We live in a world of assumptions. We live by those assumptions. We believe our assumptions. Those assumptions hold more value for us than truth. When faced with a new truth that contradicts our assumptions, the assumptions are given the weight of truth, and the truth is reduced to a mere assumption. Such is the power of myth. I hope to challenge all the assumptions we live by and give you the option to adopt new truths, and make those truths your new assumptions. There are so many assumptions that simply aren't true, like: judges and justices can overturn or overrule laws by judicial review; individual rights aren't absolute and are subject to government restrictions; Federal Reserve Notes are actual currency; and juries can't nullify laws, they can only judge on the facts of a case. I'll get to these someday. But for now, why do you assume that the President is automatically Commander in Chief?
You assume the President is Commander in Chief automatically because that has been the practice since Harry Truman, who came to the Presidency upon the death of Franklin Roosevelt, and during a declared war. So at that one time, the President automatically became Commander in Chief because the Declaration of War from Congress was still in force. However, World War Two was the last actual Declaration of War from Congress, which alone has the power to declare war, so every war or warlike action by every President since Truman, exercising Commander in Chief powers automatically, has been unconstitutional. It is time to change that practice, by changing the assumptions, by getting to the truth, and then enforcing the truth.