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American Governance

Both systems concurrently exist today. However, the corporate system has been gaining
predominance in the last 70 years. Many Sovereigns (e the people! have contracted with the
corporate system un"nowingly, unintentionally, and or without #ull disclosure given.
$nce you learn the di##erence, you may have to ma"e a decision #or yoursel#, #amily, and
posterity. %hat decision may re&uire changes in how you conduct yoursel#. 'ou will have to
undo what has been done to ma"e your Sovereign status "nown. %his is not taught in the
corporate government(s public school system, because you are not to "now.
%he elite o# the )$ne orld government) corporate system want
and need to have power and control over the population (masses!
they call )Human *esources.)
Original CORPORATE
+escription
+,S-*./%.$0
union o# the several states
the states united
united states in Congress assembled
these united States of America
The united states of America
The 1nited States o# 2merica
The United States
(intent or defined to be the original or organic)
the 10.%,+ S%2%,S
the 10.%,+ S%2%,S $3 2M,*.-2
%H, 10.%,+ S%2%,S $3 2M,*.-2
(all capital letters--a fiction--a corporation)
the United States of America
the United States
(intent or defined to be the corporate US),
Started with:
Declaration of ndependence in !""#,
Articles of Confederation in !""$,
and the Constitution in !"$"
nitiall%, the land was &ritish coloni'ed and then
separated into independent (ree states) which on
*ul% +, !""# became so,ereign states united-
Started with:
.ett%sburg Address in !$#+,
and the ncorporation of
District of Columbia b% (/residential) 0egislati,e Act
of (ebruar% 1!, !$"!, under the 2mergenc% 3ar
/owers Act and the 4econstruction Acts-
Then reorgani'ed *une !!, !$"$
--!# Stat- +!5 Chapter #1
a 6*epublic6
ha,ing its beginning with the colonial resistance
against 2ngland7s t%rannical go,ernment-
8a9or opposition against &ritish control began
with The Stamp Act, established b% &ritish
parliament on 8arch 11, !"#:--Ta;ation without
representation, followed b% the Declarator% Act,
the &oston 8assacre of !""<, and the Tea Act
passed b% /arliament on 8a% !<, !""= to sa,e
the 2ast ndian Compan% from ban>ruptc%-
a 6 -orporation"
with a legislature was established,
with all the apparatus of a distinct go,ernment
created (ncorporated) b% (/residential) 0egislati,e
Act,
(ebruar% 1!, !$"!
(ort%-first Congress, Session ,
Chapter #1, page +!5
?n *une 1<, !$"+, the /resident with ad,ice of
Senate abolished and replaced the !$"!
go,ernment with a commission consisting of three
persons-
!$ Stat- at 0- !!#, chap- =="
4esistance continued with the @uartering Act
established b% /arliament on *une 1, !""+,
reAuiring American colonists to pro,ide shelter to
&ritish troops and horses when reAuested-
(rom September : to ?ctober 1:, !""+ Twel,e
colonies, all but .eorgia, sent :# delegates to
/hiladelphia to participate in the (irst Continental
Congress- The purpose of the (irst Continental
Congress was to debate and plan a unified
response to &ritish polic% and actions-
?n 8arch 1:, !"":, /atric> Benr% deli,ered his
6gi,e me libert% or gi,e me death6 speech to the
Cirginia Assembl% in 4ichmond-
Carious conflicts too> place
and blood continued to be shed-
?n 8a% !<, !"":, The Second Continental
Congress con,ened in /hiladelphia- Delegates
from all thirteen colonies were present-
After signing the Declaration of ndependence on
*ul% +, !""#, and winning the re,olutionar% war
which ended with the /aris /eace Treat% signed
September =, !"$=, all American colonists
became free, So,ereign people, endowed with the
same rights that the Ding of 2ngland had-
Also, ,ia the %reaty o# /aris in September of
!"$=, Ding .eorge parted with the Eorthwest
Territor% which was unsettled and not %et
coloni'ed- The Eorthwest ?rdinance was set in
place in *ul% of !"$" to go,ern the territor% until
such a time the territor% became states united
with the initial thirteen-
"... at the Revolution, the sovereignty devolved on the
people, and they are truly the sovereigns of the country, but
they are sovereigns without subjects, and have none to
govern but themselves; the citizens of America are equal as
fellow citizens, and as joint tenants in the sovereignty ...
overeignty is the right to govern; a nation or tate sovereign
is the person or persons in whom that resides. !n "urope, the
sovereignty is generally ascribed to the #rince; here, it rests
with the people; there, the sovereign actually administers the
government; here, never in a single instance; our $overnors
are the agents of the people, and, at most, stand in the same
relation to their sovereign in which regents in "urope stand to
their sovereigns. %heir #rinces have personal powers,
dignities, and preeminences; our rulers have none but
official; nor do they parta&e in the sovereignty otherwise, or
in any other capacity, than as private citizens."
A subseAuent act appro,ed *une !!, !$"$ (1< Stat-
at 0- !<1, chap- !$<) was enacted stating that the
District of Columbia should 7remain and continue a
municipal corporation,7 as pro,ided in 1 of the
4e,ised Statutes relating to said District
(brought forward from the act of !$"!)
'!%R!(% )* ()+,-.!A v. (A-'"/ !R)/ 0)R1,
232 ,.. 456 72892:
http;<<supreme.justia.com<us<232<456<case.html
-"%R)#)+!%A/ R () v. '!%R!(% )* ()+,-.!A, 26= ,.. =62 72338:
http;<<supreme.justia.com<us<26=<2<case.html
-orporate $##icers
6 --- &ut b% the Act of *une !!, !$"$ (1< Stat- chap-
!$<), a permanent form of go,ernment for the
District was established- t pro,ided ---and that the
commissioners therein pro,ided for should be
deemed and ta>en as officers of such corporation-6
%he 'istrict of (olumbia v. >enry ". 0oodbury,
26? ,.. 4@= 72389:
http;<<www.supremelaw.org<decs<dccases<woodbury.htm
61nited States6 is the 6+istrict o# -olumbia6
incorporated-
6The United States go,ernment is a foreign
corporation with respect to a State6 Aolume =9; (orpus Buris
ec. C 2@35,
Also; /D re; -erriam 6? /.". 595 2442 . 9.28@6, 24 +. "d. =3@
!n ,/!%"' %A%" ()'", %itle =3,
in ection 699= 'efinitions,
it states the following;
725: ",nited tates" meansE
7A: a Federal corporation;
To incorporate means to become
a part of something bigger
Some people belie,e
it is incorporated with 2ngland
or the crown
and the paperwor>
is filed in /uerto 4ico-
This so-called go,ernment is
an imposter
posing and or masAuerading
as the original go,ernment-
Some call it the
FFupreme (ourt of the ,nited tates
= , 428 7*ebruary 2@84:
Chisholm v. Georgia
(hief Bustice; Bay, Bohn
Argued; *ebruary 5, 2@86
'ecided; *ebruary 23, 2@86
Four Organic Written Laws
of the 59 states united are;
Declaration of Independence, Buly 4,2@@?,
Articles of Confederation, /ov. 25,2@@@,
%he Constitution, ept. 2@, 2@3@
orth!est Ordinance, Buly 26, 2@3@
%hese )rganic +aws are also found in the
,nited tates (ode, Aolume 2
Also, 0i&ipedia; search for ")rganic +aws"
6insurgent governmental system6
" As (harles "vans >ughes, $overnor of /ew yor& and twice
appointed Bustice of the upreme (ourt said. "%he (onstitution
is whatever the upreme (ourt says it is." %his is as fran& an
assessment of the true situation as you will ever get from a
government official. $eorge .ush said practically the same
thing when he declared "%he (onstitution is just a piece of
paper." ...the /orthwest )rdinance shows why the *ederal
government has no legal jurisdiction over any territory but that
which is owned by the ,nited tates of America. ...%he fact is,
the (onstitution, for all practical purposes, annuls the
'eclaration of !ndependence."
--0awrence &erg
ha,ing a de jure form of go,ernment
?f right) legitimate) lawful) b% right and 9ust title)
6b% law6
--&lac>7s 0aw Dictionar% si;th edition
a de facto go,ernment
n fact, in deed, actuall%) a state of affairs) but is
illegal or illegitimate) 6b% eAuit%6 and not 6b% law6) is
not constitutional- Thus an officer, >ing- or
go,ernment de facto is in actual possession, but b%
usurpation, or without lawful title-
--&lac>7s 0aw Dictionar% si;th edition
Created b% So,ereigns
Created b% merchants, ban>ers,
and their cohorts b% acts of treason-
The% also forced the South
and other states to secede-
/res- 0incoln fell into their scheme
and went along for awhile-
This 8artial 0aw go,ernment
Factuall%: 68artial 4ule6G
is a #iction managing ci,il affairs
.ntroduction
.0%*$+1-%.$0
/hiladelphia is the Capitol
The 2rticles o# -on#ederation
were agreed to b% the united states in Congress
assembled on Eo,ember !:, !""" and were
ratified 8arch !, !"$!- (rom the time of the
Declaration of ndependence, *ul% +, !""#, to the
time of the Articles of Confederation there was a
space of time of si;teen months and ele,en da%s-
Certain members of Congress created the District of
Columbia (DC) from portions of two states) Cirginia
(Cirgin) and 8ar%land (8ar%)- /h%sicall% united
together the% are 64irgin Mary ,6 to form a more
perfect union as
a new 61nited States6-
US Titles and Codes,
in their aw>ward definitions,
call 6DC6 the 6United States6
During this period of time, the se,eral nations,
states, countries were so,ereign unto themsel,es
as relates to foreign earthl% powers-
There was an outstanding debt of !" million
sil,er 0ira from (rench ban>s o,er 1! separate
occasions all due on December !, !"$5-
Therefore, a ban"ruptcy -harter had to be
drafted- ?n September !", !"$", twel,e State
delegates appro,ed the Constitution- The States
ha,e now become Constitutors-
6-onstitutor5 n the ci,il law, one who, b% simple
agreement, becomes responsible for the pa%ment
of another7s debt-6
--&lac>s 0aw Dictionar% #th 2d-
The States were now liable for the debt owed to
the Ding, but the people of America were not- The
people are not a party to the -onstitution
because it was ne,er put to them for a ,ote-
The 9udge in the /adle#ord case stated) 6&ut,
indeed, no pri,ate person has a right to complain,
b% suit in court, on the ground of a breach of the
Constitution- The Constitution, it is true, is a
compact, but he is not a part% to it- The States are
the parties to it- And the% ma% complain- f the%
do, the% are entitled to redress- ?r the% ma%
wai,e the right to complain-6
FF#adelford, *ay G (o. vs. %he -ayor and Aldermen of the (ity of avannah. 24
$eorgia 463, 5=9
62rticles6 establish a so,ereign nation of people,
but all 6-onstitutions6 are ban>ruptc% charters or
compacts-
/resident 2ndrew 6ac"son paid the debt in the
!$=<7s- n !$=1, while discussing the &an>
4enewal &ill to a delegation of ban>ers, he said,
6Hou are a den of ,ipers and thie,es- intend to
rout %ou out, and b% the 2ternal .od, will rout
%ou out-6
The Articles of Confederation
are still in operation-
6Be F/atric> Benr%G bo%cotted the Constitutional
Con,ention of !"$" because, as he so eloAuentl%
put it, 6. smell a rat 6 and suspected the worst:
that the independent colonies that had thri,ed for
o,er a centur% were to be herded under one
consolidated go,ernment, a ,ast go,ernment
apparatus founded not on libert%, but on the
The new 6United States6 includes States such as
District of Columbia, /uerto 4ico, .uam, American
Samoa, the Cirgin slands, and the Eorthern
8ariana slands- t does not include the :< states
united-
i.e. %itle =? ection @@92 'efinitions 7a: 78: and 729: 4= ,..(. 495 7=:7c:7vii:
All Titles of the United States Code (USC) are
strictl% meant for the United States and none of the
:< states of the Union- 2ach of the :< states ha,e
their own constitutions and laws- See Bepburn ,-
2ll'e%, 1 Cranch, ++:, +:1, and *ohn &arron , The
8a%or and Cit% of &altimore =1 U-S- 1+= (!$==)-
These last two cases clearl% state that the United
States is not the :< states of the Union-
All 4ule comes from
6+istrict o# -olumbia6
which is run b% the .nostic /riesthood of the
undisclosed m%ster% &ab%lon-
)Masonic *ule)
Some of the 8asonic s%mbolism is found in the
la%out of the District7s streets, the 3ashington
monument (?belis>), the /entagon, and on the
bac> of the ?ne Dollar (ederal 4eser,e Eote-
+- 7ayout $ne +ollar
6 The best place to hide something
is in full ,iew6
6-olumbia6 is a name for 6.oddess of Creation,
3ar, and Destruction6 more >nown as the goddess
of death and pain- She is deri,ed from the imager%
of Semiramis, wife of Eimrod, and @ueen of
&ab%lon-
The statue on top of the Capitol building called the
Statue of (reedom is actuall% /ersephone,
meaning IShe who Destro%s the 0ightJ- She is the
Aueen of the underworld- She is crowned with
pentacles (pentagrams--stars with fi,e points)-
3hen someone stands on something, it is usuall%
an indication of ownership- Therefore, she owns the
facilit% she stands upon- Although the dome on top
of the Capitol building was not finished until !$#$,
the final installation of this statue on top of the dome
too> place on December 1, !$#=- The original
Capitol building, without the dome, was completed
bureaucratic dreams of monarchists and
mercantilists li>e Ale;ander Bamilton-6
--4%an 8c8a>en, columnist for 0ew4oc>well-com
---3e hold these truths to be self-e,ident, that all
men are created eAual, that the% are endowed b%
their Creator with certain unalienable 4ights, that
among these are 0ife, 0ibert% and the pursuit of
Bappiness- -- That to secure these rights,
.o,ernments are instituted among 8en, deri,ing
their 9ust powers from the consent of the
go,erned, --That whene,er an% (orm of
.o,ernment becomes destructi,e of these ends,
it is the *ight o# the /eople to alter or to
abolish it, and to institute new 8overnment---
--Declaration of ndependence
Samuel Adams said, 'When the people fear
the government they have tyranny, when
the government fears the people they
have freedom.'
8an% go,ernments are established b% good
people ha,ing good intentions- &ut, certain men
with bad intentions or another agenda get into
go,ernment office b% some means, lawful or
otherwise, find loopholes, re,ise go,ernment and
its laws to suit their needs and agenda, and build
an empire within go,ernment itself- Through
deceit and lies and through the absence of truth,
gain power and control o,er the people, e;tracting
the people7s well earned mone% from the people7s
labor to finance and increase the empire to such
an e;tent that it would seem difficult for people to
rise up against it-
6Apathetic and dependant Americans toda% are
unsuspectingl% going into bondage unless
America wa>es up-6
FFBac& lev&off =99?
in !$1#-
Columbia and /ersephone are seen as other
statues around 3ashington D-C- area-
Some of the 8nostic /riesthood include:
lluminati, S>ull K &ones Societ%, Bospitaliers,
Dnights of 8alta, Dnights of Columbus, Dnights of
the 4ound Table, ?ddfellows, Societ% of *esus,
*esuit /riesthood, Club of 4ome, Dnights Templar,
(reemasons, Scottish 4ite Temple, Hor> 4ite
Temple, Shriners, nner Temple &ar, nternational
Temple &ar Association, &arrister7s nn, Lionists,
*esuits, *esuit &rotherhood, 8ilner group (a->-a-
8ilner7s Dindergarten, 4ound Table .roup, 4hodes
crowd, 4hodes Scholars, The Times crowd, All
Souls goup, Cli,eden set, The Societ% of the 2lect,
The Association of Belpers, *unta of Three, the
Secret Societ% of Cecil 4hodes, Chatham Bouse
crowd, Commonwealth of Eations, 4o%al nstitute of
nternational Affairs), Tri-laterial Commission,
&ilderberg group, Council on (oreign 4elations
(C(4), 8agistrates, &ar Attorne%s-
6Since !$"=, the .lobal 2lite Bas Beld Secret
8eetings in the Ancient 4edwood (orest of
Eorthern California- 8embers of the so-called
6&ohemian Club6 nclude (ormer /residents
2isenhower, Ei;on and 4eagan- The &ush (amil%
8aintains a Strong n,ol,ement- 2ach Hear at
&ohemian .ro,e, 8embers of This All-8ale 6Club6
put on 4ed, &lac> and Sil,er 4obes and Conduct
an ?ccult 4itual 3herein The% 3orship a .iant
Stone ?wl, Sacrificing a Buman &eing in 2ffig% to
3hat The% Call the 7.reat ?wl of &ohemia-76--Ale;
*ones) nfo3ars-com
There is a small owl 9ust to the left of the 6!6 which
appears on the upper right hand corner of the ?ne
Dollar &ill-
%he -onstitution
#or %he 1nited States o# 2merica
Eow >nown or referred to as
the organic constitution-
This Constitution established a central
go,ernment with limited powers to do the will of
the people- ts purpose was to form a more
%he -onstitution
o# the 1nited States
The original organic Constitution
was adopted b% the corporation as
its 6By9laws6- The original Thirteenth Amendment
was replaced, and other amendments added, some
b% fraud-
perfect Union, establish *ustice, insure domestic
TranAuilit%, pro,ide for the common defense,
promote the general 3elfare, and secure the
&lessings of 0ibert% to oursel,es and our
/osterit%-
The -onstitution (a ban>ruptc% compact)
designates and limits the powers of the newl%
established central go,ernment and restrict its
,enue to a district not e;ceeding !< miles sAuare
and areas purchased for forts, maga'ines,
arsenals, doc>%ards, and other needful buildings-
The organic Constitution was
created in !"$",
adopted in !"$5, and
amended in !"5!
6The Constitution is not an instrument for the
go,ernment to restrain the people, it is an
instrument for the people to restrain the
go,ernment-6
-- /atric> Benr%
The :;th 2mendment
was not ratified-
Utah Supreme Court Cases, D%ett , Turner, (!5#$)
+=5 /1d 1##, 1#") State , /hillips, (!5":) :+< / 1d
5=#) as well as Coleman ,- 8iller, =<" U-S- ++$, :5
S- Ct- 5"1) 1$ Tulane 0aw 4e,iew, 11) !! South
Carolina 0aw @uarterl% +$+) Congressional 4ecord,
*une !=, !5#", pp- !:#+!-!:#+#)
Also see:
%he 24th Amendment /ever #assed
The :<th 2mendment
was not ratified b% the states-
--documented research in TB2 0A3 TBAT E2C24
3AS b% &ill &enson and 64ed6 &ec>man
*epublic
+,M$-*2-'
60ibera 4es /ublica6
(ree from Things /ublic
6. pledge allegiance to The United States of
America, and to the *epublic for which it stands,
?ne nation under .od6
2mphasi'es 6Democrac%6 which is the ne;t thing to
)Socialism) which is another form of
)-ommunism)-
Did %ou sa% CommunismM
Can7t happen hereM Chec> this outN
-ommunist Mani#esto
)*epublican)
(means 6common rights6)
form of go,ernment
68overnment o# the people
and b% the people6
A republic is a self go,erning forum wherein a
free, so,ereign, moral, and enlightened people
guarantee to one another and to all minorities the
right and obligation to ha,e, retain, and protect
each other7s .od gi,en common 4ights to 0ife,
(reedom, 0ibert% and the /ursuit of Bappiness in
their separate capacities as free inhabitants and
or as free So,ereign people within a nation, state
(nation state), and or a countr%, all b% positi,el%
accepting the ?aths as recipients of the oaths of
6+emocracy6
(means 6/riest rule6)
"A democracy cannot eHist as a permanent form of
government. !t can only eHist until the voters discover that they
can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury.
*rom that moment on, the majority always votes for the
candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury
with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose
fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship. %he average
age of the worldIs greatest civilizations from the beginning of
history, has been about =99 years. 'uring those =99 years,
these nations always progressed through the following
sequence; from bondage to spiritual faith; from spiritual faith to
great courage; from courage to liberty; from liberty to
abundance; from abundance to selfishness; from selfishness to
complacency; from complacency to apathy; from apathy to
their ser,ants holding public office-
The people created a republican form of
go,ernment with limitations on their ser,ants-
The people are the go,ernment,
not their ser,ants-
6...shall guarantee to every state in this union
a republican #orm o# government)
--Constitution, Art- C Sec +
At the close of the Constitutional Con,ention in
/hiladelphia on September !$, !"$", a 8rs /owel
an;iousl% awaited the results, and as &en9amin
(ran>lin emerged, as>ed him directl%: 63ell,
Doctor, what ha,e we got, a republic or a
monarch%M6 )2 republic i# you can "eep it)
responded (ran>lin-
*ames 8adison, the fourth president, >nown as 6The (ather of ?ur
Constitution6 made the following statement:
63e ha,e sta>ed the whole of all our political
institutions upon the capacit% of man>ind for self-
go,ernment, upon the capacit% of each and all of
us to go,ern oursel,es, to control oursel,es, to
sustain oursel,es according to the
%en -ommandments o# 8od-6
6The Constitution is not an instrument for the
go,ernment to restrain the people,
it is an instrument for the people to restrain the
go,ernment-6 -- /atric> Benr%
The %enth 2mendment
clearl% states:
6The powers not delegated to the united states
b% the Constitution, nor prohibited b% it to the
states, are reserved to the states respecti,el%, or
to the people-6
--ratified December !:, !"5!
Article , Section $ of the original Constitution
allowed the creation of certain federal areas and a
district for certain limited purposes:
"To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases
whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding
ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of
particular States, and the Acceptance of
Congress, become the Seat of the overnment of
the !nited States, and to exercise li"e Authority
over all #laces purchased by the Consent of the
Legislature of the State in which the Same shall
dependency; from dependency bac& again to bondage."
FFAttributed to cottish >istory #rofessor at ,niversity of "dinburgh ir AleHander
*raser %ytler 72@4@F2326: and others
"...often the most tyrannical government
on earth."
