We live in a world that is governed by laws. People will say that things are "against the law" or "you have broken the law" but is the law one thing?
The fact of the matter is really quite simple. There are two laws in play, right now as you sit reading this blog post. There is the Law of the Land (English Law or common law) and there is the Merchant Admiralty Law (Commercial Law). How possibly can the "law of the seas" be in action on the land, I hear you say..
Well it is a long and devious plot that has been going on for thousands (yes thousands) of years and in its simplest terms is all a play on words..
for commercial law, that includes, Acts of Parliament and Statutes, to take "jurisdiction" one of two things are required.
Consent
or a Contract.
(Or of course if you break the divine law of "Cause no Harm" then you deserve to have a book thrown at you)
Here's where the deceit comes in.. The words that are used in regard to "legality" (commercial law) do not always mean what you might think and we, the people, are quite literally enslaved to the commercial system, through our birth certificates.
In an attempt to understand this fraud, i have spent some time studying a legal dictionary for the true definition of the words associated with our birth certificates.
We are told by our government that we “must” get a birth certificate. Which btw is Crown Copyright…. checkout .gov about birth certificates..
Here is the definition of birth certificate, from Black's law Dictionary.
Birth Certificate. A “formal” document that records a person's birthdate, birthplace, and parentage.
formal, adj. (14c)
1. “Pertaining” to or following established “procedural”rules, customs, and practices.
2. Ceremonial.
(Pertain, vb. To relate to; to concern.) (procedural law. 1896 The rules that prescribe the steps for having a right or duty judicially enforced, as opposed to the law that defines the specific rights or duties themselves. Also termed adjective law. Cf. SUBSTANTIVE LAW. [Cases: Statutes (;::J242.])
may, vb. (bef. 12c) 1. To be permitted to <the plaintiff may close>.
2. To be a possibility <we may win on appeal>. Cf. CAN.
3. Loosely, is required to; shall; must <if two or more defendants are jointly indicted, any defendant
who so requests may be tried separately>. _ In dozens of cases, courts have held may to be synonymous with shall or must, usu. in an effort to effectuate legislative intent. [Cases: Statutes
So we "may get a birth certificate and it is not against the "law" to not do so.. It is a trick and it is a fraud.
Is legal lawful??
Blacks law dictionary
legal, adj. (lSc)
1. Of or relating to law; falling within the province of law <pro bono legal
services>.
2. Established, required, or permitted by law; LAWFUL <it
is legal to carry a concealed handgun in some states>.
3. Of or relating to law as opposed to equity. [Cases:
Action C=>21.J
lawful, adj.
(13c) Not contrary to law; permitted by law <the police officer conducted a
lawful search of the premises>. See LEGAL.
In a courtroom you enter into a "legal" jurisdiction and the court is based on assumptions. We all have a legal status, (again through the birth certificate) a persona and you are immediately considered the trustee of your affairs. This is where you need to be aware of your dominion and act as the Executor and Sole Beneficiary of your affairs.
dominion. (l4c) 1. Control; possession <dominion over the car>
2. Sovereignty <dominion over the nation>.
Whenever you enter a court of a legal matter, enter in "propria persona" and be aware of your inalienable rights
inalienable, adj. (l7c) Not transferable or assignable
propria persona (proh-pree-Ol p;>r-soh-nOl), adj. & adv. [Latin] In his own person; PRO SE. -Sometimes shortened to pro per. Abbr. p.p. [Cases: Attorney and Client (;.-::>62.]status. (I7c) 1. A person's legal condition, whether personal or proprietary;( proprietary power. See power coupled with an interest. public power. A power vested in a person as an agent or instrument of the functions of the state. -Public powers comprise the various forms of legislative, judicial, and executive authority. [Cases: Officers and Public Employees <8=> 103.] ) the sum total of a person's legal rights, duties, liabilities, and other legal relations, or any particular group of them separately considered <the status of a landowner>.
