are placed on their arrival to undergo a standard risk assessment.

As part of measures introduced by the prison service to prevent the spread of Covid-19, all new committals are also swabbed following their arrival and isolated until testing negative.

It means that Mr Burke will not mix with the general prison population until a negative test for Covid-19 is returned, as is standard practice, if he remains in custody.

Mr Justice Michael Quinn has the schoolteacher will remain incarcerated until he purges his contempt of court and agrees to comply with the injunction secured by the school.

poster

Burke has been committed to Mountjoy Prison for contempt of court after telling a judge he would not abide by a court order restraining him from attending for work while suspended, claiming that to do so would violate his religious beliefs.

The schoolteacher opposed an application from Wilson’s Hospital School for his imprisonment, saying: “I love my school. I am here today because I would not call a boy a girl.”

He told Mr Justice Michael Quinn: “It is not something I will do. It is in violation of my conscience.”

The evangelical Christian was suspended on full pay on August 24 pending the outcome of a disciplinary process after clashing with the school’s principal and board of management over a request that teachers address a transgender student by a new name and use the pronoun “they” instead of “he”.

However, he continued to turn up for work, prompting the Church of Ireland diocesan boarding school to seek and secure an interlocutory injunction from Ms Justice Siobhan Stack last Wednesday restraining him from coming to its premises in Multyfarmham, Co Westmeath until September 7.

Despite this order, he continued to come to the school each morning. This led to a further application from the board of management, and Ms Justice Miriam O’Regan ordered on Friday that Mr Burke be arrested and brought before the court.

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