--Eoah 3ebster
Democrac% can be e;plained as 6two wol,es and a
lamb, ,oting on what to ha,e for dinner6 or 6A
political s%stem calculated to ma>e an intelligent
minorit% sub9ect to the will of the stupid-6
FF*riedrich /ietzsche 72344 F 2899:
A 6Mob *ule6 form of go,ernment gi,ing the
impression of representation and rule b% it7s
citi'ens- &ut, toda%, if one follows the paper trail one
will come to belie,e that it is 4ule b%: -rown o#
,ngland, -rown %emplar, and the 4atican
together pulling the strings in 3ashington D-C- as
well as utili'ing the 68ob 4ule6 principle- Some
belie,e the 4oman /ope is in control, but actuall%,
the unseen, behind the scenes, 6&lac> /ope6 is the
one in power) the one most people ne,er hear
about or >nows e;ists- The other /ope is 9ust a
figure head for the people to see and relate with-
6?ne must admire the craft of the priests, spawn of
satan, F>nown asG 2sAuires, members of the Court
of Saint *ames of the 8iddle Temple &A4 of the
Dnights Templar which is headAuartered in 6The
Crown6 which is inside of the ancient walled Cit% of
0ondon and is a so,ereign nation 9ust li>e the
Catican and 3ashington, D- C-, i- e-: the triad that
controls the world- 6--authorM
A large 2g%ptian s%mbol called the obelisAue
(obelis>) can be found in each of the three
locations: The 0ondon financial area, The Catican,
and 3ashington DC (3ashington 8onument: :::
feet :-: inches)- These three ha,e been ruling the
world and setting up the ?ne 3orld go,ernment
s%stem- These three places are E?T in UD, tal% or
USA-
The 4oc>efeller gra,e site has an obelisAue- 8an%
national cemeteries ha,e an obelisAue- Eew Hor>
Cit% has one that is "< feet tall and weights !5=
tons-
The obelis> s%mboli'es the sun god Amon 4e (4a)
as a petrified ra% of the Aten, the sundis>- --wi>ipedia
There are two entities >nown as the 6-rown6- ?ne
be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines,
Arsenals, doc!"ards, and other needful
buildings$" --3i>ipedia
t is ,er% important to >now that
Congress has exclusive 7egislative power and
authority only o,er certain specified areas
purchased for certain reasons by consent o# the
state in which the% lie-
These are the only areas whereb% a democrac%
is allowed to e;ist- ?utside of these areas, a
republican form of go,ernment is guaranteed-
The 4esidence Act of !"5<, established the
actual location
of the district-
6?ur countr%Os founders cherished libert%, not
democrac%-6 --4on /aul, Bistorian and Congressman
6A pure 4epublic allows the people the power of
choice- The% ma% retain their right to choose or
wai,e it for what the% belie,e is profitable or for
gain-6 FF.rother $regory 0illiams =929
from article titled '"*!/!/$ +!"
The republic
has been hi-jacked
by the usurpers
is the >ing7s corporation, setup to do the >ing7s
business and protect the >ing of 2ngland from
liabilit%- The other is the 6Dnights Templar6 (Temple)
a->-a- 6Crown Templar6, a secret societ%-
Those in power behind the scenes dress up their
candidates for office, help them get elected, and
then control them while in office- Supposedl% gi,ing
%ou a choice when both ma9or /olitical parties and
other parties are controlled b% them- Their
controlled ma9or media is used to control and direct
public opinion- So, %ou wonder who is reall% in
control--t7s definitel% not the people-
6Democrac% is the road to socialism-6 FF1arl -arH
/lato postulated I+ictatorship naturall% arises out
o# democracy---J
6*epublican government6 is defined as one in
which the powers of so,ereignt% are ,ested in the
people and are exercised by the people, either
directly, or through representati,es chosen b%
the people, to whom those powers are specificall%
delegated-
--Black's Law Dictionary, 6th edition, pg 695
6+emocracy6 is defined as that form of go,ernment
in which the so,ereign power resides in and is
exercised by the whole body o# #ree citi=ens
directl% or indirectl% through a s%stem of
representati,es-
--Black's Law Dictionary, 6th edition, pg 432
The rights o# the people and the protection o#
the people of America are its main concern and
maintains that all states shall be guaranteed a
*epublican #orm o# government-
6 predict future happiness for Americans if the%
can pre,ent the go,ernment from wasting the
labors of the people under the pretense of ta>ing
care of them-6
--Thomas *efferson
2;pands and conAuers b%
deceit and #raud-
and uses )words o# art) to decei,e-
Con,inces Americans to utili'e
such words and terms as )*esidence,) )*eside),
and )1S citi=en,) regional designations (fictional
o,erla%s) such as )-2), )04), )%>) etc- in
addresses to e;pand its ,enue and control, and to
obtain )-erti#icates o# Birth) and to sign up for
)Social Security) to gain and maintain 9urisdiction-
The central go,ernment is limited in power and
abilit% and its ,enue is restricted b% the
Constitution to the :0 miles s&uare district now
called 63ashington, D-C-6 and its encla,es for
forts and arsenals-
.i,es awa% American rights, land, par>s, and
streams o,er to a foreign go,ernment such as the
United Eations b% 2;ecuti,e ?rders or b% decree
and calling them )Biospheres,) )Biosphere
*eserves,) )orld Heritage Sites) or some other
designated name-
As planned according to Article + of UE2SC?7s
Statutor% (ramewor> for U-E- &iosphere 4eser,es
7ist o# Biospheres in 1S2
4epresents 63e the people6 and the 6state
4epublics6 among nations-
4epresents its own supposed so,ereignt% among
nations-
0i,ing souls are created b% .od and are
answerable to their 8a>er who is ?mnipotent-
6---one nation under .od---6
The Bible is the &asis of all 0aw and moral
standards- n !$1<, the USA go,ernment
purchased 1<,<<< bibles for distribution- Also ta>e
note of /U&0C 0A3 5"-1$< appro,ed ?ctober +,
!5$1
Separation o# 8od and state?
)e recogni=e no Sovereign but 8od, and no
@ing but 6esusA)
Bohn Adams and Bohn >ancoc& gave this response to a
.ritish major who ordered them and those with them to
disperse in the name of $eorge the sovereign 1ing of
"ngland on April 23 2@@5.
-- American Bistor%
6t cannot be emphasi'ed too strongl% or too often
that this great nation was founded not b%
religionists but b% Christians, not on religions but
on the .ospel of *esus Christ-6--/atric> Benr%
6Americans should select and prefer Christians as
their rulers-6
--*ohn *a% (,er% first Supreme Court *ustice )
This corporate so-called go,ernment
sees itsel# as god-
t sets morals and ,alues of those in its 9urisdiction
without an% basis- These ,alues are e,er changing
at their whim and are influenced b% opinion and the
media-
2mphasi'es religious and social tolerance but
discourages -hristianity-
t pro,o>es the godl% to gi,e up their stand and to
go with the crowd-
Homosexuality and abortions are no longer
discouraged, but are now protected-
"%hus it is easy to understand how law, instead of chec&ing
injustice, becomes the invincible weapon of injustice. !t is easy
to understand why the law is used by the legislator to destroy in
varying degrees among the rest of the people, their personal
independence by slavery, their liberty by oppression, and their
property by plunder. %his is done for the benefit of the person
who ma&es the law, and in proportion to the power he holds."
"...it erases from everyoneIs conscience the distinction between
justice and injustice. /o society can eHist unless the laws are
respected to a certain degree. %he safest way to ma&e laws
respected is to ma&e them respectable. 0hen law and morality
contradict each other, the citizen has the cruel alternative of
either losing his moral sense or losing his respect for the law."
FF2343 "%>" +A0" by (laude *rederic .astiat, a *rench economist, statesman,
author, and philosopher.
Eo state of 2mergenc%
and is not at war
US continues to be in a permanent state of national
emergency since 8arch 5, !5==, and possibl% as
far bac> as the Ci,il 3ar
--enate report 93-549 !"9#3$
Ad9ournment of Congress
sine die
a 0atin term meaning
Iwithout Ffi;edG da%J)
(Eo da% is set for recon,ening)
Se,en southern nation States of America wal>ed
out of the Second Session of the Thirt%-si;th
Congress on March B7, :C<:-
n so doing, the Constitutional due process
Auorum necessar% for Congress to ,ote was
(temporaril%) lost and Congress was ad9ourned
sine die, or 6without da%-6 To some, this meant
that there was no lawful Auorum to set a specific
da% and time to recon,ene- Some sa% that
according to 4obert7s 4ules of ?rder, Congress
automaticall% dissol,ed because there are no
pro,isions within the Constitution allowing the
passage of an% Congressional ,ote without a
Auorum of the States- Deep in mind that 4obert7s
4ules of ?rder was created and published b%
Benr% 8art%n 4obert who was born in South
Carolina in !$="- Be sold a half million copies of
his rules b% !5!+- Those rules were not made a
part of the Constitution or an% Amendment to the
Constitution- According to The Constitution,
Congress was onl% reAuired to meet at least once
in e,er% %ear on a specific date unless changed
b% law and a smaller number ma% ad9ourn from
da% to da%- Therefore, because there were no
other pro,isions, dissolution does not ta>e place
unless 6the people6, the creators thereof, or the
posterit% thereof, the so,ereigns of the states, sa%
so-
&ecause the Ding7s men did not attend a meeting
reAuired b% Bim does not constitute a loss of the
Ding7s >ingdom or Bis go,ernment- t 9ust means
that such men ma% loose their heads for not
obe%ing the Ding-
The Ding in this case is the people
or 63e, the people6
6---to pre,ent abuses in our go,ernment, we will
?n 2pril :D, :C<:,
/resident 0incoln recon,ened Congress under the
2;ecuti,e branch b% proclamation (number !):
6 do hereb%, in ,irtue of the power in me ,ested b%
the Constitution, convene both Bouses of
Congress-6
- /resident 0incoln
Caesar (/resident) is now in full control e,en o,er
the Senate (Congress)-
A /residential dictatorship has been imposed on
U-S- citi'ens- The sad thing is, 68ost American
people do not reali'e it %et-6
The corporate go,ernment created in !$"! !ill
continue to e"ist as long as;
!- 6state of war6 or 6emergenc%6 e;ists (3ar
on Drugs, 3ar on /o,ert%, 3ar on
Terrorism, 3ar on raA, etc-),
1- the /resident does not terminate 6martial6
or 6emergenc%6 powers b% 2;ecuti,e ?rder
or decree, or
=- the people do not resist submission and
terminate b% restoring lawful ci,il courts,
processes and procedures under authorit%
of the 6inherent political powers6 of the
people-
The 3ourteenth 2mendment for all intents and
purposes does not e;ist- ?n 8arch 1$, !$#!
Congress ad9ourned sine die and ne,er has
recon,ened de 9ure-
assemble in Con,ention, recall our delegated
powers, and punish our ser,ants for abusing the
trust reposed to them-6
--paraphrased b% /atric> Benr%, *une !"$$
The original %hirteenth 2mendment (no title of
nobilit%), appro,ed b% != of the !" states 8arch !1,
!$!5 and thereb% ratified, is the last proper draft of
a de 9ure Amendment but is not recogni'ed b% the
corporate (de facto) UET2D STAT2S-
The original !=th Amendment prohibits 6,s&uires6
(Attorne%s) from holding positions of public office-
3lag
3728
%he 1nited States o# 2merica
Military 3lag
plain and si%ple--no gold &ringe or other orna%ents
and sy%'olis% attached
0ot the original
1S2 Military #lag
Some sa% it is a flag of Admiralt%P8aritime
t%pe 9urisdiction and is not suppose to be
used on 0and- ?thers sa% itOs not a flag at
all, but fiction-
Bowe,er, the gold fringe which surrounds
the flag gi,es notice that the American flag
has been captured and is now being used
b% the corporate so-called go,ernment to gi,e
notice of its 9urisdiction-
/rior to the !5:<7s, state republic #lags were
mostl% flown, but when a USA flag was flown,
usuall% onl% at USA facilities, it was one of the
following:
!- Military #lag --Bori'ontal stripes,
white stars on blue bac>ground
Bas no fringe, braid (tassel),
eagle, ball, spear, etc-
Some sa% the correct si'e ratio is
! ; !-5
1- -ivil 3lag
--Created in
The flag shown abo,e appears to be a 6USA flag6
but has one or more of the following:
!- 8old #ringe along its borders
(called 6a badge6)
1- 8old braided cord (tassel)
hanging from pole
=- Ball on top of pole (last cannon ball
fired)
8ainl% used at induction centers-
+- ,agle on top of pole
:- Spear on top of pole
Some people see them as ornaments but
all s%mbols ha,e a meaning and purpose-
The flag shown abo,e is Eot described in Title + of
USC and therefore is illegal on land e;cept for
ma%be (!) the /resident since he is in charge of
Ea,al (orces on high seas, and (1) na,al offices
and %ards-
/resident 2isenhower settled the debate on the
width of the fringe-
!"55 b% Secretar% of the
Treasur% ?li,er 3olcott- ntended
for peace time usage, denoting
ci,il 9urisdiction under the
Constitution and common law-
Bas ,ertical stripes, blue stars on
white bac>ground--last flown
before Ci,il 3ar with a few
e;ceptions-
A !5!= /ostcard has a ci,il flag fl%ing
on the Customs Bouse in San (rancisco
Clic> on picture to enlarge
Another e;ample of
the ,ertical stripes:
6The Coast .uard 2nsign (flag) was first flown b%
the 4e,enue Cutter Ser,ice in !"55 to distinguish
re,enue cutters from merchant ships-6
--3i>ipedia
This flag was a s%mbol of law enforcement
authorit%, not 8ilitar% authorit%-
The so-called 9ustification for a Ea,alP8aritime flag
to be on land is that all land was under the high
water mar> at one time e,en if it was eons ago-
(lags on poles fl%ing at the same height as other
flags ha,e eAual status- A flag fl%ing higher than the
flag below indicates superiorit% o,er the flag below-
Eote that corporate state flags fl% below the US flag-
Deep in mind that the states were originall%
So,ereign o,er the central go,ernment and onl% the
state flags were flown e;cept in the District of
Columbia not e;ceeding !< miles sAuare, its
territories, forts, doc>%ards, arsenals, and other
needful buildings, such as /ost ?ffices, purchased
with the consent of the legislature of the affected
state-
(Constitution, Section $, Clause !")
The people in the geographic continental USA are
at peace but the corporate go,ernment continues to
be at war to e;ist, to increase and perpetuate debt,
and to enrich others through Defense contracts-
8overning Body
8$4,*0.08 B$+'
The (ree nhabitants are
a go,ernment bod% unto themsel,es-
Eot forced to 9oin a 6state6
Eot forced to be a citi'en of an% group-
Eot forced to inhabit an% territor%-
Eot forced to 9oin the militia or militar%-
The /resident (a Caesar)
rules b% ,xecutive $rder
(Unconstitutional)
Congress and the Courts
are under the /resident-
Eot forced to pa% un-reAuested ser,ices-
The Eorthwest territor% and possessions were
go,erned b% three separate and distinct &ranches
or Departments eAual to each other as to power
and control of a segment of go,ernment while
being on the same pla%ing field laterall% in
position to each other-
0egislature
(Constitution) Article )
--can enact positive law
2;ecuti,e
(Constitution) Article )
*udicial
(Constitution) Article )
-->nown as article courts
The purpose of ha,ing three separate and distinct
branches at the same le,el is for chec>s and
balances so that no one man or branch of
go,ernment has complete power-
The legislati,e &ranch consists of the Senate and
Congress-
The purpose of the Senate was originall%
designed to ,oice states rights while Congress
,oiced the peoples rights-
The Senators were chosen b% the states and
were not elected b% the people-
Together, the% can come to a conclusion that
meets the rights, interests, and benefit of both the
state and the people-
Separation o# /owers
)%o announce that there must be no criticism
o# the /resident, or that we are to stand by the
/resident, right or wrong, is not only
unpatriotic and servile, but is morally
treasonable to the 2merican public.)
--(heodore )oose*elt, "9"2
Did %ou e,er wonder wh% Congress is ignored b%
the /residentM
The /resident is the Chief 2;ecuti,e ?fficer
(C-2-?-) of the go,ernment corporation-
mpeachment toda% is nearl% impossible, unless it is
in the best interest of the controlling ban>ers and
the one-world go,ernment elite-
Also, what most people do not reali'e is that most
courts toda% are legislati,e courts
and not *udicial-
The so-called (corporate) Congress
sits b% resolution
not b% positi,e law-
Therefore, the position of power is as follows:
!- /resident (C-2-? of the corporation sits as
Caesar
--does not need congressional appro,al)
1- 0egislature (The new Congress and Senate
,oices /ublic ?pinion)
=- so-called *udicial (0egislati,e, Article
courts) opinionate what7s best for the
corporate so-called go,ernment and the
elite
+- Eon-e;istent *udicial
(Article courts)
e;cept for Special circumstances
that benefit the elite
The top position has control o,er the second
position and the second position has control o,er
the last position ,erticall% and not laterall%-
There are no chec>s and balances unless the
/resident is concerned with a potential re,olution
based on the outcr% of its citi'ens-
"ach puppet that comes into office wears a different costume
but ends up serving the same master. 7%he #asters are the
"lite and .an&ers operating behind the scenes:
Onl$ t!o e"ecutive orders
!ere overturned%
"%he upreme (ourt ruled in Doungstown heet G %ube (o. v.
awyer, 646 , 5@8 7285=: that "Hecutive )rder 29649 from
#resident >arry . %ruman placing all steel mills in the country
under federal control was invalid because it attempted to ma&e
law,..." ee; )pinion of Bustice .lac& and (ase +aw
"!f the representatives of the people betray their constituents,
there is then no resource left but in the eHertion of that
original right of selfFdefense which is paramount to all
positive forms of government, ... if the persons entrusted with
supreme power become usurpers, ... %he citizens must
rush tumultuousl$ to arms, without concert, without
system, without resource; eHcept in their courage and
despair."
FF*ederalist J=3 F >amilton
"...a 288? order issued by #resident (linton that attempted to
prevent the ,.. government from contracting with
organizations that had stri&eFbrea&ers on the payroll.K?L
(ongress may overturn an eHecutive order by passing
legislation in conflict with it or by refusing to approve funding to
enforce it. !n the former, the president retains the power to veto
such a decision; however, the (ongress may override a veto
with a twoFthirds majority to end an eHecutive order."
#edium of E"change
#EDI&# OF E'C(AGE
7aw#ul Money
7egal
%ender
Units of 8oneti'ed +ebt
Bas substance Bas no substance--&uilt on credit
Controlled b%
Treasur% of the united States of America
Controlled b% US Treasur%
4eal 8one%
Assets of ,alue such as gold or sil,er
or can be e;changed for same-
8an% of the older generations of the American
people were taught to write the 6S6 with two lines
through it- The two lines was a deri,ati,e of the
6U6 inside the 6S6 signif%ing 6Units of Sil,er6- The
United States of America sil,er dollar is the
accepted and appro,ed uniform monetar% unit
(coin standard)- The United States of America did
not issue paper mone% until $: %ears after its
independence from &ritain, and when it did, it was
bac>ed b% sil,er or gold- 2,en at that, earl%
Californians refused to accept and use paper
currenc%, especiall% the people in San (rancisco-
/hon% 8one%
Eot bac>ed b% assets
but thri,es on faith alone-
Toda%, all computer programs, stoc> certificates,
financial paper, accounting records, balance sheets
and summaries, bills, bonds, /romissor% notes,
ban> paper such as chec>s, et cetera use the
familiar s%mbol ha,ing onl% one line through it to
denote the amount of debt considered-
All Eotes are 6 ?we Hou7s6 (?U7s)
including 3ederal *eserve 0otes ((4E7s) All Eotes
represent debt- The corporate UET2D STAT2S is
in ban>ruptc% and has no assets but can onl%
moneti'e debt-
7aw#ul Money
consist o#5
!- Silver coinsQ (Sil,er Specie)
Sil,er dollar--standard unit of ,alue
containing 5<R sil,er
1- 8old -oinsQ containing 5<R gold
=- Spanish milled dollar called the 6real-6 and
its fractional parts such as the 6medio6
(half-real)-
4+ 3arehouse receipts or certificates
redeemable in gold or sil,erQ such as
6Sil,er Certificates6 and 6.old
Certificates6 are not in itself mone% but is
an e;change for a specified amount of
lawful mone%-
M!ssued by the Treasurer of the ,nited tates of America.
"%he first coins issued by authority of the ,nited tates were
the "*ugio" cents. "ntries in the Bournal of (ongress . . ."
"aturday, April =2, 2@3@. . ."
"%hat the board of treasury be authorized to contract for three
hundred tons of copper coin of the federal standard,
agreeable to the proposition of -r. Bames Barvis, . . . %hat it
be coined at the eHpense of the contractor, etc." ")n *riday,
Buly ?, 2@3@, there was "Resolved, that the board of treasury
direct the contractor for the copper coinage to stamp on one
side of each piece the following device, viz; thirteen circles
lin&ed together, a small circle in the middle, with the words
I,nited tates,I around it; and in the center, the words I0e
are oneI; on the other side of the same piece the following
device, viz; a dial with the hours eHpressed on the face of it;
a meridian sun above on one side of which is the word
I*ugio,I 7%he meaning is, Itime fliesI: and on the other the
year in figures I2@3@I, below the dial, the words I-ind Dour
.usiness.I %he legends have been credited to .enjamin
*ran&lin by many, and the coin, as a consequence, has been
referred to as the *ran&lin (ent."
"%hese cents were coined in /ew >aven, (onn., and
possibly elsewhere. -ost of the copper used in this coinage
came from military stores. !t is believed to have been the
copper bands which held together the powder &egs sent to
us by the *rench."
FFA $,!'" .))1 of ,/!%"' %A%" ()!/ 65th "dition
Historical review5
Lincoln, Gold, and Greenbacks
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
7egal %ender
consists o#5
!- (ederal 4eser,e Eotes ((4E7s)QQQ
1- &onds
=- ?ther Eotes--e,idences of debt-
+- To>ens--clad coinage ha,ing no inherent
asset ,alue-
:- 6A unit of debt6 in a cashless societ%--
2lectronic ban>ing-
QQQssued b% the 3ederal *eserve Ban" ((4&)--A
pri,ate corporation created b% the &an> of 2ngland
in !5!= and is owned b% foreign ban>ersPin,estors
The (ederal 4eser,e is a continuation of the
6,xche&uer6 of the Crown of 2ngland-
,dward Mandell House was instrumental in setting
up the (ederal 4eser,e-
"ome people thin& the *ederal Reserve .an&s are ,..
government institutions. %hey are not government institutions.
%hey are private credit monopolies which prey upon the people
of the ,.. for the benefit of themselves and their foreign and
domestic swindlers and rich and predatory money lenders."
(hairman +ouis %. -c*adden, >ouse .an&ing and (urrency
(ommittee, Bune 29, 286=.
*ederal Reserve is not listed under the *ederal $overnment.
%hey are in the white pages, along with *ederal "Hpress,
*ederal 'eposit !nsurance (orp. 7*'!(:, and any other
business. *ind out for yourself if all this is true. And then, go to
your local law library and loo& up the case of +ewis vs. ,,
case J39F5895, 8th (ircuit, Bune =4, 283=. !t reads in part;
""Hamining the organization and function of the *ederal
Reserve .an&s and applying the relevant factors, we conclude
that the federal reserve are /)% federal instrumentalityIs . . but
are independent and privately owned and controlled
corporations F federal reserve ban&s are listed neither as
IwhollyFownedI government corporations Kunder 62 ,(
ection 34?L nor as ImiHed ownershipI corporations Kunder 62
,( ection 35?L . . . =3 ,( ections 264?7b:, =?@2."
