| The Give Me Liberty 2004 conference was held at Arlington,
Virginia January 22-24, 2004. The sole purpose of the conference
was to publicly unveil WTP's fight to restore Constitutional
Order to our Republic through the exercise of the long-forgotten
1st Amendment Right to Petition for Redress of Grievances.
The conference brought together some of the leading conservative
voices, legal experts and liberty activists of our time. The
three-day conference squarely examined the risks our nation currently
faces as a result of the relentless attacks on our Constitution,
the nature and contemporary application of the Right to Petition
and the decisive actions the People must take to reclaim our
freedom and restore the order of Law to our Constitutional
Republic.
The conference resulted in a number of outstanding oratories
that may one day be viewed as historically significant and
detailed panel discussions by nationally renowned experts
and activists exposing the constitutional abuses that have
greatly withered our most treasured constitutional protections
against tyranny and have now placed our nation at significant
risk. These panel discussions covered the areas of gun control,
the unconstitutional "Federal" Reserve, widespread
judicial misconduct, control of the dominant media, the Right
to Petition and the rapidly faltering federal income tax fraud.
Beyond the topical panel discussions, conference attendees
heard approximately ten substantial and moving addresses
delivered by nationally recognized voices for freedom
including former U.N. Ambassador Alan Keyes, film producer Aaron Russo,
syndicated columnist and author Joseph Sobran, author Bay
Buchanan and Hutton Gibson, father of producer/actor Mel Gibson.
The full conference record contains over 25 hours of professionally
produced video on 8 CD-ROMs or 4 VHS tapes covering the
full conference proceedings and includes the GML2004 banquet
speeches. The video products themselves have been professionally
edited, engineered and packaged to provide you with a complete,
high-value record of the WTP conference that may, indeed,
have marked a change for the course of this nation's future. |