Robert Herget

robert herget
Introduction

When Bob asked me to edit A Systemic Constitutional Quandary, I knew it was more than a routine assignment. What I did not expect was how strongly it would reaffirm my belief in the power of one voice to rise above division.

Bob holds fast to a simple conviction: the Constitution belongs to all of us. I have watched him engage civic life with clarity and integrity, calling us back to our responsibilities as citizens and neighbours. That call is the heart of this book.

His arguments are grounded in constitutional principle and lived experience, not political posturing. This is not a book meant to divide. It asks hard questions in service of unity and invites readers to reclaim their role in strengthening community.

It has been an honour to help bring this message forward.

For Family, Neighbours, and Community.

Gina Stevens
Editor, A Systemic Constitutional Quandary

Robert Herget

robert herget
a systemic constitutional quandary
A Veteran’s Journey Into Constitutional Activism

Robert Herget never intended to be an activist. A retired U.S. Army Combat Engineer, small business owner, and devoted husband and father, he was content coaching high school baseball and building his family’s life in York County, Virginia.

But when his wife took a courageous stand to expose documented vaccine adverse effects, everything changed. What began as a family’s mission to protect children evolved into a profound exploration of constitutional principles, the role of local government, and the urgent need for citizens to reclaim their responsibility to their communities.

This is a non-partisan political book. It is a boots-on-the-ground account of what it means to be a citizen in a divided America, and a powerful blueprint for how ordinary people can move beyond “us versus them” thinking to build unity at the local level.

A Wife’s Courage

Her fearless mission to expose vaccine data sparked a family’s journey into civic activism.

Constitutional Principles

Deep dives into the Sheriff, the Militia, and the forgotten power of the Grand Jury.

Community First

A non-partisan call for citizens to move beyond political division and reclaim unity.

a systemic constitutional quandaryA Systemic Constitutional Quandary (HardCover)
Robert Herget & Gina Stevens
A Systemic Constitutional Quandary (Paperback)
Robert Herget & Gina Stevens
A Systemic Constitutional Quandary (eBook)
Robert Herget & Gina Stevens

About Robert Herget

Robert Herget is a Constitutional Conservative, a retired U.S. Army Combat Engineer, and a small business owner. From 1985 to 2003, he served his nation with distinction, training thousands of young men and women for military service across multiple installations and roles.

After his military career, Herget and his wife built a business and raised their family in York County, Virginia. His journey into civic activism was born from a deep-seated belief in the principles of the U.S. Constitution and a desire to secure the blessings of liberty for his children and grandchildren.

What makes Herget’s perspective unique is his refusal to accept partisan narratives. He argues that the Constitution belongs to all Americans, regardless of political affiliation, and that true solutions to our nation’s challenges must begin at the community level, with citizens working together as neighbors, not as members of opposing political tribes.

Excerpt from A Systemic Constitutional Quandary

I have had thousands of conversations with citizens over the last thirty-five years, and most of those conversations about our nation conclude with the same thought: “something is not right.”

As part of those conversations, when ideas turn to how to correct whatever is wrong, they often lead to frustration and the realization that there is no clear understanding of how to “fix” it.

Those conversations have changed dramatically over the last twenty-plus years. What were once casual discussions have moved to a place of fear and visceral anger, with a stark division in citizens’ attitudes about how this nation should fix itself.

I have come to realize that this change correlates directly with the unabashed Marxist ideology of Me, Myself, and My Group that I spoke of earlier.

What caused this change was not clear to me until I was forced to look both inward and outward and educate myself, particularly by trying to understand the foundation and spirit of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Through conversations with citizens within and outside my community, I came to the realization that all citizens want essentially the same thing: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.

How do we achieve a correction for our nation? By having conversations about the true intent of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, not through political or special interest ideologies that neglect to teach these founding principles of this Constitutional Republic and the true history of our nation.

That conversation must begin at the smallest level of our government structure, the Lesser Magistrates, better known as our local communities and local elected officials.

Relying on political parties to fix our nation beyond the local level will only widen division among citizens.

We the People must work toward having conversations among ourselves at the local level, build unity within our communities, and then grow outward and upward.

Robert Herget, Core Constitutional Themes

Ready to Reclaim Your Civic Duty?

Get your copy of A Systemic Constitutional Quandary today and join thousands of citizens who are moving beyond political division to build community unity.

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