-ongressman Mc3adden
Spea"s $ut (:EF;!
-ongressman %ra#icant
Did %ou e,er wonder where the words 6ban"6 and
6currency6 come fromM Deep in mind that a ri,er
has two ban>s that control a current of water
running between them- Therefore, that is what the
ban>ers do, the% control the current or flow of
mone% called currenc%-
Spea"s $ut (:EEF!
-ongressman *on /aul
Spea"s $ut
3ebruary :D, B00<
/a%able, in Specie
8eans 6n coin6
from 0atin, in >ind
The 6+ollar6
6The dollar, or 6thaler6 (which did not originate
with the Spaniards), is short for the 6
*oachimsthaler6 of *oachimsthal, a mining town in
the *oachims Calle% in &ohemia, where the coins
were first struc> in the si;teenth centur%-6
6Thomas *efferson recommended on September
1, !""#, to the Continental Congress, that the
United States adopt the sil,er 6Spanish 8illed
Dollar6 called 6/illar /ieces of 2ight6, as our
monetar% unit of ,alue, since dail% trade was
transacted in that coin-6
--The United States 8int
, )dollar) was defined b% law (Act of April !"51)
as ="!-1: grains of pure sil,er, which was the
amount contained in a ?ne-Dollar sil,er coin-
The gold eagle was eAui,alent to Ten sil,er
dollars and had 1+"-:< grains of pure gold-
Therefore, ="!-1: grains of pure sil,er was
eAui,alent to 1+-": grains of pure gold) a :D5:
ratio-
Coinage started in :7CF- The first gold coins were
made *ul% =!, !"5: and consisted of "++ half
eagles-
Coinage of Sil,er coins for circulation ended with
the !5#+ coins-
Under the )#ree coinage) pro,ision, no charge
was to be made for con,erting gold or sil,er
bullion into coins 6weight for weight-6 At the
The amount of (4E7s printed is based upon the
corporate go,ernment7s borrowing or appetite for
debt- (or e;ample: f the corporate go,ernment
prints S!<< billion in interest-bearing U-S- bonds
and ta>es them to the (ederal 4eser,e- The
(ederal 4eser,e places the S!<< billion in a
chec>ing account and the go,ernment writes
chec>s or prints debt currenc% against the balance-
n other words, this pri,ate ban>ing s%stem creates
so-called mone% out of thin air and the ban>ers get
interest on it fore,er- n addition, new debt and debt
currenc% has to be created 9ust to co,er the
compounding interest- An ideal 6/on'i scheme-6
Deep in mind that bonds are ?U7s and are to be
paid bac> b% the people through their future labor or
the labor of their posterit%- That is wh% wars are
created and perpetuated, go,ernment bureaucrac%
and empire building increases, and superfluous
spending continues- The% create an ongoing and
e,er increasing debt to ensla,e the people and their
posterit%- Debt must be continuall% created to feed
the debt-credit econom% s%stem-
The so-called e;panding econom% alwa%s needs
new debt notes ((4E7s) and therefore more debt
must be created- &udgets can ne,er be balanced in
this t%pe of s%stem- f the budget is balanced, the
econom% will collapse because no new (4E7s can
be printed and no new debt credit created-
The (4& pa%s 1T U per (4E note printed whether
S! or S!<<<- The US in-turn pa%s (4& interest
indefinitel% for each outstanding note or
representation of a note- 3ith electronic ban>ing
(4E7s are created out of nothing and nothing being
printed- %hat a deal&
Central )an*ing and credit
&eginning in !5#=, the words 6 redeemable in
law#ul money 6 and 6 will pay to the bearer on
demand 6 were remo,ed from future issues of
(ederal 4eser,e Eotes
depositor7s option, howe,er, he could demand an
immediate e;change of coins for his bullion, for
which pri,ilege a deduction of one-half of one
percent was to be imposed-
Redeema+le Certificates
Although the #irst paper currency was issued in
:C<B, redeemable certificates were not issued
until :CC<
Silver -erti#icates were contracts initiall%
redeemable in face ,alue sil,er coin or sil,er
bullion- Sil,er Certificates were released into
circulation in !$"$, redemption in sil,er dollars
ceased in !5=+, last printed in !5:", and
redemption in all forms ceased on *une 1+, !5#$-
8old -erti#icates were contracts initiall%
redeemable in face ,alue .old coin or gold
bullion- .old Certificates were released into
circulation in !$$1 and ended in !51$-
Mints
Although a go,ernment mint was appro,ed
(ebruar% 1!, !"$1, no immediate action was
ta>en- The first mint building was erected in !"51
on Se,enth Street near Arch in /hiladelphia- The
first coin struc> was the half disme (half-dime)-
(ifteen hundred were produced during the month
of *ul% !"51 before the mint was completed- (ile
mar>s on earl% coins was a mint process of
weight ad9ustment-
FFA $,!'" .))1 of ,/!%"' %A%" ()!/ 65th "dition
The 8int was initiall% a part of the Department of
State, became an independent agenc% in !"55,
and became part of the Department of the
Treasur% in !$"= when the 8int7s administrati,e
headAuarters mo,ed from /hiladelphia to
3ashington, D-C-
/ublic 0aw $$-=#, appro,ed *une +, !5#= made
Sil,er certificates redeemable for sil,er bullion in the
form of pellets or granulations and not in sil,er
dollars- The e;change could onl% ta>e place at the
U-S- Assa% ?ffice in San (rancisco up to *une 1+,
!5#$- After that, Sil,er certificates were no longer
redeemable and are onl% legal tender ha,ing same
,alue as (ederal 4eser,e Eotes-
The sil,er content of the dimes and Auarters was
completel% eliminated under the Coinage Act of
!5#: and the sil,er content of the half dollars was
greatl% reduced and or eliminated since then- Coins
that no longer ha,e sil,er content are called
6Copper-nic>el clad coins6 or 9ust 6clad coins6 and
ha,e no intrinsic ,alue-
n !5$1, the cent was changed from being 5:
percent copper and : percent 'inc to copper plated
'inc weighting 1< percent less- The cent is now 9ust
li>e a to>en-
6n 8% opinion, the purchasing power of the
debassed coinage and the increasingl% inflationar%
currenc% s%stem is undeniable proof to substantiate
e;tortion and embe''lement b% the ban>ing
industr% and those who hold office in the corporate
go,ernment s%stem-6
--*ac> Sle,>off 1<<$
De+t Currenc$ #one$ Fraud
n 8% opinion, it is impossible to pa% the entire US
debt because there is not enough mone% in
circulation and not enough mone% created to co,er
the principle let alone the interest being created and
accumulated-
--*ac> Sle,>off 1<<$
A 8a;im of 0aw:
6?ne is not reAuired to do the impossible-6
America7s wealth
would be li>e a 6/ot of .old6
Fore warned:
6f the American people e,er allow private ban"s
(the (ederal 4eser,e &an>s) to control the issue
of their currenc%, first b% inflation and then b%
deflation, the ban>s and corporations that will
grow up around them will depri,e the people of all
propert% until their children wa"e up homeless
on the continent their fathers conAuered--6 --Thomas
*efferson
The Law, which still stands, stated:
ndi,idual states are 6not allowed to ma>e an%
things but gold and sil,er coin a tender in
pa%ment of debts-6 The Constitution also stated:
6Congress has the power to -$.0 mone% and
regulate the ,alue thereof-6
--Article Section !< of the Constitution
Eotice that it states the word 6coin6
and not 6print paper currenc%-6
?ur (ounding (athers >new how a central ban>
printing paper mone% would collapse our
econom%-
6And to preser,e their independence,
we must not let our rulers GleadersH load us
with perpetual debt-6
--Thomas *efferson
6Until we reali'e that our money power is our
sovereign power we cannot act as so,ereigns6
--2-C- 4iegel-
6.old will alwa%s remain the ultimate form of
pa%ment in the world-6
FFAlan $reenspan, %estimony before , >ouse
.an&ing (ommittee, -ay 2888.
The 8reenbac" Acts of !$#! allowed the Union
(during the Ci,il 3ar) to print and issue paper
currenc% in !$#1 for the first time in US histor%-
/rior to that, the federal go,ernment restricted itself
to coins- The paper mone% was not bac>ed with
gold or sil,er but simpl% with the full faith and credit
of the Union go,ernment- The in> chosen for the
bac> side was a peculiar green) thereb% nic>named
6greenbac>s6-
The confederate states did the same thing and their
currenc% were called 6bluebac"s6 and
6graybac"s-6
?ne %ear later, the !$#! Acts were re,o>ed and
replaced with the 0ational Ban"ing 2ct in !$#=-
An Act passed on April !1, !$## authori'ed the sale
of bonds to retire currenc% called greenbac>s-
(4E7s were first issued in !5!+-
The .ndependent %reasury 2ct of !51!
suspended the de 9ure Treasur% Department of the
United States go,ernment and turned it o,er to a
pri,ate corporation called the (ederal 4eser,e
(de 9ure means 6b% right of lawful establishment6)
*ust prior to the Stoc> 8ar>et crash of !515,
millions of dollars of gold was ta>en out of this
Countr% and transferred to 2ngland-
All of the remaining assets of the US citi'ens,
including their person, are held b% the Depositor%
Trust Corporation (DTC), the central securities
depositor%, at :: 3ater Street, Eew Hor>, EH -
secured b% Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)
Commercial 0iens, which are then moneti'ed as
6debt mone%6 b% the (ederal 4eser,e-
Under the umbrella of the DTC lies the C2D2 Corporation, the
(ederal 4eser,e Corporation and the American &ar Association, the
6legal arm6 of the ban>ing interests-
Return #one$ To The People
-n 2."., the pop/larity o& the dollar
has fallen behind the Euro.
"the euro is the currency with the highest combined value of
cash in circulation in the world, having surpassed the &.,.
dollar -&,D.." --3i>ipedia
Sovereigns S1B6,-%S
7iving Souls coming out of mother7s womb onto
the land of one of the se,eral states of America
are 6So,ereign6, 6(reemen6, 6(ree inhabitant6,
and 6(reeborn6 unless that right is gi,en up
>nowingl%, intentionall%, and ,oluntaril% upon full
disclosure-
2mendment >
6The powers not delegated to the United States
b% the Constitution, ---are reser,ed to ---the
people-6
1S citi=ens (Chattel /ropert%) are belligerents in
the field and are
6sub'ect to its 'urisdiction6
(3ashington DC)
U-S- citi'ens are :;th 2mendment citi=ens
implemented b% the Ci,il 4ights Act of !$##
originall% established for the newl% freed sla,es-
That is to sa%: 6Eow sla,es of the corporate
go,ernment plantation6
%he people are Sovereign
6---at the 4e,olution, the so,ereignt% de,ol,ed on
the people) and the% are trul% the so,ereigns of
the countr%, but the% are so,ereigns without
sub9ects--- with none to go,ern but themsel,es)
the citi'ens of America are eAual as fellow
citi'ens, and as 9oint tenants in the so,ereignt%-6
--Chisholm ,- .eorgia (US) 1 Dall +!5, +:+, ! 0 2d ++<, +::
VDall !"5= pp+"!-+"1
Sovereign
A chief ruler with supreme power; one possessing
sovereignty. 7q. v.:;
=. !n the ,nited tates the sovereignt$ resides in the +od$
of the people.
Aide Rutherf. !nst. =3=.
--&ou,ier7s 0aw 4e,ised
#th 2dition, !$:#
"K!t isL the people,
to whom all authority belongs."
FF%homas Befferson to pencer Roane, 23=2.
"%here is no such thing as a power of inherent overeignty in
the government of the ,nited tates. !n this country
sovereignty resides in the #eople, and (ongress can
eHercise no power which they have not, by their (onstitution
entrusted to it; all else is withheld." FFBulliard v. $reenman, 229 ,..
. 4=2
A piece of paper does not give people the right to wal& the
earth as one of $odIs creatures. #eople have that right
without the (onstitution, without the Amendments some
people call the ".ill of Rights," and without a .irth (ertificate.
/o #olitical or Royal figure can give one the right to be free
or ta&e that right away. %he idea that one is "given" what one
already has is an illusion created for the purposes of control,
Toda%, almost all mothers, blac> or white,
un>nowingl% inform on their own babies- Ta>e a
loo> at the so-called 6&irth Certificate6
C24T(CAT2 ?( 0C2 &4TB where the mother
signs and %ou will see the title of the bo; stating in
small print:
)M$%H,* $* $%H,* .03$*M20%).
The word 6?TB246 ma>es the mother )an
in#ormant.) &% signing the 6&irth Certificate6 as an
informer, she contracts with the go,ernment putting
her child and her child7s future labor as collateral for
the national debt (ser,itude--sla,er%)- The father or
mother can rescind the contract within three
business da%s (Truth-in-0ending)-
Since the &irth Certificate neither lists the father as
the husband nor lists the wife7s acceptance of the
father7s surname as her own but has the mother7s
maiden name instead, the bab% is considered a
B2S%2*+- &astards are therefore under the care
and control of the /riest 4ule (democrac%) and can
be ta>en from the mother at an% time-
The hospitals recei,e a fairl% large monetar%
benefit (S=,<<<, more or less, per child) from the
corporate go,ernment for ha,ing &irth Certificates
filled out and signed-
%he i=ard o# $=
6The primar% control and custod% of infants is with
the go,ernment6
--Tillman C- 4oberts- !<$ So- #1
power, and manipulation. uch an idea eHists only when
people allow it to eHist or are ignorant of their rights.
Judicial ame
(Appellation)
Eame of a li,ing soul
in a flesh and blood man-
(7man7 includes woman and child)-
*ohn *ames, Christianson
Eote upper and lower case
(/roper b% 4ules of 2nglish .rammar)
Christian Appellation: *ohn *ames
(Sole propert%)
(amil% Eame: Christianson
(Common propert%)
Bere is an e;ample of how
*ac>, the author, declares who he is:
*ac>, the son of *ac>, of the famil% named
Sle,>off (surname), a li,ing soul in a flesh and
blood man on the land, Fhereinafter , 8e, 8%, or
8%selfG, is an American ha,ing So,ereign status
FDeclaration of ndependence: anno Domini,
Se,enteen se,ent%-si; for AmericaG, a nati,e of
California, thereb% being a California national,
California being one of the 4epublics and a nation
unto itself Fan Act establishing go,ernment in
California: anno Domini,
eighteen hundred fort%-nineG
Legal ame
is a 6/risoner of war) name
(ictitious 6 no# de guerre " name
for a non-li,ing entit%:
also referred to as the 6Strawman6
andPor 6%ransmitting 1tility6
*?BE D?2
Eame is in all capital letters
a->-a- all CA/S
which is in a format called
-apitus +iminutio Maxima
-apitus +iminutio Maxima
(8a;imum diminished status)
means that a man7s condition changes from
freedom to bondage
and becomes a sla,e or an item of in,entor%-
FF.lac&s +aw 'ictionary, Revised 4th "dition 28?3
*ohn C- Doe
Eote: middle initial
(Eo name at all--A fiction)
(irst Eame: *?BE
8iddle nitial: C-
0ast Eame: D?2
A fictional persona
being suret% for the debt
as a fiction in commerce
Also >nown as an I ,ns 7egis J
which means Wlegal entit%O-
t is non-human, Wci,ill% deadO-
0oo> at the name on Dri,ers 0icenses, Social Securit% cards, Credit
Cards, Deeds, &an> Accounts, etc-
0ame in all -2/S
Maintaining Sovereignty
1.S. citi=ens were declared enemies of the U-S- b%
(-D-4- b% 2;ecuti,e ?rder Eo- 1<+< and ratified b%
Congress on 8arch 5, !5==, +$ Stat- !
(D4 changed the meaning of The Trading with the
2nem% Act of December #, !5!" b% changing the
word 6without6 to citi'ens 6within6 the United
States
As
a result of a &ingIs uncontrolled spending spree, *rance had
severe inflation which resulted in a monetary crisis. A group
of people stormed the .astille in #aris on Buly 25th 2@38,
and the *rench Revolution was born. %he IRights of -anI
was declared on August =?, 2@38. .y midsummer of 2@8=,
the &ing was dethroned and the royal family was imprisoned.
ince the people no longer had any use for a &ing and
queen, +ouis NA! was beheaded on Banuary =2, 2@86 and
-arie Antoinette was beheaded later that year.
%herefore, it is the people who are really in control. !t is
intended for government to be the servants and the people to
be the masters. !t is better for the government to fear the
people than the people fear their government.
6--whene,er an% (orm of .o,ernment becomes
destructi,e of these ends, it is the 4ight of the
/eople to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new
.o,ernment,--6
--Declaration of ndependence, *ul% +, !""#
6f e,er a time should come, when ,ain and
aspiring men shall possess highest seats in
go,ernment, our countr% will stand in need of its
e;perienced patriots to pre,ent its ruin-6 --Samuel
Adams
/eople become suret% for the debt b% a number of
different wa%s- ?ne wa% is b% a Birth -erti#icate
when the bab%7s footprint is placed thereon before it
touches the land- The certificate is recorded at a
Count% 4ecorder, then sent to a Secretar% of State
which sends it to the &ureau of Census of the
Commerce Department- This process con,erts a
man7s life, labor, and propert% to an asset of the US
go,ernment when this person recei,es a benefit
from the go,ernment such as a dri,ers license, food
stamps, free mail deli,er%, etc- This person
becomes a fictional persona in commerce- The
&irth Certificate is an unre,ealed 6%rust
.nstrument6 originall% designed for the children of
the newl% freed blac> sla,es after the !+th
Amendment- The US has the abilit% to ta; and
regulate commerce-
The go,ernment issued Birth -erti#icate is now a
*egistered Security which initiall% has an
estimated ,alue of ?ne 8illion dollars- The% are
circulated around the world as collateral for loans
and entered on the asset side of ledgers 9ust li>e
an% other securit%- That is wh% the% are initiall% filed
with the Commerce Department-
The central ban>s now ha,e a negotiable
instrument against which credit is ad,anced b% the
international funding communit%, namel% The 3orld
&an>, nternational 8onetar% (und, &an> for
nternational Settlements, &an> of 2ngland, (ederal
&an> of America etc
3reeborn
(ree inhabitant
(reeman
(reeholder
A member of the So,ereign
63e the people---6
Bond Servant
To co,er the debt in !5== and future debt, the
corporate go,ernment determined and established
the ,alue of the future labor of each indi,idual in its
9urisdiction to be S#=<,<<<- A bond of S#=<,<<< is
set on each Certificate of 0i,e &irth- The certificates
are bundled together into sets and then placed as
securities on the open mar>et- These certificates
are then purchased b% the (ederal 4eser,e andPor
foreign ban>ers- The purchaser is the 6holder6 of
6Title-6 This process made each and e,er% person
in this 9urisdiction a bond ser,ant-
6Eone are more ensla,ed
than those whofalsel%% belie,e
the% are free-6
--.oethe
.nherent rights
present at birth
but not necessaril% hereditar%
1nalienable rights
4ights from .od
that are not lienable-
.nalienable rights
4ights from the corporate go,ernment that can be
liened against or ta>en awa% at an% time- Cer%
much li>e a (privilege(-
1nalienable vs .nalienable
,lector
4$%,*
The 6,lectoral college o# electors6 are the ones
that actuall% determine who will be /resident - not
an% popular ,ote, poll, media, or statistic-
An ,lector
is Eot sub9ect to
e;clusi,e legislati,e power
)*egistering to vote) is an admission that the
declarant is sub9ect to the e;clusi,e legislati,e
power of the corporate Congress and is a !+th
Amendment citi'en residing in federal territor%-
6Xthe right to vote at an% electionX is deniedI
except #or participation in rebellion, or other
of Congress-
Almost an%one can
become an elector-
Did not ha,e to be a registered ,oter
or a part% member-
Currentl%, there are
DFC elector positions-
t now ta>es 1"< 2lectoral Cotes
to win the /residential 2lection-
The total number of electors a state can ha,e is
eAual to that state7s total representation in
Congress- 0ess populated states such as
3%oming, Eorth Da>ota, and Cermont ha,e at
least one 4epresentati,e and two Senators-
Therefore, the% ha,e onl% three electoral ,otes-
California, for instance, with :1 4epresentati,es
and two Senators, ha,e :+ electors-
6Eumerous constitutional amendments ha,e been
introduced in the Congress see>ing to alter the
2lectoral College or replace it with a direct
popular ,ote) howe,er, no proposal has e,er
passed the Congress-6 --3i>ipedia
8embers of Congress or an%one holding an%
(ederal office cannot be an elector based on what
the Constitution refers to as:
7trust or pro#it-7
The (ounding (athers did not intend to ha,e
institutionali=ed party systems such as
Democrats, 0ibertarians, and or 4epublicans-
crimeX6 --Section 1 of the !+th Amendment, U-S- Constitution
4ather than remaining a state national, one
becomes a U-S- citi'en participating in the rebellion
b% ,oting in the corporate go,ernment s%stem and
or signing up for benefits and pri,ileges-
6Stop and thin> for a moment as to ,oting- 3hen
%ou ,ote for an office to be filled in the UET2D
STAT2S ?( A824CA or one of its SU&-
C?4/?4AT?ES (TB2 STAT2 ?( T2YAS), %ou
ha,e ,oted to fill a fictional corporate position
designed to represent the C?4/?4AT?E, not a
political position to represent the people- All
elections in the 6United States6 are nothing more
than pro;% fights in a board roomN6
--2d: &rannum (Secretar% of /ri,ati'ation)
/ro,isional .o,ernment) 4epublic of Te;as)
There are more people recei,ing go,ernment
benefits toda% than e,er- 8ost of these people are
Democrats and ,ote for people who are Democrats-
4eason being) the Democratic part% pro,ides and
creates more benefit programs and ser,ices to
obtain ,otes and popularit%- Also, there are more
people coming from 8e;ico, legall% or illegall%,
amnest% or not, who >now that the benefits are
mostl% created b% Democrats and will alwa%s ,ote
for the Democrats or con,ince others to do so- As
these numbers increase, it will be ,er% difficult for
an% non-democrat to win an election-
"%he elite and the major media have the people pitting the
democrats against the republicans or vise versa.
%he democrats get in, the people find negative consequences
and then vote republican.
%he republicans get in, the people find negative consequences
and then vote democrat neHt election.
!n the meantime, the oneFworld government eliteIs agenda is
being fulfilled.
#eople have to wa&e up and realize that this is a corporation
doing business disguised as the former government and is not
the government originally instituted in the 2@99Is.
top playing their game."
