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Words
What does unconstitutional mean? Checking the Supremacy Clause of Article 6 we find, "This Constitution...shall be the supreme law of the land..." In other words, anything done against the Constitution is against the law. And the proper term for something that is against the law is illegal, i.e. unconstitutional means illegal. Now someone or some organization that acts illegally is an outlaw, literally, acting outside the law.
We balk at these terms because we have been educated by the elites, who only recognize the word unconstitutional when it applies to pornography, Christianity, abortion rights, homosexuality or the media. But all true Americans realize that these terms are, in fact, correct.
Thus once parents of children protest that the public schools' charging no tuition infringes on their constitutional rights, the public schools are from that point on, acting illegally [6]; they have become outlaws.
So can an illegal body receive any kind of taxes?
State judges ruling on this matter ought to consider another provision of the Supremacy Clause: "(T)he judges in every state [7] shall be bound (by the Constitution) [8]..." Notice the judges are not to be bound by any other court or precedent. They are only bound by the words of the Constitution. In short, state judges are to interpret the supreme law of the land as they define the words. They may rely on someone else, even another court, to reach a definition, but once done, they have no choice but to enforce the law.

6. There are at least three arguments against those who say this is too sudden and unexpected:
(a) Are the school districts without the means to hire competent lawyers?
(b) The government should not embark on something unless it is absolutely sure it is Constitutional, and
(c) The public schools overrate their importance. What will they teach that is it more important than their kids learning that the Constitution is supreme?
7. The Constitution is silent on federal judges, probably because most matters are to be handled by the states.
8. Nor are the judges limited by "the laws or constitution of any state...". These are mentioned because state judges are most likely to encounter them. But there is no limiting language, and to propose any is to violate the Ninth Amendment, the subject of which is the "enumeration".
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