In 1814 and again in 1816, the U.S. President and Secretary of State announced that the Titles of Nobility Amendment had been adopted as part of the Constitution.
Those announcements were not rumors, not newspapers, not opinions — they were formal executive circulars.
Yet today, the amendment is treated as if it never existed.
How did that happen?
This book does not ask you to believe anything.
It asks you to look at the actual documents:
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gubernatorial certifications,
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legislative journals,
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executive proclamations,
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and unexplained contradictions in state and federal records.
You’ll see where the record is clear — and where it is not.
You’ll see where later summaries conflict with original evidence.
And you’ll see why some states’ records raise serious Article V questions that have never been resolved.
This is not a political argument.
It’s a document-based case study in constitutional process, archival inconsistency, and how history sometimes hardens around assumptions instead of evidence.
The book is free.
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Download it. Read it. Decide for yourself.
👉 https://ReadTheBookToday.com
If nothing else, you’ll walk away with a deeper understanding of how constitutional history is actually constructed — and how fragile the record can be when no one is willing to ask uncomfortable questions.