FFBac&;lev&off =998
6Hou >now, comrades- That thin> in regard to this:
consider it completel% unimportant who in the part%
will ,ote, or how) but what is e;traordinaril%
important is this - who will count the ,otes, and
how-6
--*oseph Stalin
An 2lector7s choice (election) or decision counts
li>e one on the &oard of Directors
A ,oter7s vote
is a recommendation onl%
Cotes are counted at a poll
or polling station-
6/oll6 is defined as an inAuir%
into public opinion-
6ustice System
)61S%91S) S'S%,M
3ree inhabitants are under .od7s
commandments, one7s conscience, and the
2nglish Common 0aw (*ur%)
-iti=ens within the Eorthwest territor% are under
the written legislated laws created b% Congress
which is ad9udicated ,ia the *udicial &ranch of
go,ernment established b% 62rticle ...6 of the
Constitution
So-called *udicial s%stem
and 0egislature
are under the /resident
-ost courts today are Article I
or Article II courts.
Separate from 2;ecuti,e and 0egislati,e
branches of go,ernment
6serving the /eople6
under Constitutional mandates-
The so-called *udicial is not separate
although it ma% appear that wa%-
8ost so-called courts toda%
are listed in +un J Bradstreet as
a private company or corporation,
operating as a business for profit-
judicial ,enue federal (feudal) ,enue
Ministerial court s%stem
(o ser*e the people--"er*ant"
Ad#inistrati$e court s%stem
)esponsi'le to the ad%inistration
--"/pport"
8eneral 7aw
Common 0aw
"%he nature of law is to maintain justice."
FF.astiat 2343
/rivate, internal law
"...the conversion of the law into an instrument of plunder."
"%hus, in order to ma&e plunder appear just and sacred to
many consciences, it is only necessary for the law to decree
and sanction it." FF.astiat 2343
-ommon 7aw
(0aw not written)
Common 0aw is based on custom and usage and
includes the Magna -arta and The great -harter
o# the 3orest
Common 0aw has two basic reAuirements:
!- Do not ?ffend An%one
-ivil 7aw
based on the 4oman Ci,il 0aw
Co,ers a ,ast number of ,olumes of te;t that e,en
attorne%s can7t absorb or comprehend such as:
!- 4egulations
1- Codes
=- 4ules
+- Statutes
2+ Bonor all contracts
The 7th 2mendment guarantees a trial b% 9ur%
according to the rules of the common law when
the ,alue in contro,ers% e;ceeds Twent% dollars
Fin sil,er specie) not (4E7sG
)hen inKustice becomes law,
resistance becomes duty.)
F %homas Befferson
There are now o,er #< million of these so-called
laws on the boo>s- Deep in mind 6ignorance of the
law is no e;cuse6 2,er%one must be guilt% of
something- The more so-called laws, the more
re,enue generated-
/The more corrupt the ,tate0
the more numerous the la!s./
FF(ornelius %acitus 7c. 55F22@ A.'.:
/The more numerous the la!s0
the more corrupt the state./
FF.astiat law 7286?F:
/rior to ban>ruptc% of !5==
6/ublic 7aw6
Eow the so-called courts administer 6/ublic /olicy6
through the
61ni#orm -ommercial -ode6
(instituted in !5#")
/ublic /olicy and 1--
-onstitution
Supreme 0aw of the land restricting a central
go,ernment, appointed and elected officials, and
their staff-
The 6organic6 Constitution and its amendments
are created b% the states united to institute,
restrict, and restrain a limited central go,ernment
and to protect the people from such central
go,ernment from infringing on the peoples .od-
gi,en rights-
Eo stare decisis
8eans no precedent binds an% court, because the%
ha,e no law standard of absolute right and wrong
b% which to measure a rulingZwhat is legal toda%
ma% not be legal tomorrow-
So-called 6court decisions6 are administrati,e
opinions onl% and are basicall% decided on the basis
of
63hat is best for the corporate go,ernment-6
8ost so-called laws toda% don7t protect %ou against
them, but protects them against %ou-
8rand 6ury composed of
1: people who are So,ereigns
--8agna Carta, Article #!
so-called 8rand 6ury
composed of B; US citi'ens
6udicial -ourts
with real *udicial ?fficers and
real *uries who can 9udge the law
as well as the facts
*ur% decisions cannot be re,ersed b% the 9udge
The so-called courts are actuall%
-orporate 2rbitration Boards
Consisting of an Arbitrator
(so-called 6*udge6)
and sometimes a panel of corporate emplo%ees
(so-called 6*uries6)
/anel decisions (recommendation)
can be re,ersed b% the Arbitrator
6udges
(Eo blac> robes)
The 9udicial officer is actuall% a coordinator who
sits in on behalf of the people, for the good of the
people, who swears b% full oath of office to abide
b% and uphold the Constitution, and is there to
gi,e presenters and counselors eAual opportunit%
to present their case, with fairness and un bias to
all, whether it is pertaining to a contro,ers% or one
suspected of a crime or in9ustice, to produce and
pro,ide an impartial and fair trial or suite in 0aw
b% bringing forth the facts and the law to be
Kudged by the people who are peers-
The people are the ultimate 69udges6 of both the
law and the facts-
The so-called 9udge, a corporate )blac"9robe)
referee, an actor (acting 9udge), on a fictitious
stage, sitting under a gold or %ellow fringe flag,
becomes the 6captain6 or 6master6 of that ship or
encla,e and has absolute power to ma>e the rules
at his whim as he goes) all the while tal>ing to or
about the fictitious /24S?E-
The so-called 9udge will sometimes not allow all of
the facts to be heard or the so-called law e;amined
because of his bias or is following orders of the
corporate so-called go,ernment who ma% e,en
want to ha,e the case sealed from the public-
f one does not conform to the 9udge7s wishes, the
9udge, without proper cause, will send the non-
conformist to a psychiatric ward for e,aluation
(intimidation) and sometimes left there to be
drugged and not released until one is willing to
conform to the 9udge7s bias-
This has happened man% times in the latter %ears and has been
personall% witnessed b% 8%self concerning friends-
6---the 9udiciar% has usurped the law for its own
purposes and replaced constitutional guarantees
with a s%stem in which 9udges rule b% decree-6--
www-tulanelin>-com
-ommon 7aw -ourt
is a )-ourt o# *ecord) that proceeds according
to Common 0aw, >eeps a record of the
proceedings, has power to fine or imprison, and
the tribunal is independent of the magistrate- (8a%
also ha,e a seal)
These so9called courts are not 6in law6 but are
simpl% acting on behalf of a corporate business
enforcing it7s contracts under the disguise of 2Auit%
Courts, Superior courts, (ederal courts, District
courts, 8unicipal Courts--8erchant 0aw, 8ilitar%
0aw, 8arshall 0aw, Summar% Court 8artial
proceedings, and administrati,e ad hoc tribunals
(similar to Admiralt%P8aritime) and appear to be
go,erned b% 6The 8anual of Courts 8artial6 (under
Acts of 3ar) and the 63ar /owers Act of !5==-6
7aw#ul or Unlawful
&ased on .od7s law, the common law, and an%
law that an% prudent man will abide b% under
normal circumstances without gi,ing up one7s
rights or infringing upon another7s rights-
7egal or llegal
All legal actions are pursued under
the )color o# law)
Color of law means
6appears to be) law, but is not
6&ecause of what appears to be lawful commands
on the surface, man% Citi'ens, because of their
respect for what appears to be law, are cunningl%
coerced into wai,ing their rights due to ignorance-6
--United States Supreme Court
US- ,- 8in>er ,
=:< US !"5 at !$" (!5:#)
%rial by 6ury
of one7s peers,
whether Ci,il or Criminal-
The people ha,e
the ultimate sa%
in an% matter-
/ro,ides 6hearings6
whene,er possible
for total control
unless one insists on
ha,ing a Kury trial-
"1ur$ Trial" 7recommendation: is not the same as "Trial +$
2ur$ of oneIs peers."
oFcalled judges have been &nown to
overturn jury trial recommendations.
Hearings are not mentioned
in the constitutions-
Suit 2ction
-rime
(a noun)
n9ur% to a man, woman, or child)
or damaged their propert%
8ust be an in9ured part%
8ust show actual harm or damage
-riminal offence
6criminal6 is an ad9ecti,e) not a noun
An offence is not a crime
but is a ,iolation of a polic%
2nforcement of policies
The name 6/olice6
came from 6policies6
2ccusor
/lainti##
.n#ormant
-omplainant
2ccused
Eo defense necessar% unless e,idence and
witnesses is o,erwhelming-
+e#endant
Eeeds to defend against
guilt assumption-
2ccusation
)-laim)
other terms used: 6true bill,6 6libel6
).n9Kury)
0atin for infringement-of rights
)-harge)
Charged with---(a negati,e)
7payment or retribution is the positive:
6an assertion that someone is guilt% of a fault or
offence6
6(criminal law) a pleading describing some wrong or
offense6
0hen as&ed, "'o you understand the charges...O", actually
means "'o you stand under the charges...O"
)rit)
(orm of written command in the name of one in
authorit% such as a So,ereign, such as a member
of 63e the people6
Some e;amples are as follows:
rit o# Habeas corpus,
)Motion)
6A formal application to a court (so-called 9udge) for
its (his or her) order, ruling, 9udgement or decree-6
--&allentines 0aw Dictionar%
A motion must be supported b% an affida,it but the
affida,it cannot be read during the hearing-
--lectlaw-com
6An order to bring forth the bod%6) usuall% from 9ail
or prison-
rit o# Mandamus
6Commanding an official to perform a ministerial
act-6
6Used onl% when all other 9udicial remedies fail6
rit o# /rohibition
6An order prohibiting an act6
rit o# -ertiorari
6An order demanding the record6
Although most definitions today only mentions that writs can
be issued by a judge or are a court order, in reality, almost
anyone, eHcept ", citizens" 7subjects or slaves:, can issue
such writs. 0rits are tools of the common law.
6hearings are conducted as oral arguments in
support of motions,6 --3i>ipedia
,mit writs Submit documents
rit o# 2rror 2ppeal
)/resent)
/resent as ones self-
)*epresent)
deri,ed from re-present-
To present as someone else-
To re-present as the 62ns 0egis6
a->-a- ST4A38AE name
f %ou are represented, %ou are a ward of the court
and are incompetent or a 9u,enile-
)4enue)
(A place)
6the count% from which the 9ur% are to come, who
are to tr% the issue6 --&ou,ier7s 0aw Dictionar%
)*e9venue)
Eow often seen as )revenue) which refers to
monies collected b% changing ones ,enue to a
corporate go,ernment ,enue-
)in9law)
!i+e+ "on-in-law" or a "co*enant in law"$
Submersed in (true) law-
Dealing with 0aw itself-
)at 7aw)
",ttorney at law"
Can be at something
but not submersed in it
or a part of it-
?n the outside of law, not in it-
)/rivate) side )/ublic) side
man, woman, child
6one of the people6
6a li,ing soul6
6flesh and blood6
)/erson)
defined as a corporation, trust, partnership,---
6artificial legal entit%6
All fictions
mirror-li>e identit% recogni'able in written form)
usuall% in all caps
The word 6person6 originated from the 0atin word
6persona6 deri,ed from 2truscan 6phersu6 which
means 6mas>-6
s the ST4A38AE masAuerading
as the real manM
)Husband)
)i#e)
)Spouse)
Eeither feminine nor masculine-
A spouse is a 6partnered trust6 produced b%
marr%ing or merging two trust accounts-
)the people)
man>ind
)/ersons)
,arious trusts, partnerships, corporations, or
fictional entities of some >ind-
)Sui 6uris)
0atin, of one7s own right
?ne who has all the rights
to which a freemen is entitled)
one who is not under the power of another,
as a sla,e, a minor, and the li>e-
To ma>e a ,alid contract, one must,
in general, be sui 9uris-
www-lectlaw-com
Appearing on one7s own behalf-- meaning %ou are
not beholden to or obligated to an%one in or out of
go,ernment-
4eferring to people who present themsel,es as a
li,ing soul
in a flesh and blood bod%
presenting the law and the facts-
)/ro se)
(e-presents one7s self 6in person6
or 6in persona6 (mas>)
as a fiction-
Ser,ing as one7s own attorne%-
A pri,ilege that can be
ta>en awa% at an%time
,nited tates v 'ougherty, 4@6 * =d 2226, 22==
)/ro per)
short for 6propria persona6
meaning 6proper person6
Since 6/erson6 is a fiction
%ou are telling them %ou are
in %our proper person (mas>)
and not a man b% an% means-
Deep in mind that pro per
is better than pro se-
*urisdiction not admitted,
if no attorne% pleads-
2##irmation
testif% to the facts
written testimon% of the facts
witness statement of the facts
+eclaration
To declare
6---b% these /resents6
"...being of sound mind, over the age of =2 years, competent,
and having first hand &nowledge of the facts stated herein,
do hereby tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the
truth and herein say, saith, declare, proclaim, and claim as
follows;..."
2##idavit
(statutor% ,enue)
6An affida,it is an oath in writing, sworn before and
attested b% him FofficerPnotar%G who hath authorit% to
administer the same-6
Spea" the %ruth $ath
)My word is My Bond)
Cannot swear or ma>e an oath
8atthew ::==-=", *ames ::!1
an e;ternal pledge
to swear or affirm
usuall% under penalt% of per9ur%
6 do not accept6
6 ta>e exception) to that
6 $bKect6
6?b9ection, please6
-ounsel
or 6Counsellor in-0aw6
0aw%er
defined here as
?ne who studies
and understands
the law or laws
0o license reAuired
0o registration reAuired
0o &ar card reAuired
*ust need to >now the 0aw-
The 0aw is simple
Do not ?ffend An%one
Bonor all contracts
And of course
one has to recogni'e
.od7s 0aw
some refer to as
6Eatures law6
such as 6gra,it%6
or 6breathe air to li,e-6
Another basic choice one ma% li,e b%
is the .olden 4ule
6Do unto others
as %ou would ha,e them
do unto %ou-6
And others ac>nowledge
and abide b% the
Ten Commandments
2ttorney
an )Esquire) (&ritish nobilit%)
a title meaning 6Shield &earer6
Attorne%-at-law
The defense Attorne%, the /rosecutor, and the so-
called *udge are all attorne%s doing business in the
corporate administrati,e courts (tribunals) of the
U-S- as agents of the Crown of 2ngland
Attorne%s swear an oath
to uphold the
"B,) ,01-,(-02"+
The &A4 ASS?CAT?E is registered with the
ET24EA0 42C2EU2 S24CC2 as a
D0:(c!(F! organi=ation
li>e a religious ta; e;empt organi'ation-
Some people belie,e that the first letter of B.2.*.
stands for 6&ritish6+
(&ritish Accredited 4egistr%)-
This could be a m%th, although the 6bar6 term ma%
ha,e originated in 0ondon ha,ing to do with an
obstruction that denies or allows entrance such as
6raising the bar6 being a bridge or a gate-
The &A4 in the U-S- was first organi'ed in
8ississippi in !$1:-
The "integrated bar" mo,ement, meaning 6the
condition precedent to the right to practice law,6 was
initiated in the US in !5!+ b% the American
*urisprudence Societ%-
--Black's Law Dictionary, 4th edition
TAT! "F #AL$F"%&$A
63hen onl% attorne%s can understand the codes,
statutes, and regulations (so-called laws), then onl%
These laws are simple
eas% to understand
not hard to >now
and do not change
There are no 6codes6
Almost an%one
can become a 0aw%er
attorne%s should be reAuired to obe% them-6 --*ac>)
Sle,>off--1<<1
Should . hire an attorney?
%he Supreme -ourt
#or %he 1nited States o# 2merica
the &ITED ,TATE, ,&PRE#E CO&RT
%he +istrict -ourt
#or %he 1nited States o# 2merica
were implemented for territories
that were not states-
the &ITED ,TATE, DI,TRICT CO&RT
7awyer or counsel
for the states united
&ITED ,TATE, DI,TRICT ATTORE3
/rosecutor
6n the earl% da%s of our 4epublic, WprosecutorO
was simpl% an%one who ,oluntaril% went before
the grand *ur% with a complaint-6
FF,nited tates v. andford, *ed. (ase /o.2?, ==2
7(.(t.'.(. 239?:
/*$S,-1%$*
A go,ernment official who
conducts criminal prosecutions
on behal# o# the corporate S%2%,-
An attorne% who wor>s for the 0?CA0, STAT2 or
(2D24A0 go,ernment to bring and litigate so-
called criminal cases-
At the 0?CA0 le,el, the prosecutor will usuall% be
the C?UETH DST4CT ATT?4E2H7s ?ffice- n
some cases the prosecutor ma% be from the CTH
ATT?4E2H7s ?ffice- The /4?S2CUT?4 re,iews
e,idence to determine if a complaint ma% be filed-
-ounsel to help the accused
or the lawyer who >nows
and studies the law
Defense 2ttorney
A so-called court can safel% assume 9urisdiction
when one is re-presented b% an attorne%-
8ust ha,e damaged party
Compels performance
Eo damaged part% is necessar%-
8aintains rights, freedoms, and liberties
of the people
0o rights e;cept Ci,il 4ights-
and pri,ileges that can be ta>en awa% at an% time-
4estricts freedoms and liberties-
Unalienable rights, fundamental rights, substantial
rights and other rights of li,ing souls are all
US citi'ens are at the merc% of go,ernment and the
administrati,e courts and tribunals
protected b% The 0aw and protected b% The
6organic6 Constitution and its amendments-
Ser,ants (sub9ectsP bond-ser,ants)
cannot sue the 8aster
(Corporate go,ernment)
unless allowed to-
The first ten articles
of amendment to the constitution
are sometimes refereed to as
6Bill o# *ights6
which is incorrect-
The% are not a 6&ill6
but are simpl% 6amendments-6
The actual 6Bill o# *ights6 was a declaration in
!#$5 b% Ding 3illiam and @ueen 8ar% to their lo%al
sub9ects of the &ritish crown-
f %ou are in this 9urisdiction,
%ou are a sub9ect of the crown as wellM
+ue /rocess is reAuired
Due /rocess is optional--Sometimes .estapo-li>e
tactics without reser,ation-
%nnocent until proven guilty
6Eo Bill $# 2ttainder
or ,x9post 3acto 0aw,
shall be passed-6
FF(onstitution, in Article 2, ection 8, #aragraph 6
"&uilty" until pro,en "not guilty"
(2speciall%, when faced with issues relating to the
corporate go,ernment, its agents, and or its
highwa%men-)
The so-called 9udge will as> if one is 6guilt%6 or 6not
guilt%-6
Alwa%s claim to be 6innocent-6
A 6plea6 enters one into a binding contract with the
so-called court-
6urors Kudge the law
as well as the #acts
*urors are the last bastion of hope
to free one from t%rannical or un9ust laws imposed
b% go,ernment-
J'ry n'llification
6*ur% nullification occurs when a 9ur% returns a
,erdict of Inot guilt%J despite the common belief
that the defendant is guilt% of the ,iolation
charged- The 9ur% in effect nullifies a law that it
belie,es is immoral, unconstitutional or is wrongl%
applied to the defendant whose fate it is charged
with deciding- Traditionall% 9urors are free to
disregard the 9udge if the% feel he is part of the
s%stem of oppression- *ur% nullification is an
essential protection for citi'ens against
go,ernmental t%rann%-6 --*ohn Tiffan%)
American(ree/ress-net
The 9udge instructs the 9urors to tr% only the facts
(not the code, statue, et cetera)-
The 9udge usuall% gi,es the statute, regulation,
code, rule, etc- that will most li>el% con,ict the
defendant-
f there is an% dispute with the
so-called law, the 9udge will declare
6 sa% what the law is6-
-& there is any %ore disp/te with the law,
the 3/dge will say,
6 will hold %ou in contempt if %ou continue in this
manner-6
8arcella &roo>s testimon% on ,ideo
before the Eational /ress Club
on Eo,ember =, 1<<# (!+ min 1+ sec)
-rime
A crime is an offence against a public law- This
word, in its most general signification,
comprehends all offences but, in its limited sense,
All crimes are considered
Co##ercial cri#es-
6An% of the following t%pes of crimes ((ederal or
State): ?ffenses against the re,enue laws)
it is confined to #elony-
! Chitt%, .en- /r- !+-
1- The term misdemeanor includes e,er% offence
inferior to felon%, but punishable b% indictment or
b%-particular prescribed proceedings-
=- The term o##ence, also, ma% be considered as,
ha,ing the same meaning, but is usuall%, b% itself,
understood to be a crime not indictable but
punishable, summaril%, or b% the forfeiture of, a
penalt%-
&urn7s *ust- 8isdemeanor-
+- Crimes are defined and punished b% statutes
and b% the common law- 8ost common law
offences are as well >nown, and as precisel%
ascertained, as those which are defined b%
statutes) %et, from the difficult% of e;actl% defining
and describing e,er% act which ought to be
punished, the ,ital and preser,ing principle has
been adopted, that all immoral acts which tend to
the pre9udice of the communit% are punishable b%
courts of 9ustice-
1 Swift7s Dig-
All from &ou,ier7s 0aw Dictionar%
burglary) counterfeiting) forger%) "idnapping)
larcen%) robbery) illegal sale or possession of
deadl% weapons) prostitution (including soliciting,
procuring, pandering, white sla,ing, >eeping house
of ill fame, and li>e offenses)) extortion) swindling
and confidence games) and attempting to commit,
conspiring to commit, or compounding an% of the
foregoing crimes- 2ddiction to narcotic drugs and
use of marihuana will be treated as i# such were
commercial crime.)-
1" C(4 Sec "1-!! (+-!-<1 2dition)
"4oor people ha*e access to the co/rts in the sa%e sense
that the 1hristians had access to the lions+"- 5/dge 6arl
5ohnson, 5r+
6---there simpl% is too much law (go,ernment) to
e,en function - we cannot get out of our own wa%,
we ha,e tied oursel,es in >nots - when we were
supposed to ha,e a limited go,ernment and the
purpose of the Constitution was to tie go,ernment
down to the 2Y/42SS powers gi,en it- There
simpl% is nothing left that go,ernment does not
touch, ha,e its hands on, and has not made a mess
of- 8ore law, more go,ernment will not sa,e us -
the% are the problem-6 --from an article written in 1<<# b%
Attorne% .ar% Lerman, titled: 6South Da>ota .o,ernment Acted n
Concert Against The /eople6
8ost courts ha,e become the collection agenc% of
the corporate go,ernment s%stem for the debt
created b% said s%stem to be paid in part b% the
people who come before the so-called court-
7aw#ul determination
6udicial determination
6The people7s one supreme Court is the count%
Court of record) the highest Court in the 0and-
?nce it rules, the United States Supreme Courts,
(ederal or State, can not Auestion the ruling) read
the "th amendment- The State and federal Courts
are inferior tribunals to 3e the /eople7s one
supreme Court- The one supreme Court e;ist
where,er the /eople con,ene itN ---the /eople
ha,e agreed to con,ene it at the count% seat and
the count% 9udge is electFedG b% the people as the
administrator of their one supreme Court of
4ecord- Be ma>es no 9udicial ruling- Be is onl%
there to >eep the Court open and see that it is run
orderl% and enforce the 9udgments of the Court of
the /eople- 3hen the 9ur% is called and has been
sworn from among the /eople the% are the twel,e
7egal determination
6TB242 S E? 0A3H24 ?4 *UD.2 TBAT CAE
?4 300 .? A.AEST TBS C?0?4A&02
SHST28NN6
6Under this s%stem, the 9udge ma>es 6legal
determinations6 which is in accord with the creditors
of this countr%- Eo 0aw%er (0%72r) will demand a
6*UDCA0 D2T248EAT?E6- 0egal
Determinations A42 E?T appealable as are
*udicial DeterminationsNN 0egal determinations are
an%thing the 9udge sa%s the% are under their
colorable /ublic polic% laws- Bowe,er, *udicial
determinations are in accordance with the /ublic
0aw and are sub9ect to C?Estitutional constraints-6
6Since the 2rie 44 ,- Tomp>ins decision in !5=$,
the courts ha,e been operating under /ublic /olic%,
in the interest of the 6nations creditors,6 instead of
