A message sent to Belfast in July 1913:
And (probably the most damning) a speech given in Dublin in November 1913:
It's not particularly uncharitable to interpret his words and actions as advocating armed rebellion against the Crown, using extra-parliamentary means to subvert Parliament and deny its sovereignty, and telling the army to disobey orders. If Asquith had been a more bloody-minded man, could Law (and Carson?) have been arrested and charged with sedition? What would the consequences have been?