GIGANTIC PERVERSIONS OF BRITISH JUSTICEĀ - A CASE FOR A SECOND INQUEST (original) (raw)

2001, GIGANTIC PERVERSIONS OF BRITISH JUSTICE - A CASE FOR A SECOND INQUEST

A series of Freemason Judges' Errors Of Law decisions persecute the family for demanding Justice CHAPTER 1: Introduction-Freemason army of Judges persecute the family, for seeking justice into Sunaina's highly suspicious and sudden death, in an NHS hospital, at the hands of doctors, in British Courts. Way back, in the days of King Richard II, Old John of Gaunt, was, according to Shakespeare, obliged to cry out against injustice thus, "This land of such dear dear souls, dear land, Dear for her reputation through the world Is now leas'd out-I die pronouncing it-Like to a tenement or pelting farm". What was felt about England then, is what many of us now feel about out courts! Very few of our judges are still committed to ensure justice in our court. Many of them seem to be leasing out justice like a tenement or a pelting farm. Hence, the sum total, of this website is about the ways some of our judges, by virtue of their membership of Freemasonry, have perverted the course of justice in our dear, dear land. TO BE OR NOT TO BE When my sister Sadhana Dolly Chaudhari, a postgraduate certificated science teacher, and I, a pharmacist, found ourselves greatly afflicted by the death of baby Sunaina Chaudhari, my niece, and Chaudhari's daughter, we sought guidance from the Holy Writ. Now and then, quotations from Shakespear turned out to be very useful. For instance, to be or not to be, became the question with us. Were we to suffer the outrageous fortune brought by the killing of the five month old baby Sunaina or were we to take up arms against a sea of misfortune and by opposing them, end them? We decided to take up arms against a sea of misfortune. But what kind of arms were we to take? REPORTING OFFENCE The answer to that question was easy. The greatest philosopher, Socrates had given it. Though he had lived for the edification of mankind, yet he was sentenced to die for corrupting the youth. Although some of those who sentenced him to die wanted him to flee the country and escape death, yet, he refused to save his life saying something to the effect that, "Since I have lived by the law, it is only right that I die by the law too".