/ublic 0aw in accord with the C?Estitution-6
6The 9udges are not allowed to consider an% case
9ustices sitting as the one supreme Court of
4ecord for the /eople of that count%-6
%homas 6e##erson worried about that the Courts
would o,erstep their authorit% and instead of
interpreting the law would begin ma>ing law, an
oligarch%, the rule of few o,er man%-
The ,er% first Supreme Court *ustice, *ohn *a%,
said, 6Americans should select and prefer
Christians as their rulers-6
law prior to !5=$N &UT, there is one case, Clearfield
Trust, et al ,- US, =!$ US =#= (!5+=), (see
attachment)- All courts are Administrati,e Tribunals,
operating under a Colorable Admiralt% *urisdiction
called Statutor% *urisdiction and all 9udges are
Administrators, and all 0aw%ers (/ronounced 0%72r)
are officers of the colorable courts-6
6The whole 9udiciar% is administering the &an>ruptc%
of the US, declared b% 4oose,elt in !5==NN---6
--1<<+ &ill%-*oe--8auldin
2,er%one is responsible for
their actions and words spo>en-
t does not matter what position
or title one has in life-
The United States Supreme Court ga,e #ull
immunity against both ci,il and criminal
prosecution for perKury to *udges, Attorne%s, Court
4eporters, Stenographers, 0aw 2nforcement
?fficers and 2;pert 3itnesses,
who testif% for the STAT2-
See: A &rief on *udicial mmunit%
and *udicial mmunit% ,s Due /rocess
(he deck is stacked against
the ordinary people and e*en the innocent+
Prisons for incarceration
/*.S$0S 3$* /*$3.%
To /rotect Societ%
The responsibilit%, accountabilit%,
and liabilit% for incarceration
belongs to the state-
A Commercial &usiness
8ore and more prisons toda% are pri,atel% owned
and run as a profit ma>ing commercial enterprise
creating products and ser,ices for sale- t is
belie,ed that man% 9udges hold stoc> or an interest
in these pri,ati'ed prisons- These commerciall% run
prisons do not ha,e the best interest of the nmates
or Staff in mind but the bottom line--/4?(T- The%
need a continuous suppl% of low-cost labor (sla,es)
to produce products in order to increase profits-
2,en when the crime rate is down, these pri,ateers
lobb% the appropriate go,ernmental and 9udicial
authorities to increase the incarceration rate in
order to add to their alread% substantial profit ta>ing-
There are no chec>s and balances for monitoring
this t%pe of s%stem-
To name a few pri,ateers:
Corrections Corporation of America (CCA)--
founded in !5$=, based in Eash,ille,
Tennessee, now operates more than ""
facilities across the USA
3ac>enhut Ser,ices, nc- of (lorida
3ac>enhut Corrections Corp-(3CC)--
nmates are not merchandise
to be sold or used for profit-
The initial purpose of prisons is to protect the
people from criminals-
/risons were also created to punish the guilt% for
offensi,e crimes against ,ictims of such crimes-
The amount of punishment
was to fit the crime-
misappropriated o,er S"<<,<<< of funds in
Te;as, which were allocated b% that state
for drug rehabilitation programs-
Directors consists of former members of the
(& and CA-
&econ-3ac>enhut nc- of (lorida
U-S- Corrections Corporation, a pri,ate
compan% headAuartered in 0ouis,ille,
Dentuc>%--since !5$#
4ehabilitati,e ndustries K Di,ersified
2nterprises nc- (/4D2), a firm based in
Clearwater, (lorida, now manages all :=
(lorida prison wor> programs as a for profit
operation- /4D2 has made a S+ million
profit in one %ear- 8an% states considering
pri,ati'ation of prison industries are
stud%ing the /4D2 operation- /4D2
products range from optical and dental
items to modular office s%stems-
/ricor Corporation
American Correctional S%stems, nc-
Corrections De,elopment Corporation
&uc>ingham Securit% 0td-
Cornell Corrections--currentl% has contracts
to operate $! facilities in !" states and the
District of Columbia
Correctional Ser,ices Corp-(CSC)
10.-$*--a federal go,ernment-owned
corporation established b% the (ran>lin D-
4oose,elt administration in !5=+ otherwise
>nown as 63ederal /rison .ndustries-6
UEC?4 maintains factories in e,er%
(ederal /rison in the countr%- Eationwide
sales of 6/4S?E /4?DUC2D
/4?DUCTS6 in %ear 1<<< was $-5 billion
dollars- Some products produced are) office
furniture, high tech militar% cable and wiring
s%stems, mattress and bo; springs,
camouflage militar% uniforms, sheets,
towels, pillow cases, brooms, mops, et
cetera- UEC?4 has now partnered with
Spire, an American solar compan%, to
manufacture photo,oltaic modules and
s%stems-
There are too man% innocent people, in recent
times, sent to prison-
Toda%, ordinar% people, innocent people, non-
criminals are found guilt% of so-called crimes and
are sent to prison as a result of e;cessi,e
needless so-called laws, o,erl% 'ealous,
ambitious, and or corrupt prosecutors and 9udges-
8an% people, toda%, are sent to prison, for one
reason or another, to silence them for spea>ing
and sharing information one would find on this
web page-
Toda%, man% people are not recei,ing a fair,
impartial, and unbiased trial and or not recei,ing a
trial b% their peers, especiall% if it affects the
poc>et boo>s of such prosecutors and 9udges
such as a ta; issue or re,enue issue-
&est 3estern nternational, nc, a ma9or hotel chain,
emplo%s o,er thirt% Ari'ona prison wor>ers to
operate the hotel7s telephone reser,ation s%stem-
Trans 3orld Airlines, nc- hires %oung offenders
from the Centura Center Training School in
California to handle 6o,er the phone6 flight
reser,ations-
8uarantees
)L12*20%.0,S)
2mendment .4
6The right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
unreasonable searches and sei=ures, shall not
be ,iolated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon
probable cause, supported b% oath or
a##irmation, and particularl% describing the
place to be searched, and the persons or
things to be sei=ed-6
3arrantless and unreasonable searches in homes,
airports, corporate go,ernment facilities, on the
roadwa%s (highwa%s), etc-
.o,ernment ma% search and sei'e Americans7
papers and effects without probable cause to assist
in so-called terror in,estigation- --/atriot Act
n Ea'i .erman%, t started with:
"Where's your papers?"
or "Your papers, please?!"
Bistor% repeats itself- Eow, it is:
"ID, please?"
The -D- called 6*eal .+6 with biometrics is on the
hori'on and about to be implemented if not alread%-
2mendment 4
6---nor be depri,ed of life, libert%, or propert%,
without due process o# law) nor shall pri,ate
propert% be ta>en for public use, without Kust
compensation-6
/ropert% is constantl%, currentl%, and consistentl%
being ta>en for alleged ta;es without due process
and without 9ust compensation-
0and and propert% is now being ta>en b% 28E2ET
D?8AE for purposes not originall% intended-
"-an can live and satisfy his wants only by ceaseless labor;
by the ceaseless application of his of his faculties to natural
resources. %his process is the origin of property. .ut it is also
true that a man may live and satisfy his wants by seizing and
consuming the products of the labor of others. %his process
is the origin of plunder." "...the proper purpose of law is to
use the power of its collective force to stop this fatal
tendency to plunder instead of wor&. All the measures of the
law should protect property and punish plunder."
"%hus it is easy to understand how law, instead of chec&ing
injustice, becomes the invincible weapon of injustice. !t is
easy to understand why the law is used by the legislator to
destroy in varying degrees among the rest of the people,
their personal independence by slavery, their liberty by
oppression, and their property by plunder. %his is done for
the benefit of the person who ma&es the law, and in
proportion to the power he holds."
FF2343 "%>" +A0" by (laude *rederic .astiat, a *rench economist, statesman,
author, and philosopher.
All >inds of fees and penalties are being e;torted
from the people for so-called laws- The people can
no longer win in court against the corporate
go,ernment s%stem- f one tries, one ma% be held
6in contempt of court6 and fined
The Senate e;amined e;actl% what powers the%
had granted the /resident b% amending the Trading
3ith the 2nem% Act on 8arch 5, !5==, the%
concluded that: 6Under these powers the president
ma%: sei'e propert%) organi'e and control the
means of production) sei'e commodities) assign
militar% forces abroad) institute martial law
Factuall%: Martial *uleG)
sei'e and control all transportation and
communication) regulate the operation of pri,ate
industr%) restrict tra,el, and in a plethora of
particular wa%s, control the li,es of all American
citi'ens-6
--Senate 4eport 5=-:+5-
2mendment 4.
6n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall
en9o% the right to a speedy and public trial, b%
an impartial Kury---, and to be informed of the
nature and cause of the accusation) to be
con#ronted with the witnesses against him) to
ha,e compulsor% process for obtaining witnesses
in his fa,or, and to ha,e the assistance o#
counsel for his defense-6
(does not sa% 6attorne%6)
.o,ernment ma% 9ail Americans indefinitel% without
a trial- --/atriot Act
So-called .o,ernment ma% monitor federal prison
9ailhouse con,ersations between attorne%s and
clients, and den% counsel to Americans accused of
crimes-
(ascism police-state tactics and methods, similar to
Ea'i .erman%
6The pri,ileges and immunities clause of the
(ourteenth Amendment protects ,er% few rights
because it neither incorporates an% of the &ill of
4ights nor protects all rights of indi,idual citi'ens-
See Slaughter-Bouse Cases, $= U-S- (!# 3all-) =#,
1! 0-2d- =5+ (!$"=)- nstead, this pro,ision protects
onl% those rights peculiar to being a citi'en of the
federal go,ernment) it does not protect those rights
which relate to state citi'enship-6
--*ones ,- Temmer, $15 (ed- Supp- !11# (!55=)
States
S%2%,S
6state6 when used b% itself refers to the
64epublics6 of The united states of America
n U-S- Titles and Codes 6State6 refers to U-S-
possessions such as /uerto 4ico, .uam, etc-
All of the states are 6*epublics6
e-g- 6California republic6
6California state6
or 9ust 6California6
abbre,iated 6Calif-6
2ach state is a sovereign
nation unto itself) free and independent
%he boo& "$olden *leece in /evada" written by Budge (lel
$eorgetta states "!n 2@39, the (ontinental (ongress adopted
a resolution requesting the thirteen original states to
surrender to the central government 7the (onfederation: all
the lands they claimed in the territory west of their original
boundaries Kwest of the Appalachian -ountainsL to the
-ississippi, so such lands could be sold to private interests
for money to pay off the debt incurred by the Revolutionary
0ar, and then the area would be divided into new states to
be admitted into the (onfederation on the same basis as the
original states." Budge $eorgetta continues "%he thirteen
independent sovereign states were first joined together in a
*ederal ,nion &nown as I%he (onfederationI and in 2@32
ratified I%he Articles of (onfederation and #erpetual ,nion.I
%hose Articles contain the following words; Article !!. "ach
state retains its sovereignty, freedom and independence, and
every power, jurisdiction and right, which is not by this
confederation eHpressly delegated to the ,nited tates in
(ongress assembled. Article !N. ...provides also that no state
shall be deprived of territory for the benefit of the ,nited
tates. %here can be no doubt that the purpose of
guaranteeing each state its complete sovereignty was to
waylay all fear of joining the organization. !t was those words
of guaranty in the Articles that the various states joined the
I(onfederationI in order to form a (entral $overnment to
perform certain functions for all the states as a group. !t was
to be a central government with very limited power." written
by 'ic& (arver, /ye (ounty (ommissioner, member of the
/evada tate +and ,se #lanning Advisory (ouncil
6 am neither a 64esident,6 nor a 6Eon-resident,6
neither 6in this state,6 nor 6within this state6 and
certainl% not a UET2D STAT2S citi'en- f am to
be categori'ed or described, one can consider 8e
a li,ing soul in a flesh and blood man on the land,
a free inhabitant, a California nati,e-6
--*ac>) Sle,>off
All States are corporations incorporated with the
federal corporation
e+g+ "State of California"
corporate California
California State
STAT2 ?( CA0(?4EA
CA
/oliticians and the legislature of each state formed
a new so-called go,ernment (de facto) and
incorporated it into the corporate US commercial
corporation a->-a- UET2D STAT2S, nc- and are
therefore under its 9urisdiction- This so-called
go,ernment is actuall% a limited-liabilit% corporation
(0imited 0iabilit% Act of !$:!), chartered in a pri,ate,
militar%, international, commercial,
admiralt%Pmaritime 9urisdiction, entitled 6STAT2
?(X6 as e,idenced b%, inter alia, the change in the
seal and the flag and the creation of a new
constitution- 2ach 6STAT2 ?(X6 collects whole life
insurance premiums, >nown as 6ta;es,6 for the
nternational 8onetar% (und, based, inter alia, upon
the 0imited 0iabilit% Act of !$:! and the ban>ruptc%
of United States of !5==-
6.n this state" or "within this state6 includes all
federal areas l%ing within the e;terior boundaries of
the state- --4e,ised Code of 3ashington (4C3) $1-<+-1<< found
at:
http;<<apps.leg.wa.gov<R(0<default.aspHOciteP3=.94.=99
The citi'ens of the corporate States, federal areas,
are 6sub9ects6 and are called 6*esidents6
Deri,ed from )res) meaning 6the thing6 and 6ident6
meaning 6identif%-6 Therefore, a 6resident6 is
)a thing identi#ied.)
And, )/resident) is 6/-resident,6 meaning
)/rincipal resident) en9oined in the federal area-
60onresident" means an% person whose residence
is outside )this state) and who is temporaril%
soKourning ).%H.0 %H.S S%2%,)- F!5#! c !1
[+#-<+-=#<- /rior: !5:5 c +5 [ =") prior: (i) !5+= c !:= [ !, part)
!5=" c !$$ [ !, part) 4em- Supp- !5+= [ #=!1-!, part- (ii) !5=" c !$5
[ !, part) 44S [ #=#<-!, part-G (emphasis added)-
)e the people) created the states (the
republics) and are So,ereign o,er the states-
Certain powers are granted to the state,
not b% the state-
All state governments today
are corporations,
not sovereign states.
A document made b% the people to create a state
purposel% limits the powers granted to the state)
said document does not measure the rights of
those go,erned, but is to assure that those rights
are not trampled upon-
So,ereigns of California are sometimes referred
to as 6California nationals-6 n Te;as, 6Te;as
nationals,6 etc-
0i>ewise, 63e the /eople6 made the document
that created the go,ernment of the United States
of America (USA) and are therefore so,ereign
o,er the USA go,ernment-
Also, people from each indi,idual state of the
states united participated in the creation of the
document that created the go,ernment of the
united states of America with limited power- The
people from each state accepted and ga,e their
appro,al with the conditions that each indi,idual
state ga,e up onl% certain portions of their power
on an eAual basis but retained all other rights and
powers in the states and in the people- Thereb%,
the states and the people in each state retained
their So,ereignt% o,er the go,ernment of the
united states of America-
The creator is o,er the created, not ,ise ,ersa
The corporate states were created b% incorporation
into the corporate federal United States as
corporate entities appearing to be similar to and
o,erla%ing the republics so as not to rouse
suspicion- 0i>ewise, the corporate states created
political subdi,isions of the corporate state such as
C?UETH ?( (42SE? being similar to (resno
count% but is not) C?UETH ?( 8AD24A being
similar to 8adera count% but is not) etc-
The corporate States are controlled b% the
corporate US go,ernment b% its purse strings such
as grants, funding, matching funds, re,enue
sharing, disaster relief, etc-
Comprehensi,e Annual
(inancial 4eport
Section <<< of the (ederal Social Securit% Code (+1
USC [###) preempts daho7s (ree 2;ercise of
4eligion Act ((24A) and similar acts of other states-
Section ### appears to mandate that e,er% State is
to force e,er%one to identif% with a Social Securit%
Eumber (SSE) in order to obtain a professional
license, occupational license, recreational license,
dri,er7s license, and or marriage license in spite of
ones religious beliefs based on 4e,elation, Chapter
!=, of the &ible which warns of a beast that reAuires
e,er% person to identif% with a number in order to
engage in a li,elihood-\The &ible clearl% states that
one is not to accept a number whereb% one cannot
bu% or sell without it-
Indirect ta" verses Direct
n some states, an indirect ta; is implemented on
certain specific items- ?ther states ma% not ha,e
an% indirect ta;, while others ma% ha,e an indirect
ta; on all items sold b% corporations- Although
6direct taxes6 are unconstitutional, 6indirect
taxes6 are acceptable- A man or woman still has
a choice to pa% the ta; or not- (or e;ample: Do
not bu% cigarettes if %ou do not want to pa% the
indirect ta;- a 6direct tax6 is appropriate onl% b%
means of apportionment under certain
circumstances-
,ales Ta" and ,ales Permit
?nl% corporations are reAuired to pa% sales ta;- The
sales ta; is what corporations are reAuired to pa%
as creatures of the corporate go,ernment- &ut the%
got ordinar% people ,olunteering to pa% up front
sales ta; on their behalf directl%- The% also got
other companies to collect sales ta; up front as well
b% ma>ing a 6Sales /ermit6 mandator% to enter
corporate trade shows- A 6Sales /ermit6 is a license
and ma>es one obligated to collect ta;es and to
turn them o,er to the corporate go,ernment- ?ut of
ignorance, most companies ,olunteer to obtain a
license e,en though it is ,oluntar%- 8ost
go,ernment people enforcing Sales licenses
assume e,er% compan% is reAuired to collect sales
ta;- That is what the ma9orit% belie,es-
-ali#ornia state
republic 3lag
", nation /nto itsel&"
This flag was first flown on 6une :;, :C;< in
Sonoma, California, b% American settlers in
California who re,olted against 8e;ican rule in
California and proclaimed California an
independent republic-
The short-li,ed re,olution ended on 6uly E, :C;<-
2,entuall% the war with 8e;ico ended 8a% =<,
!$+$ resulting in a treat% signed at 8uadalupe
Hidalgo, 8e;ico, whereb%, 8e;ico ga,e up 6Alta
California6 (Upper California)- &a9a California
being the lower California- Monterey was the
capital of Alta California under Spanish and
8e;ican rule since !"":-
The% raised a bear flag that had a 4ed star, red
bear, and red stripe from 6?ld .lor%6 The animal
silhouette was a rendition of the California .ri''l%-
Bowe,er, the silhouette did not actuall% loo> li>e a
bear- A +-inch strip of red flannel from a petticoat
worn b% 8rs- Sears was sewn onto the bottom to
produce a red stripe- &lac>berr% 9uice was used
for the words WCalifornia 4epublicO in 4oman
letters- The whole flag was about three b% fi,e
feet-
o%e people 'elie*e it was a gold star and 'ear, B/t, -
did not &ind anything to s/'stantiate that clai%+
(he Bear 7lag
was a res/lt o& a %istake
corporate #lag
of the
S%2%, $3 -27.3$*0.2
being incorporated within
the corporate UET2D STAT2S
This flag design was adopted as the official flag of
California in !5!! with minor changes in design
from time to time- The last >nown design change
was made b% prominent California historian and
artist Donald Delle% in !5:=
This flag is seen toda% in the corporate STAT2 ?(
CA0(?4EA usuall% with a gold fringe around it or
with gold tassels, or with a ball or spear on top of
the pole- The .ri''l% bear design on the flag is
based on Charles Eahl7s rendition on paper and in
sculpture-
n California, the US corporate militar% flag is
reAuired to be flown abo,e the corporate California
flag indicating which one is superior or submissi,e
to the other-
The corporate STAT2 ?( CA0(?4EA is actuall%
a fiction, o,erla%ing the original California state, a
republic-
.o,ernment buildings of the original state,
go,ernment buildings of the original counties, and
buildings of the original go,ernment of the united
states of America ha,e been abandoned and
become museums until such a time the original
go,ernment is re-established and or re-con,ened-
!8ore 9istorical in&o$
California7s original constitution was created b% +$
delegates from !< districts of California who were
called to con,ene a Constitutional con,ention on
September :, :C;E in the Colton Ball building in
8ontere%- Said constitution was signed $ctober
:F, :C;E, adopted b% the people of California and
went into effect on 0ovember :F, :C;E- Said
!$+5 constitution designated San 6ose as the
capital- California was admitted into the union
as a 4epublic on September E, :CD0-
--Colume 5, Statutes at 0arge, /age +:1
The people created the original state constitution
to gi,e the go,ernment limited powers and to act
on behalf of, and for the people-
(our da%s after being admitted, the /resident said
6---which, on due e;amination, is found to be
republican in its form of go,ernment---6
The original constitution was re,ised and adopted
b% the corporate State of California
on May 7, :C7E
t has been re,ised man% times hence-
?n April 1+, !5:<, the U-S- District Court of Appeal,
Second District, Di,ision 1, State of California, with
*ustice 3ilson presiding in a case titled 6S2 (U* ,-
TB2 STAT2 ?( CA0(?4EA6 decided that the
7aw o# the 7and is the 1nited 0ations -harter
#a"ims Of 1urisprudence
)f %he California Civil Code
65=@ "%he law helps the vigilant,
before those who sleep on their rights."
652? "Acquiescence in error
ta&es away the right of objecting."
65=2 ">e who ta&es the benefit
must bear the burden."
65=6 "*or every wrong there is a remedy."
65=? "/o man is responsible for that
which no man can control."
*rom the "+ectric +aw +ibraryIs tac&s"
/reamble
63e the people of -ali#ornia, grateful to Almight%
.od for our freedom: in order to secure its
blessings, do establish this Constitution6
/reamble
63e the /eople of the State o# -ali#ornia, grateful
to Almight% .od for our freedom: in ?rder to secure
and perpetuate its blessings, do establish this
Constitution6
Ad9ournment sine die occurred
in California on 2pril B7, :C<F
(or more histor% on California, see: Alta (alifornia,
>istory of (alifornia,
Raising the .ear *lag,
*lag of (alifornia,
*remont in the (onquest of (alifornia, and (alifornia .ear
*lag; ymbol of trength
2nd California state info
A one word change in the original State (California)
constitution from 6unalienable6 to 6inalienable6
made rights into pri,ileges
6nalienable6 means go,ernment gi,en rights that are 6in-a-lien-able6
condition-
6Unalienable6 means .od gi,en rights that are 6not-in-a-lien-able6
condition-
1nalienable vs .nalienable
2nd STAT2 ?( CA0(?4EA info
+ebt
+,B%
None!
:o/ldn't it 'e nice to 'e co%pletely o/t o& de't,
personally, and ha*e a stash o& gold and sil*er 'esides;
"%he budget should be balanced, the %reasury should be
refilled, #ublic 'ebt should be reduced, the arrogance of
officialdom should be tempered and controlled, and the
assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed lest Rome
become ban&rupt. #eople must again learn to wor& instead
of living on public assistance." F (icero, 55 ..(.
%rillions of Dollars
(irst ban"ruptcy was in !$#=
n !$#: the total debt was S1,#$1,:5=,<1#-:=
A portion was funded b% :0;0 Bonds to run not
less than !< nor more than +< %ears at an interest
rate of #R
3hen a go,ernment goes ban>rupt, it loses its
sovereignty-
n !5== the U-S- declared ban"ruptcy, as
e;pressed in 4oose,elt7s 2;ecuti,e ?rders #<"=,
#!<1, #!!!, and #1#<, Bouse *oint 4esolution !51
(/ublic 0aw "=-!<) of *une :, !5== (=! U-S-C- +#=)
confirmed in /err% ,- U-S- (!5=:) 15+ U-S- ==<-=$!,
"5 02d 5!1, as well as =! United States Code
(USC) :!!1, :!!5, Senate 4eport 5=-:+5, and !1
USC 5:a-
8embers of Congress are the official %rustees in
the ban>ruptc% of the US and the re-organi'ation
%axation
%2>2%.$0
0imits on ta;ation Eo limit on ta;ation
Direct ta;es such as 6.ncome taxes6
are unlaw#ul
ncome ta;es are legal when properl% applied and
are e,er increasing-
ndirect ta;es such as
excise tax and import duties
are lawful
?ther ta;ation7s such as inheritance ta;es are legal
when properl% applied-
4S7s :0;0 #orms originated from the !<+< &onds
used for funding 0incoln7s 3ar
!$#=, first %ear income ta; was e,er used in histor%
of US- The ta;es were collected to help finance the
ci,il war-
The .*S is a collection arm of the (ederal 4eser,e-
The (ederal 4eser,e was created b% the &an> of
2ngland in !5!= and is owned b% foreign in,estors-
The 4S is not listed as a go,ernment agenc% li>e
other go,ernment agencies-
The 4S does not ha,e fran>ing pri,ileges- The 4S
has to pa% for postage-
United States .o,ernment Attorne%s den% nternal
4e,enue Ser,ice is agenc% of United States
.o,ernment-
The Constitution pro,ides for imposts, e;cises,
and duties to pro,ide funds for running the
go,ernment-
6esus as"ed /eter )3rom whom do the "ings
o# the earth collect duty and taxes99#rom their
own sons or #rom others?) /eter replied
)3rom others. 6esus said to him )%hen the
sons are exempt) --8atthew !":1:
(nderstandin) J'risdiction
)%axes are not raised
to carry on wars,
wars are raised to carry on taxes.)
--Thomas /aine !"="-!$<5
)2ll individual .ncome %ax revenues are gone
be#ore one nic"el is spent on services taxpayers
expect #rom government)
--4onald 4eagan, !5$+
8race -ommission *eport
pro,ided the information
4eagan used
This corporate .o,ernment is actuall% funded b% the trillions of
dollars collected from duties on importPe;ports and the e;cise ta;es
placed on cigarettes, 0iAuors and other products- Eot one cent of the
trillions collected from income ta;es b% 4S runs the go,ernment-
Bighwa%s are funded b% .asoline ta;es- The /ostal Ser,ice is run
li>e a business and is funded b% postage
(stamps and the li>e)-
.nternal *evenue 7aws
were *epealed in :EFE
3hat former 4S agents ha,e to sa%:
Sherry /eel 6ac"son, -/2
1oe )annister and 1ohn Turner
Count% 4ecorders commit fraud
together with 4S-
6?ur federal ta; s%stem is, in short, utterl%
impossible, utterl% un9ust, and completel%
counterproducti,e it ree"s with inKustice and is
fundamentall% un-American--- it has earned a
rebellion and it(s time we rebelled6
--/resident 4onald 4eagan, 8a% !5$=, 3illiamsburg, CA
Bene#its
B,0,3.%S
1nalienable rights
(are 6not-a-lien-able6 condition)
meaning 6can not be liened6
in other words,
6cannot be infringed upon6
(rights that can not be ta>en awa%
or lost)
Composed of:
.od gi,en rights,
Substantial rights,
(undamental rights,
Eatural rights (breathe, locomotion etc-)
(lesh and blood people ha,e unalienable rights
granted to them b% their Creator, which can ne,er
be sold, gi,en awa%, or contracted awa%-
1nalienable vs .nalienable
4ight to 2n9o%:
!- 7i#e
1- 7iberty
=- pursuit of Happiness
.nalienable rights
(are 6in-a-lien-able6 condition)
.o,ernment gi,en rights
that are reall% /rivileges.
Can be ta>en awa% at an% time
/ersons (legal fictions) ha,e onl% inalienable rights,
which ma% be surrendered or transferred without
the consent of the one possessing such rights-
So-called &enefits are as follows:
"+ Social Security Appl%ing for and recei,ing
an )SS card) ma>es one a member of the
)1S +- -ommunist /arty) and is eligible
for benefits of the part% membership- Since
one is eligible for benefits, !<<R of ones
earnings (wages) belongs to the part% and
the part% determines what the% will >eep
and how much %ou will get bac>- (Hou paid
all %our wor>ing life and there are no
guarantees that there will be mone% for %ou
to help in retirement)
The Supreme Court ruled that Congress
has no constitutional authorit% whatsoe,er
to legislate for the social welfare of the
wor>er- The result was that when Social
Securit% was instituted, it had to be treated
as strictl% ,oluntar%-
Railroad Retirement .oard vs Alton Railroad
72865: =85 , 669
There is no law that reAuires one to get a
Social Securit% card-
B. Medicare
F. Medicaid
+- #ull property ownership-
*The +aster does not
ask his servants
or slaves for benefits.*
Eo US benefits--2,er% li,ing soul is responsible
for themsel,es and has the option of helping
others-
2ach li,ing soul gi,es accordingl% to help others
in need and recei,es the credit or gi,es the credit
to his 8a>er and /ro,ider-
2o ta< '/rdens
or go*ern%ent de't o'ligations+
;. 8rants
D. +isaster relie#
<. 3ood Stamps
#+ 7icenses and *egistration (/ermission)
$- /rivileges onl%, no 4ights
5- ,xperimentation on
citi'ens without their
consent-
Corporate go,ernment ta>es %our mone% and gets
credit for helping others- /oliticians in return create
more such programs to get more ,otes- 2,entuall%
there is no more to collect and gi,e- 2,er%one
becomes ta>ers and there are no gi,ers- The
go,ernment then collapses within- That is wh%
democrac% ne,er sur,i,es-
6As a matter of law, an%one that participates or
ta>es from the s%stem is responsible for what is
being done to us as Americans-6
6The onl% wa% out of this is to abstain #rom the
system,
and expose it-
3e ma% want to refer to it as
6%he 8andi Method6-6
--0& &org (2;cerpts: email August !$, 1<!<)
*ecords
*,-$*+S
Ex!officio cler>s
Count% Cler> is also Cler> of
the superior court,
(i-e- a court of common law)
and 6courts o# record6
4ecords are also >ept b% So,ereigns
such as in a #amily Bible
Count% Cler>
*ecorders $##ice
Created b% statute to >eep trac> of the corporate
go,ernment7s holdings which are applied as
collateral to the increasing debt- The written records
are a continuation of the 6+oomsday Boo"6 which
>eeps trac> of the Crown of 2ngland7s holdings- The
6Doomsda% &oo>6 originated as a written record of
the conAuered holdings of >ing 3illiam, which was
later the basis of his ta;es and grants-
Churches, in the old da%s were also >nown to
>eep records-
3hene,er something is registered it is actual%
being put into the >ings domain- The word
6registered6 is deri,ed from the word 6regis6 which
means 6"ingly-6 Therefore, recording a document
toda% is the same as registering it and putting it into
the "ings domain-
/ropert% recorded or registerd at the recorders
office ma>es the corporate de facto go,ernment
6holders in due course-6 An%thing registered can be
ta>en awa% at an% time) that includes cars, guns,
and %our home-
Hour TC is not recorded there, therefore %ou are
6holder in due course6 for the TC-
4ecord the date famil% members are born,
married, and the date the% pass on in the 3amily
Bible
6Birth -erti#icate6 is reAuired- t creates a trust and
puts one into commerce as a fictional persona
The 6+eath -erti#icate6 closes the trust
Common 0aw 8arriage
!- Agreement of the two parties and consent of
the father of the bride is all that is reall% reAuired
to be married, andPor
1- 8arried b% a minister or pastor constitutes a
marriage, andPor
=- 0i,ing together for more than " %ears
constitutes a marriage-
A ceremon% was optional- The se,en %ears is onl%
encountered when one of the two reAuirements
for common law marriage was missing,
presumabl% the consent of the father- The se,en
%ears is the law of *ubilee which is the
forgi,eness of the obligation to allow the marriage
to be lawful-
-erti#icate o# Matrimony
&oth .eorge 3ashington and Abraham 0incoln
were married without a marriage license- The%
simpl% recorded their marriages in their (amil%
&ibles-
6Marriage 7icense6-
n,o>es the Corporate State to be the third part% to
%our union and whate,er %ou concei,e is theirs and
becomes their offspring (children)-
That is wh% the% can ta>e awa% %our children at an%
time at their discretion- The State lea,es them in
%our custod% and care unless or until the% find
reason not to-
Definitions from
&0ACD7S 0A3 DCT?EA4H, +th 2d:
6license6
6The permission b% competent authorit% to do an act
which without such permission, would be illegal-6
6marriage license6
6A license or permission granted b% public authorit%
to persons who intend to intermarr%-6
3hat if %ou appl%
and the State sa%s 6no6M
6.ntermarry6 is 68iscegenation6
6Miscegenation6
6mi;ture of races) marriage between persons of
different races, as between a white and a Eegro-6
Some marriage licenses will actuall% state that its
purpose is for interracial marriage-
6marriage certi#icate6
6An instrument which certifies a marriage, and is
e;ecuted b% the person officiating at the marriage) it
is not intended to be signed b% the parties, but is
e,idence of the marriage-
t seems that a certificate would be more
appropriate than a license-
/astor Matt %rewhella
Secular -ontract
68arriage is a ci,il contract to which there are three
parties-the husband, the wife and the state-6
--Can Doten ,- Can Doten- !:+ E-2- !+#-
/roperty
/*$/,*%'
(ull and complete ownership
!- 2llodial %itle--0and /atents--Allodial
(reeholder
1- Can not be ta;ed (?nl% ,oluntar%)
=- Hou are "ing o# your castle
+- Eo go,ernment intrusion, in,ol,ement, or
controls
/ri,ilege to use
!- (ee title--(eudal Title
1- 8rant +eed and %rust +eed Eote:
.4AET?4 and .4AET22 in all caps are
fictional persona
=- /ropert% ta; (8ust pa%)
+- ?ther ta;es (such as water district ta;es)
:- Sub9ect to control b% go,ernment
#- Cehicle 4egistration
(The incorporated State owns ,ehicles on
behalf of US)
"- /ropert% and ,ehicles are collateral for the
go,ernment debt
/The ultimate o!nership of all
propert$
is in the ,tate/
6All the propert% of this countr% now belongs to the
state and will be used for the good of the state-6--
(D4, !5==
!ortgage
0atin word 68ort6 means 7death7 and 6gage6 means
7pledge7- Therfore, a mortgage is a death pledge-
8ost people ne,er reall% own their house, e,en
unto death- 2nd up pa%ing more than twice the
initial cost of the house- A mortgage is designed
so that someone else will ma>e mone% on %ou
during %our lifetime-
for the ban> loan
3ree ,nterprise
-$*/$*2%.SM
The people engage in #ree enterprise b% trading
ones labor for another7s labor-
There is no filing, registering, or obtaining
permission or licensing from an% go,ernment
structure-
The people are responsible for themsel,es and
each other-
The people do not rel% on insurance to o,ercome
irresponsibilit% and capriciousness-
(omposed of, encourages, and creates a corporate structure of
corporations and big businesses that use people as human
resources to further its goal to grow and eHpand and become
more powerful thereby eliminating competition and becoming
more controlling.
%he thing created 7the corporation: becomes more powerful
than the creator 7man: who created it. -an is no longer free but
is subservient 7a slave: to the corporate structure. %he
corporate structure needs to reduce the wages of its human
resources to decrease cost to increase profit to &eep growing.
(orporations eat each other and grow bigger and more
powerful thereby allowing fewer persons having big egos
controlling the lives of the common fol& from cradle to grave.
(orporations have no feelings. (orporations primary purpose is
to grow and are thereby less responsible and less sympathetic
towards the people, thereby rely on and utilize insurance or
other resources such as the corporate government to bail
themselves out of irresponsible critical situations.
-ost often, people start with a free enterprise but choose to be
incorporated into the government structural system. %o
incorporate is to become a part of something bigger. %herefore,
corporations are creatures created by the soFcalled government
and are no longer a free enterprise. (orporations become big
uncontrollable monsters who eventually control government by
putting their people into office to maintain control. %hese
monsters got out of their cages when they made fictions such
as corporations equal with people by calling them "persons"
having the rights equal to people. -ost corporations eat each
other up and become huge monsters, thereby creating
monopolies that stifle "capitalism" in its true meaning.
(orporations do not want competition. %hey want to eliminate
competition using their power and politicians they purchased.
%hey want to capture the system and use it for their benefit.
-ommon ay
*$2+2'S
So,ereigns ha,e a right to use the common wa%
such as the tra,eled wa% (/ublic right-of-wa%) for
locomotion purposes-
The right to tra,el is an ancient right)
ac>nowledged b% the 8agna Carta-
The right to tra,el was recogni'ed in the Articles
of Confederation-
Dri,ers 0icenses are reAuired, because dri,ing is a
privilege -
(irst state law reAuiring all dri,ers to pass an e;am
before recei,ing a Kcommercial use privilegeL license
too> effect in *ul% of !5!=, in Eew *erse%
&eginning in !51<, courts began to hold that dri,ing
is not a right, but a pri,ilege that the state ma%
re,o>e
67iberty of the common wa%6
8a% lose licensed pri,ilege or ha,e it suspended at
the whim of go,ernment
Eo 6Dri,er7s 0icense6 is reAuired for pri,ate,
personal, and recreational use of the common
wa%-
A 6dri,er7s license6 can onl% be reAuired for those
people using the common wa% for hire for
commercial purposes such as Ta;i Dri,ers, Truc>
Dri,ers, &us Dri,ers, Chauffeurs, etc-
8ust compl% with the Department of 8otor
Cehicles, the Cehicle Code, which is e,er changing,
and the Bighwa% /atrol-
2,en the ordinar% )-lass -) Dri,er7s license is a
6commercial6 license-
See document
/rivate -onveyance
or 6/rivate -ar6
--a mode of con,e%ance or a means of locomotion
for tra,el purposes)
being pri,ate and not for hire-
6-ar6 is short for 6carriage6
such as 6horseless carriage6-
-arriage is an 2nglish word
deri,ed from
?ld Eorth (rench word 6carier6
which means 6to carr%6
Hac"ney is a coach
or carriage #or hire
and 6hac>ne%ing6 means
6to hire out-6
--The(reeDictionar%-com
&% law, the state can onl%
regulate intrastate commerce-
&% law, the go,ernment of the united
states of America can onl% regulate
interstate commerce-
Motor vehicle
6(#) 8otor ,ehicle- - The term 6motor ,ehicle6
means e,er% description of carriage or other
contri,ance propelled or drawn b% mechanical
power and used #or commercial purposes on the
highwa%s in the transportation of passengers,
passengers and propert%, or propert% or cargo-6
6(!<) Used for commercial purposes- - The term
6used for commercial purposes6 means the carriage
of persons or propert% for an% fare, fee, rate, charge
or other consideration, or directl% or indirectl% in
connection with an% business, or other underta>ing
intended for profit-6
-- %itle 23, ection 627a:7?: G 729: ,nited tates (ode
6%he Motor 4ehicle 2ct (Stats- !5!=, p-#=5) is not
unconstitutionalXin that it reAuires professional
chauffeurs, or dri,ers of motor ,ehicles for hire, to
pa% an annual license ta;, but e;empts all others
operators of such ,ehicles from such ta; and
regulation-6 n re Stor>, (!5!+), !#" C- 15+-
6A chau##eur is one who is paid compensation for
his ser,ices-6 Bunton ,- California /ortland Cement
Co- (!5+1), :< C-A- 1d #$+, !1= /-1d 5+"-
&o,ier7s 0aw Dictionar% describes
%*20S/$*%2%.$0 as: 6punishment- n the
2nglish law, this punishment is inflicted b% ,irtue of
!< min- ,ideo
$o past Q min. advertisement
sundr% statutes) it was un>nown to the common
law- 1 B- &l- 11=- t is a part of the 9udgment or
sentence of the court, that the part% shall be
transported or sent into e;ile- ! Ch- Cr- 0aw, "$5 to
"5#: /rinc- of /en- 0aw, c- + 1-6
68uest6--?ne who comes along for pleasure,
recreational, or pri,ate reasons without cost or
without ha,ing to pa%-
6/assenger6--?ne who pa%s, emplo%s, or hires
someone to transport themsel,es to another
location
6%raveling on the common wa%6--The act of
locomotion and con,e%ance on the common wa%
for pri,ate, personal, and recreational purposes
6+riving on the road6--The act of propelling a motor
,ehicle on the roadwa% or highwa% b% one who is
emplo%ed or hired to transport goods or
passengers-
6-ontrol6--The act of ha,ing power o,er
locomotion or to direct locomotion-
6+rive6-The act engaging locomotion and control of
an automobile, bus, or truc> b% one who is
emplo%ed or hired to transport goods or
passengers- ?perating 8otor Cehicles on the
roadwa%s for commercial purposes-
6-ontrolling the Car6--The act of ha,ing power
o,er a car in a safe manner as it is propelled-
6Steering the car6--Directing the path of the car
as it is propelled-
6+riving the truc>6-The act of controlling or steering
a truc> b% one who is emplo%ed or hired to transport
for commercial purposes-
6%raveler6--?ne who uses an% means of
locomotion, from point to point, for pri,ate and
personal reasons, con,enience, and pleasure-
6+river6--?ne who is for hire or emplo%ed to
transport goods or passengers upon the roadwa%s
and highwa%s-
2re you a +river?
6Tra,eling6 and 60ocomotion6
are unalienable rights
6Dri,ing6 is a licensed pri,ilege that can be ta>en
awa% at an% time-
6%ravelers6--A number of people who use some
form of locomotion, from point to point, for pri,ate
and personal reasons, con,enience, and
pleasure-
6%*233.-6--- Commerce, trade, sale or e;change
of merchandise, bills, mone% and the li>e-
--&ou,ierOs 0aw Dictionar% of !5!+
/eace $##icer
8aintains the peace
/olice $##icer
A re-,enue agent that enforces corporate
go,ernment contracts and protects the assets of the
and the safet%
of the people
corporate go,ernment including human resources-
Compels performance, no in9ured part% necessar%-
?ne who has policing powers as found in a
6/?0C2 STAT26 i-e- Ea'i .erman%-
An enforcer of policies
The name 6/olice6
came from 6policies6
Americans ha,e the right to tra,el
freel% in their cars---
(hicago -otor (oach v. (hicago, 2?8 /" ==2
%hompson v. mith, 254 " 5@8
1ent v. 'ulles, 65@ , 22?, 2=5
chactman v. 'ulles 8? App '( =3@, ==5 *=d 863, at 842
2389 wift v. (ity of %ope&a
2338 !ndiana upreme (ourt, >olland v. .artch
1ing v. /ew Rochelle >ousing Authority 728@2:
Rumford v. (ity of .er&eley, 62 (al. 6d 545, 559 7283=:
The state cannot issue a license or
charge a fee for the e;ercise of that
right---
-urdoc& v. #ennsylvania, 628 , 295
f the state does tr% to license or
charge for the e;ercise of a right, the
people ma% engage in that right with
impunit%---
huttlesworth v. .irmingham, A+, 6@6 , =?=
-iller v. ,, =69 * 43?, at 438
herer v. (ullen, 432 * 84?
A right cannot be made into a
pri,ilege---
>ertado v. (alifornia, 229 , 52?, ,. upreme (ourt
.ennett v. .oggs, 2 .aldw ?9
Article iH of the ,.. (onstitution
All laws repugnant to the
Constitution are null and ,oid-
6I0aw enforcementJ out there has changed
drasticall% o,er the past few %ears- t used to be that
%ou would be pulled o,er for bad or dangerous
dri,ing to protect other dri,ers and propert%-
Toda%Os traffic court is nothing more than a
collection agenc% for the go,ernment- The cops are
the collection agents, and the 9udge is the IBead
CollectorJ who pla%s .od o,er the li,es of
unsuspecting Americans-
A I.oodJ motorc%cle cop will write as man% as ":-
!<< tic>ets in one da% with his trust% radar gunX
(BmmmmmX!< cops each write ": tic>ets totaling
":< tic>ets V S1<< each ] 3h% thatOs S!:<,<<<
/24 DAHNN)6
FFBames R. .utler, .eat %he (ourt.(om
DU chec>points and other traffic stops bring in a lot
more re,enue to the cities ,ia car impoundments-
Tow truc> companies are in bed with the cit% police
for monetar% gain- &oth are committing theft and
are in ,iolation of the 4C? Act (rac>eteering) and
the Bobbs Act (2;tortion)- 2;tortion is defined as
6the obtaining of propert% from another, with his
consent, induced b% wrongful use of actual or
threatened force, ,iolence, or fear, or under color of
official right-6 !$ U-S-C- [ !5:!
6&etween (ebruar% !, 1<<" and April =<, 1<<", the
8a%wood /olice Department towed and impounded
some !",""= ,ehicles-6
FF/ews Release by Attorney $eneral, (alifornia
(ities collect an impound release fee varying from R299 to
R599 for each returned vehicle or sell the car at auction.
%herefore, 2@,@@6 vehicles at R299S each P Almost 4 million
dollars collected in three months time not including citation
fines and penalties.
-ity o# 3resno collects M:C; release fee plus M::0
for dri,ing without a license, suspended license, or
-arbury v. -adison, 5 , 26@
-iranda v. Arizona, 634 , 46?, 482
under the influence- --(resno &ee
A 8a;im of 0aw
(ree people ha,e a right to tra,el on the roads
which are pro,ided b% their ser,ants for that
purpose, using ordinar% transportation of the da%-
"(he streets o& a city 'elong to the people o& the state,
and e*ery citi=en o& the state has a right to the /se
thereo&,++++ "(he /se o& highways &or p/rposes o& tra*el
and transportation is not a %ere pri*ilege, '/t a
co%%on and &/nda%ental right, o& which the p/'lic
and indi*id/als cannot right&/lly 'e depri*ed +++ >,?ll
persons ha*e an e@/al right to /se the% &or p/rposes o&
tra*el 'y proper %eans, and with d/e regard &or the
corresponding rights o& others+++"
--)/%&ord *+ 1ity o& Berkeley,
s/pra, 3" 1al+3d 545, 549-55.
andA 1ity o& 4oway *+ 1ity o& an Diego !"99"$
229 1al+,pp+3d B4#, 2B. 1al+)ptr+ 36B
C2BC02 Codes
do not have an enacting clause
on their face to Aualif% as a law
that binds /eople
to obedience-
Ta>ing on the restrictions
of a license
reAuires the
surrender o# a right-
Mail
M2.7
/ost ?ffice
o& the /nited states o& ,%erica
(reated in #hiladelphia under .enjamin *ran&lin on Buly =?,
2@@5 by decree of the ,econd Continental Congress.
.ased on the #ostal (lause in Article )ne of the ,nited
tates (onstitution, empowering (ongress "%o establish
post offices and post roads," it became the #ost )ffice
'epartment 7,#)': in 2@8=. !t was part of the #residential
cabinet and the #ostmaster $eneral was the last one in the
,nited tates presidential line of succession.
wi&ipedia
&ITED ,TATE, PO,TA5 ,ER6ICE
%he #ostal Reorganization Act signed by #resident Richard
/iHon on August 2=, 28@9, replaced the cabinetFlevel #ost
)ffice 'epartment with the independent ,nited tates #ostal
ervice. %he Act too& effect on Buly 2, 28@2.
wi&ipedia
0on9domestic
8ail that mo,es outside of D-C- its possessions
and territories
+$M,S%.-
8ail that mo,es between D-C-, the regions of the
US, and possessions and territories of the U-S-
"- 'elie*e, Cip 1odes %/st not 'e /sed &or one's sel&
and ne*er /se 1,, 2D, ,C, etc+ &or one's sel&+ Best to
spell o/t co%pletely or a''re*iate the state properly in
/pper and lower case letters s/ch as "1ali&+" or "2e*+"
or ",ri=+" " -*ac>) Sle,>off
Nip -odes are reAuired
when using 6federal regions6
such as CA, EC, AL, etc-
3,+,*27 *,8.$027.SM
%he 2bolishment o# 7ocal
8overnment
F cents99Sovereign to Sovereign
labled properl% and is from
general /ost to general /ost-
6Eon-domestic6 inscribed
on both labels-
(?ld = cent postage stamps preferred) ?therwise,
current /ostal Ser,ice rates
Cost is ++ cents for first class
in 1<<5-
3rite out the state completel% such as 6California6
or abbre,iated 6Calif-6- Ee,er use 6CA6 for the
mailing location of a So,ereign or in %our return
mailing location-
8ust now use 69urisdictional regions or 'ones6 such
as 6CA6, 6EC6, 6AL6, etc-
that are not abbre,iations but are 6two9digit
designations6 of the federal fictional o,erla%s
(Counterfeits) of the states-
on-use o" #ip
The latest cite for the statement
"7ip codes ma$ +e omitted"
is now 6
+MM <0B :.Fe (B!6
(last printing on *anuar% $, 1<<#)-
pre,iousl% it was 6+MM :BB.FB6
"D##" is "DO#E,TIC #AI5 #A&A5"
The U-S- /ostal Ser,ice cannot discriminate
against the non9use o# N./ codes, pursuant to
the /ostal 4eorgani'ation Act, Section +<=
(/ublic 0aw 5!-=":)-
Samples o# Mail
*eceived
!$ USC Sec- !"1#-
$ostage collected unlaw"ully 3hoe,er,
being postmaster or other person authori'ed to
recei,e the postage of mail matter, fraudulentl%
demands or recei,es an% rate of postage or
gratuit% or reward other than is pro,ided b% law for
the postage of such mail matter, shall be fined
under this title or imprisoned not more than si;
months, or both-
A82ED82ETS
!55+ - /ub- 0- !<=-=11 substituted
#ip %ode &mplementation
6on *ul% !, !5#=, non9mandatory L/ codes were
announced for the whole countr%6
6n !5#", these were made mandatory #or second9
and third9class bul" mailers, and the s%stem was
soon adopted generall%-6
6a cartoon character, 8r- L/, to promote use of the
L/ code-6
n !5$=, 6add-on code 555$ for mail addressed to
the postmaster6
65555 for general delivery6
--3i>ipedia
Federal 'istricts
6fined under this title6
for 6fined not more than S!<<6-
0ast modified: April !=, 1<<#
!ail 'eli(ered $ri(ately
6The American 0etter 8ail Compan% was started
b% 0%sander Spooner in !$++, competing with the
legal monopol% of the United States /ost ?ffice
(US/?) (now the US/S) in ,iolation of the /ri,ate
2;press Statutes- t succeeded in deli,ering mail
for lower prices, but the U-S- .o,ernment
challenged Spooner with legal measures,
e,entuall% forcing him to cease operations in
!$:!-6
--3i>ipedia
Titles o" obility
Do not use or accept titles of nobilit% such as
68ister6 meaning 68aster6 (has authorit% o,er
ser,ants) and abbre,iated 68r-6) 62sAuire6
abbre,iated 6esA-6) and others li>e 68issus6,
68adame6 (non-2nglish nationalit%) or
68esdames6 meaning 68istress, feminine ,ersion
of 8aster 6 and abbre,iated 68rs-6) 68iss%6
meaning 6unmarried %oung mistress6 and
abbre,iated 68iss-6
The corporate de facto go,ernment utili'es the
6L/-Code6 s%stem to pro,e that one actuall%
resides in a 6federal district of the District of
Columbia6- This is wh% the 4S and other
go,ernment agencies (federal, state, and political
subdi,isions thereof) assert 9urisdiction b% sending
letters and notices with 'ip codes reAuired- The%
claim that this speeds up the mail, but this is a sl%
and subtle deception- t is also prima facie e,idence
that one is 6a sub9ect6 of corporate U-S- Congress,
a 6citi'en of the District of Columbia6, and is a
6resident6 in one of the se,eral States although not
a state Citi'en or Eational of that state-
the !R has adopted T!# code areas as "!nternal Revenue
'istricts". ee the *ederal Register, Aolume 52, /umber 56, for
0ednesday, -arch 28, 283?
%he corporate soFcalled government attempts to assert
jurisdiction by sending letters with T!# codes, when jurisdiction
would otherwise be lac&ing.
/atrons recei,e mail
b% 6general delivery6
or 6general /ost6
at main post office or post offices in e;istence
prior to the creation of corporate go,ernment
/ost used since
Biblical times
Since *ul% !st, !$#=
-ustomers recei,e
63ree delivery6
to an% location
ha,ing a mailing address or /? &o;- 4ural (ree
Deli,er% became an official ser,ice in !$5#
This is a corporate go,ernment benefit- 4ecei,ing a
benefit admits that one has a contract with the
corporate go,ernment- There is usuall% an
e;change, consideration, or pa%ment made for a
6benefit-6 So, what price is paid for this benefitM f
the price is 6loss of freedom and libert%6- s the price
too highM
E)amples o"
!ailing Labels*
*ohn-Da,id: Christian
general /ost (general deli,er%)
(ran>lin F8ainG /ost ?ffice
California state
FE?E-D?82STC to corp- USG
*ohn Da,id
general /ost-office
*?BE C- D?2
!=1+ 32ST 320D?E
(4AED0E EC ###==
D?2 *?BE C
!=1+ 3est 3eldon A,enue
(ran>lin, EC ###==
*?BE C D?2
!=1+ 32ST 320D?E
(4AED0E EC ###==
(ran>lin
California state
*ohn-Da,id) Christian
general /ost
(ran>lin /ost ?ffice
California
*ohn-Da,id) Christian
in care of temporar% /ost location
!=1+ 3est 3eldon A,enue, Suite "
(ran>lin FEon-DomesticG
California
*ohn) Christian
cPo !=1+ 3est 3eldon A,enue, Suite "
(ran>lin FEon-DomesticG
California FLip e;emptG
Some people who are afraid to lea,e off a 'ip use the format
below- prefer not to use an% 'ip at all unless out of absolute
necessit% (rarel%)- recei,e hundreds of mail and pac>ages without
a 'ip code, without dela%-
*ohn Da,id) Christian
in care of !=1+ 3est 3eldon A,enue
(ran>lin,
California republic Fnear :+=1!G
Eon-Domestic
*ohn Da,id, Christian
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the rest of the document-
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Eote: All caps andPor 8iddle initial ma>es the name a fiction--a non-
li,ing entit%
Schools
Human *esource
+,4,7$/M,0%
Enroll %our child
"sign /p," "3oin"
'egister %our child
"p/t into in*entory"
Bome taught
Communit% or town schools
/arochial schools
Children who >new how to handle a gun safel%,
went to school with one for protection along the
wa%-
/ra%er was respected
Children learned
according to their abilities-
Children were taught
to respect their elders-
/ublic Schools
are actuall% go,ernment schools
paid for b% forced ta;ation
whether the% want it or not-
Teaches blind obedience
to the central STAT2-
Similar to Ea'i .erman%-
6.i,e me a child
and 7ll shape him into anything-6
E .. *. &inner, Bewish psychologist and pioneer of behaviorism "..modern methods
of propaganda."
"%he populace will not be allowed to &now
how its convictions were generated.
0hen the technique has been perfected, every government
Discipline was respected and taught in the
schools as well as at home-
The rod was not spared-
The 6%en -ommandments6 were respected and
cherished as good rules to li,e b%-
Eo worshipping of a flag
Eo blind obedience
62ducate and inform the whole mass of the
people--- The% are the onl% sure reliance for the
preser,ation of our libert%-6 --Thomas *efferson
that has been in charge of education for a generation will be
able to control its su+2ects securely without the need of
armies or policemen..."
FF .ertrand Russell, "%he !mpact of cience on ociety"
6Xin the communist ideolog% X education is tied
directl% to 9obs Z control of the 9ob being the critical
control point in an authoritarian state-6
FF"ugene -aHwell .oyce, #rofessor of "ducational Administration at the ,niversity
of $eorgia, %he (oming Revolution in "ducation, 2836.
/ledge o# 2llegiance
and 3lag Salute
/ledge of Allegiance (a lo%alt% oath) to one nation-
Eot to one particular state of the se,eral states or to
.od-
6one nation, indi,isible6
6one nation under .od6
3hich .odM whose .odM
ndi,idualism and the lo,e of libert% of the American
founding fathers would alwa%s stand in the wa% of
achie,ing the socialist utopia
60ational /ublic School -elebration6
in !$51 was the first national propaganda campaign
?riginall%, 6students were taught to recite the
/ledge with their arms outstretched, palms up,
similar to how 4oman citi'ens were reAuired to hail
Caesar, and not too different from the wa% in which
Ea'i soldiers saluted their (^_hrer- This was the
custom in United States public schools from the turn
of the twentieth centur% until around !5:<, when it
was apparentl% decided b% public school officials
that the Ea'i-li>e salute was in bad taste-6
-- Thomas *- Di0oren'o author of The 4eal 0incoln: A Eew 0oo> at
Abraham 0incoln, Bis Agenda, and an Unnecessar% 3ar
((orumP4andom Bouse, 1<<1) and professor of economics at 0o%ola
College in 8ar%land-
The origin of this practice was instituted b% /haraoh
A>henaten in his worship of the glor% of Aten, the
Sun Disc (the Sun god)-
Eo go,ernment bureaucrac%
Eo bureaucratic costs
Eo additional o,erhead cost
n !$#", /resident Andrew *ohnson signed
legislation creating the first +epartment o#
,ducation- ts main purpose was to collect
information and statistics about the nation7s schools-
Bowe,er, man% people feared the Department
Eo go,ernment control
Eo superfluous costs or spending
Eo go,ernment influence programming children7s
minds and belief s%stem-
Eo Secret Societ% hidden agenda
Eo special interests hidden agenda
(reedom to teach without go,ernment influence
or inter,ention
would e;ercise too much control o,er local schools
and called for its abolition- Thus, the new
Department was demoted to an $##ice o#
,ducation in !$#$- n !5"5, Congress passed
/ublic 0aw 5#-$$ creating the +epartment o#
,ducation-
n the !$#<7s, a budget of S!:,<<< and four
emplo%ees handled education fact-finding- &% !5#:,
the ?ffice of 2ducation emplo%ed more than 1,!!=
persons with a budget of S!-: billion- As of earl%
1<<1, the U-S- Department of 2ducation has about
+,$<< emplo%ees and a budget of MD;.D billion-
/rivate Schools
Colleges and uni,ersities were originall% pri,atel%
owned and run b% religious groups
Usuall% opened and closed with pra%er to .od
Colleges and uni,ersities changed o,er to
go,ernment control through grants and other
pri,ileges such as accreditation-
8uns
810S
So,ereigns ha,e a right to own and use
guns--64ight to bear arms6 against 6enemies
foreign and domestic6-
The founding fathers >new the importance of
protecting themsel,es from go,ernments who get
out of hand-
6.uns in the hands of
good people is a good defense-6
--*ac>) Sle,>off 1<!1
This go,ernment wants to disarm the Citi'ens so
as to ha,e complete control and power- 2,er%
t%rannical go,ernment in the past has ta>en awa%
the guns to pre,ent an% serious opposition or
rebellion- Bistor% continues to repeat itself because
the new generations who come along don7t >now or
tend to forget about the past and will sa% it will not
happen here-
8uns 2ustralia
Bnd 2mendment
6---the right of the people to >eep and bear arms,
shall not be infringed-6
8uns are %ools
6Those who hammer their guns
into plows will plow
for those who do not-6
--Thomas *efferson
6Those who trade libert%
for securit%
ha,e neither-6
` *ohn Adams
Disregards the 1nd Amendment or 9ustifies what
weapons should not be legal- 2,er changing and
e,er restricti,e-
The corporate go,ernment s%stem reAuires:
*egistration o# guns-
8eans to bring them into the corporate registrar-
Then becomes the propert% of the corporate
go,ernment, and that is wh% the% can ta>e them at
an% time-
(ree men do not as> permission
to bear arms-
Hou onl% ha,e the rights
%ou are willing to fight for-
3hen %ou remo,e the people7s right
to bear arms, %ou create sla,es-
The Second Amendment is in place
in case the politicians ignore the others-
#+,555,5$" firearms owners
>illed no one %esterda%-
6Eo #ree man shall e,er be debarred the use of
arms-6
--Thomas *efferson
6The strongest reason for the /eople to retain the
right to >eep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to
protect themsel,es against tyranny in
go,ernment-6
--Thomas *efferson
The constitutions ma>e no mention of registering
guns-
f an% of %ou saw the motion picture called 64ed
Dawn6 would reali'e that the enem% finds these
lists and then goes door to door collecting all of the
guns-
Gun Control88(uman Cost
-ust see two videos
and
%his is why
0e say no to $un (ontrol
Militia
M.7.%2*'
+mendment &&
A well regulated militia being necessar% to the
securit% of a free state, the right of the people to
>eep and bear arms shall not be infringed-
FF(onstitution for the united states of America
"%he econd Amendment 7Amendment !!: to the ,nited
tates (onstitution is the part of the ,nited tates .ill of
Rights that declares a wellFregulated militia as "being
necessary to the security of a free tate" and prohibits
infringement of "the right of the people to &eep and bear
arms.""
"!n ,nited tates v. (rui&shan&, 8= ,.. 54= 723@5:, the
upreme (ourt held that the econd Amendment is only a
limit on the power of the federal government, but some
people contend that it also limits the power of each tate.K4L
!n the landmar& decision in 'istrict of (olumbia v. >eller
7=993:, the upreme (ourt ruled a 0ashington, '.(.
68ilitar% men are 9ust dumb stupid
animals to be used as pawns in
foreign polic%-6
FF(enr$ 9issinger, as quoted in "1iss the .oys $oodbye; >ow
the ,nited tates .etrayed !ts )wn #)0Us in Aietnam"72889:
and as found at
#ortland !ndependent -edia (enter
+rmed Forces
"! believe;that being in the -ilitia, based on the 'eclaration of
!ndependence, declares and maintains oneIs overeignty, but
joining the , military, no matter which department 7/avy,
Army, -arines, etc:, one loses all rights and privileges and
becomes the property of the , soFcalled government to do
with what they may; therefore a subject 7slave:. "veryone in the
military have volunteered even if and when summoned under
the draft system. 0hen they as& for everyone to ta&e a step
forward or bac&ward, or give an oath, it is a voluntary action. At
ordinance, that was an outright firearm ban, to be
unconstitutional. !n doing so, the (ourt identified a personal
right of self defense protected by the econd Amendment.
--3i>ipedia
An oath most Americans ha,e ta>en in times past,
some e,en to this da%:
6 will support and defend the Constitution and
laws of the United States of America against all
enemies, foreign and domestic6
Some oaths toda% ha,e been manipulated and
changed to reflect ser,ice to what the /resident
reAuests and for ser,ice to what the United
Eations desires) being completel% different than
the Constitutional oath-
The real problem is that these 6US citi'ens,6 so-
called Americans dressed as soldiers, are not
protecting the people from domestic enemies
within, but ha,e 9oined with the enem%- The
enem% are now in high places and ha,e ta>en
o,er this countr%, usurping the powers within,
while ignoring the Constitution, and some do not
e,en ta>e a ,alid oath based on the Constitution,
especiall% the so-called 9udges and those
Americans appearing as UE /eace>eepers-
">e that would ma&e his own liberty secure must guard even
his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he
establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
F %homas #aine
that moment, is when one is actually inducted. %he one that
does nothing or the opposite maintains all rights and privileges.
Des, they will try to persuade you or ma&e you loo& bad in front
of everyone else, and may even yell at you. .ut, if you maintain
your stance, in spite of it all, you will most li&ely be released;
cognizant of your belief and understanding."
--*ac> the son of *ac> of the famil% Sle,>off
sent abo,e in an email on the Third da% of the 2le,enth month, 1<<$
&n"antry
deri,ed from the word infant-
.n#ant5 ?ne under the age of twent%-one %ears- Co-
0itt- !"!
--&ou,ier7s 0aw Dictionar%
.n#ancy5 8inorit%) the state of a person who is
under the age of legal ma9orit%,--at common law,
twent% one %ears-
--&lac>7s 0aw Dictionar%, #th 2d-
"0ar will eHist until that distant day when the
conscientious objector enjoys the same
reputation and prestige that the warrior does
today." F Bohn *. 1ennedy
Faith and :orship
*,7.8.$0
Churches e;ist alone-
Eo permission of go,ernment reAuired-
!st Amendment
/rotects against go,ernment ma>ing a law that
would respect an establishment of religion or
This go,ernment wants to control religious
institutions b% ha,ing them come under
their 9urisdiction as
corporations
under
Section D0:(c!(F!-
under Title 1# of the
nternal 4e,enue Code (U-S- Code)
This is to pre,ent the clerg%, /astors, 8inisters, etc-
from ha,ing an% political influence on its members
or the public in general- This go,ernment regulates
what is to be said and not to be said-
These churches also displa% the
gold #ringe #lag-
Their faith is in the go,ernment and not in .od-
The% e;ist b% permission of this go,ernment not b%
prohibit the free e;ercise of ones belief-
The (rench and other romance languages get
their word for church from the .ree> word
6e>>lesia,6 meaning 6called out6 referring to all
those, li,ing or dead, who ha,e accepted what
*esus, The Christ, has offered-
6 do not go to a specific church
but am 9ust one member of The Church-6
--*ac>) Sle,>off !5$#
.od alone-
The% signed away their Birthright
for a so-called benefit:
6Ta;-e;empt corporation-6
2ll rights are reserved b% 6*ac>) Sle,>off6, a
li,ing soul, a flesh and blood man on the 0and, a
natural born So,ereign, a California national, a
child of .od whereb% all offenses committed b%
*ac>, whether in the past, present, or future,
ha,e been paid in full b% *esus, The Christ- All
rights are protected under the common law and
under .od7s 0aw that sa%s 6Thou shalt not
steal-6 Eo publishing or cop%ing allowed without
prior written consent-
,ltho/gh /rinted -opies %ay not 'e
a*aila'le at this ti%e, yo/ can o'tain
written per%ission *ia e%ail or snail
%ail to print, copy, and or reprod/ce
this :e' 4age directly &ro% the
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"1o%e o/t o& her %y people,
that ye 'e not partakers o& her sins"
)e*elation "BA4
"-& %y people, which are called 'y %y
na%e, h/%'le the%sel*es, and pray,
and seek %y &ace, and t/rn &ro% their
wicked waysE then will - hear &ro%
hea*en and will &orgi*e their sin, and
will heal their land+"
-- 1hronicles #A"4
"(he earth is the Lord's,
and the &/llness thereo&+"
4sal% 24A"
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0u>e !<:"
/lease contact us immediatel% if %ou find an%
information contained herein to be false or
misleading- Corrections will be made
immediatel% upon written proof and ,erification-
1lick on '/tton to send e%ailA
68a>e %oursel,es sheep and the wol,es will eat
%ou6 -- &en9amin (ran>lin
6Hou will not fight for the right when %ou can
easil% win without bloodshed, if %ou will not fight
when %our ,ictor% will be sure and not so costl%,
%ou ma% come to the moment when %ou will
ha,e to fight with all the odds against %ou and
63e fought the 4e,olutionar% 3ar for no
ta;ation without representation, seems to me we
are much worse off toda%, because we are
hea,il% ta;ed, and onl% the >ing7s corporations
control this Countr%, together with mob rule, of
the special interests6--*ames 8ontgomer%) A-D-
1<<!
/The Truth As I ,ee It/ o. 4
Pertaining to (IERARC(3
:ho su+mits to !ho
onl% a precarious chance for sur,i,al- There
ma% be a worse case- Hou ma% ha,e to fight
when there is no chance of ,ictor%, because it is
better to perish than to li,e as sla,es-6 --
3inston Churchill
62ducation is the best securit% for maintaining
liberties, and, a nation of well-informed men who
ha,e been taught to >now and pri'e the rights
which .od has gi,en them cannot be ensla,ed-
t is in the region of ignorance that t%rann%
reigns-6-- &en9amin (ran>lin, Autobiograph%
6t will be of little a,ail to the people that the laws
are made b% men of their own choice, if the laws
be so ,oluminous that the% cannot be read, or
so incoherent that the% cannot be understood) if
the% be repealed or re,ised before the% are
promulgated, or undergo such incessant
changes that no man who >nows what the law is
toda% can guess what it will be tomorrow-6 --
*ames 8adison, (ederalist no- #1, (ebruar% 1",
!"$$
6f %e lo,e wealth better than libert%, the
tranAuilit% of ser,itude better than the animating
contest of freedom, go home from us in peace-
3e as> not %our counsels or arms- Crouch
down and lic> the hands which feed %ou- 8a%
%our chains set lightl% upon %ou, and ma%
posterit% forget %e were our countr%men-6--
Samuel Adams
6The problem isn7t what we don7t >now, the
problem is what we belie,e to be so and isn7t
so-6-- 3ill 4ogers
6--it does not reAuire a ma9orit% to pre,ail, but
rather an irate, tireless minorit% >een to set
brush fires in people7s minds--6 -- Samuel
Adams
6The% that can gi,e up essential libert% to obtain
a little temporar% safet% deser,e neither libert%
nor safet%-6 -- &en9amin (ran>lin
6As such, the United States now no longer
e;ists as 6united states6) rather, it is now simpl%
a single entit% >nown as 6America6 whose state-
boundaries are now secondar%, and which
e;ists as a shell of its former self- t is no longer
a land of peace and prosperit%, e;cept what little
can be maintained in an atmosphere of ,iolence
and hostile competition as its inhabitants fight
for freedom against one another, each
6 belie,e that America is the greatest countr% in
histor% and for good reasons, but America has
been changing and not for the better- ?ur free
societ% has been falling pre% to a more
repressi,e s%stem with methods for the
increased control of people- The return of
groups and indi,iduals to the controlling
ideolog% of mperialism and 8ar;ism using the
structures of Corporation, Socialism and
Democrac%- The result is that this nation7s
foundational principles based on the ideolog% of
0ibert% are now in danger of e;tinction-6
--Darren /er>ins) A-D- 1<<1
6There are man% people in,ol,ed in the fight to
return our countr% to a so,ereign nation and
there are man% people who are 9ust plain sic>
and tired of the 6go,ernmental6 controls placed
on our e,er% da% li,es- The 6go,ernment6
controls our li,es ,ia ta;ation, le,ies, traffic
tic>ets, code enforcement, licensing, permits,
registrations, inspections, the mails, ban>ing,
child protecti,e ser,ices, airport 6in6-securit%,
etc---- The% listen to our telephone
con,ersations, read our e-mails, rifle through
our belongings during roadside searches and
now the% can come into our homes without a
search warrant - e,en when we7re not home-
Troops are alread% being trained to stop us on
the highwa%s and demand to see our 6papers
please-6 Does an% of this sound remotel%
familiarM Thin> it can7t happen hereM 3hen is
enough going to be enoughM At what point do
we sa% 6E? 8?42N6M6--Ann Sims 1<<=
63arning to Americans from a 4ussian
2migre- --- came to the United States in the
7"<7s from the ,er% possible future of America -
4ussia- The longer li,e in this countr% the more
ominous signs of the So,iet Union see around
me- feel li>e am on the trip 6&ac> to the
(uture6 - The United States of Socialist
4epublics- ---6 -- Anon%mous
63h% of course the people don7t want war- 3h%
should some poor slob on a farm want to ris> his
life in a war when the best he can get out of it is
to come bac> to his farm in one pieceM Eaturall%
the common people don7t want war neither in
4ussia, nor in 2ngland, nor for that matter in
.erman%- That is understood- &ut, after all, it is
the leaders of the countr% who determine the
polic% and it is alwa%s a simple matter to drag
struggling ,ia the law of the 9ungle to 6ta; or be
ta;ed, regulate or be regulated-6 This is onl%
possible in an oppressi,e, capti,e en,ironment,
which the original s%stem was created to
preclude) the onl% solution, it seems, is to
restore this former s%stem, ending federal
supremac% and once again restoring supreme
so,ereignt% to the states as a chec> on such
federal e;cess-6 -- Defining 7America7 *ul% :,
1<<+ b% &rian 8cCandliss who is a business
and economics graduate of 0ibert% Uni,ersit% in
0%nchburg, Cirginia, a law student, and a
businessman in Detroit, 8ichigan-
6?nce a go,ernment is committed to the
principle of silencing the ,oice of opposition, it
has onl% one wa% to go, and that is down the
path of increasingl% repressi,e measures, until it
becomes a source of terror to all its citi'ens and
creates a countr% where e,er%one li,es in fear-6
--Barr% S Truman
?nl% two people signed the Declaration of
ndependence on *ul% +th, *ohn Bancoc> and
Charles Thomson- 8ost of the rest signed on
August 1, but the last signature wasn7t added
until : %ears later-
6.o,ernments are instituted among 8en,
deri,ing their 9ust powers from the Consent of
the .o,erned, that whene,er an% (orm of
.o,ernment becomes destructi,e of these
2nds, it is the 4ight of the /eople to alter or to
abolish it, and to institute new .o,ernment---6
Sound familiarM t should-
t is from the second paragraph of the American
Declaration of ndependence-
6A great industrial nation is controlled b% it7s
s%stem of credit- ?ur s%stem of credit is
concentrated in the hands of a few men- 3e
ha,e come to be one of the worst ruled, one of
the most completel% controlled and dominated
go,ernments in the world--no longer a
go,ernment of free opinion, no longer a
go,ernment b% con,iction and ,ote of the
ma9orit%, but a go,ernment b% the opinion and
duress of small groups of dominant men-6
-- /resident 3oodrow 3ilson
62,er% act of resistance ma>es t%rann% wea>er-
8an%, man% acts of resistance, e,en small
ones, can topple it- donOt wish suffering on
m%self or an%one else, but am proud of people
who ha,e stood up for truth and 9ustice when it
the people along, whether it is a democrac%, or
a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a
communist dictatorship- Coice or no ,oice, the
people can alwa%s be brought to the bidding of
the leaders- That is eas%- All %ou ha,e to do is
tell them the% are being attac>ed, and denounce
the peacema>ers for lac> of patriotism and
e;posing the countr% to danger- t wor>s the
same in an% countr%-6--Bermann .oering !5+#
(!$5=-!5+#) Commander-in-Chief of the 0uftwaffe, /resident of
the 4eichstag, /rime 8inister of /russia and, as Bitler7s
designated successor, the second man in the Third 4eich-
F.aringG Euremberg Diar% ((arrar, Straus K Co !5+"), b%
.usta,e .ilbert (an Allied appointed ps%chologist), who ,isited
dail% with .oering and his cronies in their cells, afterwards
ma>ing notes and ultimatel% writing the boo> about these
con,ersations-
3as that what 5!! was all aboutM---To entice public opinion in
fa,or of the /atriot Act(s), Bomeland Securit%, and to bring
Afghanistan and raA under the rule of the Eew 3orld ?rder
6Simpl% put, freedom is the absence of
go,ernment coercion-6--4on /aul (United States
4epresentati,e from Te;as) (ebruar% ", 1<<:
from: http;<<www.house.gov<paul<tst<tst=995<tst9=9@95.htm
6As go,ernment e;pands, libert% contracts-6--
4onald 4eagan
63ho controls the food suppl% controls the
people) who controls the energ% can control
whole continents) who controls mone% can
control the world-6--Benr% Dissinger
6There are more instances of the abridgment of
the freedom of the people b% gradual and silent
encroachments of those in power than b% ,iolent
and sudden usurpation6--*ames 8adison (!":!-
!$=#)
63hen %ou conAuered with armies, e,er%one
>new %ou were conAueringX-- 3hen %ou
conAuered with economic hitmen %ou could do it
secretl%-6 --AETB?EH /24DES (former 3orld
&an> economist) 6TB2 S2C42T BST?4H ?(
TB2 A824CAE 28/426
---the most de,astating weapon-of-mass-
destruction e,er deplo%ed against an% particular
national population has alwa%s been its own
unrestrained go,ernment, armed with powers
ceded during moments of real or imagined
crisis---/eter Bendric>son
6Ci,il disobedience becomes a sacred dut%
when the state has become lawless or corrupt-
And a citi'en who barters with such a state
was dangerous to do so- And Oll be proud to &2
one of those people, no matter what happens to
me-6 --Tessa Da,id 4ose (3ife of 0ar>en 4ose)
68ost people prefer to belie,e that their leaders
are 9ust and fair, e,en in the face of e,idence to
the contrar%, because once a Citi'en
ac>nowledges that the go,ernment under which
he li,es is l%ing and corrupt, the Citi'en has to
choose what he or she will do about it- To ta>e
action in the face of corrupt go,ernment entails
ris>s of harm to life and lo,ed ones- To choose
to do nothing is to surrender oneOs self-image of
standing for principles- 8ost people do not ha,e
the courage to face that choice- Bence, most
propaganda is not designed to fool the critical
thin>er but onl% to gi,e moral cowards an
e;cuse not to thin> at all-6 --8ichael 4i,ero
6A reall% efficient totalitarian state would be one
in which the all-powerful e;ecuti,e of political
bosses and their arm% of managers control a
population of sla,es who do not ha,e to be
coerced, because the% lo,e their ser,itude- To
ma>e them lo,e it is the tas> assigned, in
present-da% totalitarian states, to ministries of
propaganda, newspaper editors and
schoolteachers-6 --Aldous Bu;le% (!$5+-!5#=)
6The onl% thing necessar% for the triumph of e,il
is for good men to do nothing-6 --2dmund &ur>e
6Eo man sur,i,es when freedom fails) the best
men rot in filth% 9ails) and those who cr%
6AppeaseN AppeaseN6 are hanged b% those the%
tried to please6 --Biram 8ann
68ourn not the dead that in the cool earth lie,
but rather mourn the apathetic, throng the
coward and the mee> who see the world7s great
anguish and its wrong, and dare not spea>-6 --
4alph Chaplin
6Cowardice as>s the Auestion: is it safeM
2;pedienc% as>s the Auestion: is it politicalM
Canit% as>s the Auestion: is it popularM &ut
conscience as>s the Auestion: is it rightM And
there comes a time when one must ta>e a
position that is neither safe, nor political, nor
popular - but one must ta>e it simpl% because it
is right-6 --8artin 0uther Ding, *r-
6The% don7t reali'e no man escapes when
freedom fails because the best men rot in filth%
9ails and those who cried, 7Appease, Appease7
shares in its corruption and lawlessnessX
2,er% citi'en is responsible for e,er% act of his
go,ernmentX There is onl% one so,ereign
remed%, namel%, non-,iolent non-cooperation-
3hether we ad,ertise the fact or not, the
moment we cease to support the go,ernment it
dies a natural deathX 8% method is con,ersion,
not coercion, it is self-suffering, not the suffering
of the t%rant---6--8ahatma .andhi 63e are fast
approaching the stage of the ultimate in,ersion:
the stage where the go,ernment is free to do
an%thing it pleases, while the citi'ens ma% act
onl% b% permission) which is the stage of the
dar>est periods of human histor%, the stage of
rule b% brute force-6 --A%n 4and, The Eature of
.o,ernment
63hen force is the standard, the murderer wins
o,er the pic>poc>et, and then that societ%
,anishes, in a spread of ruins and slaughter- Do
%ou wish to >now whether that da% is comingM
3atch 8one%- 8one% is a barometer of a
societ%7s ,irtue- 3hen %ou see that trading is
done, not b% consent, but b% compulsion - when
%ou see that in order to produce, %ou need
permission from men who produce nothing -
when %ou see that mone% is flowing to those
who deal, not in goods, but in fa,ors - when %ou
see men get richer b% graft and pull than b%
wor>, and %our laws don7t protect %ou against
them, but protect them against %ou - when %ou
see corruption being rewarded and honest%
becoming a self-sacrifice - %ou ma% >now that
our societ% is doomed- 8one% is so noble a
medium that it does not compete with guns and
it does not ma>e terms with brutalit%- t will not
permit a countr% to sur,i,e as half-N propert%,
half-loot- 3hene,er destro%ers appear among
men, the% start b% destro%ing mone%, for mone%
is men7s protection, and the base of a moral
e;istence-6 --A%n 4and, whose gi,en name is Alissa
4osenbaum was a witness to the socialist horrors of the Union
of So,iet Socialist 4epublics- She escaped and arri,ed in the
United States in !51# on a ,isitor7s ,isa, but ne,er returned- A%n
4and became a successful no,elist and popular philosopher of
reason and indi,idualism after wor>ing as a screenwriter in
Boll%wood- She helped inspire the modern libertarian
mo,ement-
6 0?C2 8H C?UET4H,
D2S/S2 3BAT 8H C?UET4H BAS
&2C?82NN6
--&ill%-*oe--8auldin 1<<=
6the s%stematic repression of all our freedoms
under the prete;t of 6Bomeland Securit%6
are hung b% those the% tried to please-6 --(rom
&ett% (reauf web site
63hat good fortune for those in power that
people do not thin>-6 --Adolf Bitler
6(ascism will come to this countr% and it will
come disguised as Americanism-6 .o,ernor
Bue% 0ong-
6f t%rann% and oppression come to this land, it
will be in the guise of fighting a foreign
enem%-6--*ames 8adison
6(irst the% came for the Communists, and
didn7t spea> up, because wasn7t a Communist-
Then the% came for the *ews, and didn7t spea>
up, because wasn7t a *ew- Then the% came for
the Catholics, and didn7t spea> up, because
was a /rotestant- Then the% came for me, and
b% that time there was no one left to spea> up
for me-6
--4e,- 8artin Eiemoller (!5+:)
6The people are the masters of both Congress
and the courts, not to o,erthrow the
Constitution, but to o,erthrow the men who
would per,ert itN6 --Abraham 0incoln
6Be who passi,el% accepts e,il is as much
in,ol,ed in it as he who helps to perpetrate it-
Be who accepts e,il without protesting against it
is reall% cooperating with it-6 --8artin 0uther
Ding, *r-
6Dissent is the highest form of patriotism-6--
Thomas *efferson-
FSilence is consentG
6?ur go,ernment concei,ed in freedom and
purchased with blood can be preser,ed onl% b%
constant ,igilance-6 Z3illiam *ennings &r%an
68an is not made for the State but the State for
man and it deri,es its 9ust powers onl% from the
consent of the go,erned-6 ZThomas *efferson
62nlighten the people generall%, and t%rann%
and oppressions of bod% and mind will ,anish
li>e e,il spirits at the dawn of da%-6 ZThomas
*efferson
6The men the American people admire most
e;tra,agantl% are the greatest liars) the men
the% detest most ,iolentl% are those who tr% to
modeled after the .estapo and the Securit%
Ser,ice FSSG of Ea'i .erman%- don7t thin>
need to sa% more about that, but please ma>e
strong efforts to inform others of this who are
still afflicted with mass-media brainwashing-
Deep throwing the facts in their faces until the%
can no longer dispute %ou- 3e cannot ta>e our
countr% bac> unless the people are educated
and Auic>N6--/aul 3al>er --Aftermath Eews
64esistance to t%rants is obedience to .od-6--
Thomas *efferson
belie,e that resistance to t%rann% is obedience
to The Creator- ?nce learned the truth had to
do something about it- There7s no wa% in good
conscience can allow m% posterit% to grow up
in toda%Os world as it is- must be one of the
/eople that do something-
--4ae Copit>a, 1<<"
64egarding the pledge of allegiance to the
64epublic-6 3hen one 6pledges6 an%thing and
particularl% allegiance hePshe is ma>ing an oath-
3e ha,e had oath discussions before but don7t
thin> we ta>e it seriousl% enough- Though ha,e
8A*?4 issues with the *eho,ah7s 3itnesses
must agree with them that ta>ing an oath or a
pledge goes against Scripture- 2,en the% do not
obe% this when it comes to signing 6under
penalt% of /er9ur%-6 n m% correspondence with
Al Thompson he is adimate about this point- Be
spends a great deal of time in the &ible and has
concluded that this is the trap that gets us into
those adhesion contracts and entanglements
with the 6s%stem-6 tend to agree with him more
and more- Technicall%, the onl% people that
should wor> for FcorporateG go,ernment, most of
which reAuires an oath, are the non-belie,ers-
3hen the% become belie,ers the% should 6come
out of &ab%lon6 so to spea> and disengage
themsel,es from satan7s s%stem- As much as
we can rel% on the constitution it D?2S reAuire
oaths- Dinda ma>es %ou wonder, doesn7t itM 7,e
long since retired from ma>ing m% 6patriotism6 a
religion- 8% wife and both are militar% >ids- 3e
grew up Cer% patriotic- 8a>ing the pledge,
singing the anthem hand o,er heart, signing
under 6penalt% of /er9ur%-6 3e no longer claim a
citi'enship an%where but .od7s Dingdom
because of Bis promise- ?nce the ,eil is lifted
and satan7s deception is e;posed that is reall%
all that we as belie,ers ha,e left- t was reall% all
that we had to begin with and that is what .od
has been tr%ing to tell us since the .arden of
tell them the truth-6 ZB-0- 8enc>en
Bere7s a little stor% from /lato7s most famous
boo>, %he *epublic- Socrates is tal>ing to a
%oung follower of his named .laucon, and is
telling him this fable to illustrate what it7s li>e to
be a philosopher -- a lo,er of wisdom: 68ost
people, including oursel,es, li,e in a world of
relati,e ignorance- 3e are e,en comfortable
with that ignorance, because it is all we >now-
3hen we first start facing truth, the process ma%
be frightening, and man% people run bac> to
their old li,es- &ut if %ou continue to see> truth,
%ou will e,entuall% be able to handle it better- n
fact, %ou want moreN t7s true that man% people
around %ou now ma% thin> %ou are weird or
e,en a danger to societ%, but %ou don7t care-
?nce %ou7,e tasted the truth, %ou won7t e,er
want to go bac> to being ignorantN6
6(irst the% ignore %ou-
Then the% laugh at %ou-
Then the% fight %ou-
Then %ou win-6
--.andhi
)2ll truth passes through three stages5 3irst,
it is ridiculed, second it is violently opposed,
and third, it is accepted
as sel#9evident.)
-- Arthur Schopenhauer, /hilosopher
!"$$-!$#<
2den- &lind lo%al nationalism has been the
gra,estone and suffering of so man% millions of
people it almost ma>es me ill- America, despite
its roots is E?T a Christian nation and will li>el%
ne,er be one- The membership role of the
Dingdom of Bea,en is ours to e;pand no matter
where we li,e- TBAT is m% countr%- B2 is m%
Ding and whom will ser,e- Be has 9urisdiction-
will gi,e to Bim that which is Bis and to Caesar
that which is Caesar7s (nothing-) am a bond
ser,ant of Christ and will ta>e E? oaths to an%
other man, beast, or fiction for that would be
tr%ing to ser,e two masters- That cannot be
done-6
--4ic>) Bart' (4ic>it%) 5P=<P1<<:
6 could send %ou the information on how the
pledge of allegiance got started and b% whom Fif
%ou wantG but a Christian could ne,er gi,e their
allegiance to an%one other than .od- would
gi,e m% lo%alt% to this countr% which ha,e
done, Fbeing US8C retiredG but m% allegiance is
to .od onl%-6--Al &e%er !<P!P1<<:-
6(ear can onl% pre,ail when ,ictims are ignorant
of the facts-6--Thomas *efferson
6The best wa% to ta>e control o,er a people and
control them utterl% is to ta>e a little of their
freedom at a time, to erode rights b% a thousand
tin% and almost imperceptible reductions- n this
wa%, the people will not see those rights and
freedoms being remo,ed until past the point at
which these changes cannot be re,ersed-6--
Adolf Bitler
would suggest reading the following boo>s:
%he -reature 3rom 6e"yll .sland (1<<1) b% .-
2dward .riffin 4eads li>e a detecti,e stor%
--cause of wars, boom-bust c%cles, inflation,
depression, prosperit%, etc and who is behind it
all-
0one +are -all .t -onspiracy b% .ar% Allen
+eath o# a 0ationO 0one +are -all .t %reason
b% *ohn A- Stormer
%ragedy and Hope (!5"") b% Dr- Carroll
@uigle% a Bar,ard professor and an intimate,
high le,el member of the international elite,
more commonl% >nown toda% as the Eew 3orld
?rder- !,=+$ pages- This boo> is important to
read because @uigle% meticulousl% details the
carefull% planned and orchestrated scheme of
the capitalistic elite and their plot to establish a
one world go,ernment-
*,avin) heard all of this,
yo' may choose to look the other way...
...b't yo' can never say a)ain
that yo' did not know*
--:illia% :il'/r&orce "#59-"B33
The information pro,ided is for
educational purposes onl% and is
sub9ect to change at an% time-
%he videos that are lin&ed to this web site present solely
the opinions of their ma&ers. +in&s to these videos are
made available as a resource for ones own research and
evaluation not as an endorsement.
+ate o# 3irst /ublication
The Twent% se,enth da% of the fourth month in
the Hear of ?ur 0ord and Sa,iour *esus, The
Christ, Eineteenth hundredth and ninet% eight
and the Two hundred and twent% third %ear of
the ndependence of America
">ereIs to the crazy ones. %he misfits. %he rebels. %he troubleFma&ers. %he round pegs in the
square holes. %he ones who see things differently. %heyIre not fond of rules, and they have no
respect for the statusFquo. Dou can quote them, disagree with them, glorify, or vilify them. .ut
the only thing you canIt do is ignore them. .ecause they change things. %hey push the human
race forward. And while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius. .ecause the
people who are crazy enough to thin& they can change the world, are the ones who do."
FF Apple (omputers, from "%hin& 'ifferent" Advertisement
"A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. .ut it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less
formidable, for he is &nown and carries his banner openly. .ut the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, his sly
whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. *or the traitor appears not a traitor; he
spea&s in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep
in the hearts of all men. >e rots the soul of a nation, he wor&s secretly and un&nown in the night to undermine the pillars of the
city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murder is less to fear."
FF(icero -arcus %ullius F .orn on Banuary 6, 29? .( and was murdered on 'ecember @, 46 .(
64othschild, the lord and master of the mone% mar>ets of the world, and of course ,irtuall% lord and
master of e,er%thing else- Be literall% held the re,enues of southern tal% in pawn, and monarchs and
ministers of all countries courted his ad,ice and were guided b% his suggestions- .o,ernments do not
go,ern but merel% control the machiner% of go,ernment, being themsel,es controlled b% the hidden
hand-6
FF.enjamin 'israeli, #rime -inister of the ,nited 1ingdom
7*ebruary =9, 23@4 F April =2, 2339:
6n /olitics, nothing is accidental-
f something happens, be assured
it was planned this wa%-6
--(ran>lin D- 4oose,elt,

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