2. A person's legal condition regarding personal rights but excluding proprietary relations <the status of a father> <the status of a wife>
3. A person's capacities and incapacities, as opposed to other elements of personal status <the status of minors>
. 4. A person's legal condition insofar as it is imposed by the law without the person's consent, as opposed to a condition that the person has acquired by agreement {the status of a slave}.
"By the status (or standing) of a person is meant the position that he holds with reference to the rights which are recognized and maintained by the law -in other words, his capacity for the exercise and enjoyment of legal rights." James Hadley, Introduction to Roman Law 106 (1881).
"The word 'status' itself originally signified nothing more than the position of a person before the law. Therefore, every person (except slaves, who were not regarded as persons, for legal purposes) had a status. But, as a result of the modern tendency towards legal equality formerly noticed, differences of status became less and less frequent, and the importance of the subject has greatly diminished, with the result that the term status is now used, at any rate in English Law, in connection only with those comparatively few classes of persons in the community who, by reason of their conspicuous differences from normal persons, and the fact that by no decision of their own can they get rid of these differences, require separate consideration in an account of the law. But professional or even political differences do not amount to status; thus peers, physicians, clergymen of the established Church, and many other classes of persons, are not regarded as the subjects of status, because the legal differences which distinguish them from other persons, though substantial, are not enough to make them legally abnormal. And landowners, merchants, manufacturers, and wage-earners are not subjects of the Law of Status, though the last-named are, as the result of recent legislation, tending to approach that position." Edward Jenks, The Book of English Law 109 (P.B. Fairest ed., 6th ed. 1967). status, law of. See LAW OF STATUS.
The birth certificate is not you it is an artificial person that happens to have the same name as you. To understand what this means you need to first understand capitis deminutio.. this is basically the capitalization of all or part of your name on the birth certificate. This is the artificial person..it is the artificial person that a court will try to attach to a natural being YOU!!
"Capitis
deminutio" is the destruction of the 'caput'
or legal personality. Capitis deminutio, so to speak, wipes out the former
individual and puts a new one in his place, and between the old and the new
individual there is, legally speaking, nothing in common. A juristic
personality (legal fiction) may be thus destroyed in one of three ways:
(1) by loss of the status libertatis. This is the capitis
deminutio maxima;
(2) by loss of the status civitatis. This is the capitis
deminutio media (magna);
(3) by severance from the agnatic family. This entails
capitis deminutio minima." Rudolph Sohm, The Institutes: A Textbook of the
History and System of Roman
Private Law 178-79 Uames Crawford
Ledlie trans., 3d ed. 1907).
persona
"So far as legal theory is
concerned, a person is any being whom the law regards as capable of rights and
duties. Any being that is so capable is a person, whether a human being or not,
and no being that is not so capable is a person, even though he be a man.
Persons are the substances of which rights and duties are the attributes. It is
only in this respect that persons possess juridical significance, and this is
the exclusive point of view from which personality receives legal
recognition." John Salmond, Jurisprudence 318 (Glanville L Williams ed.,
10th ed. 1947).
artificial person. (17c)
An entity, such as a corporation, created by law and given certain legal rights
and duties of a human being; a being, real or imaginary, who for the purpose of
legal reasoning is treated more or less as a human being .• An entity is a
person for purposes of the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses but is not
a citizen for purposes of the Privileges and Immunities Clauses in Article IV §
2 and in the Fourteenth Amendment -Also termed fictitious person; juristic
person; juridical person; legal person; moral person. Cf. LEGAL ENTITY. [Cases:
Corporations (::::;> 1.1(2).]
persona (pdr-soh-nd), n. [Latin] Roman law. A person; an
individual human being.
persona designata (pdr-soh-nd dez-ig-nay-td). [Latin]
A person considered as an
individual (esp. in a legal action) rather than as a member ofa class.
persona dignior (pdr-soh-nd dig-nee-or). [Latin] Hist. The
more worthy or respectable person; the more fitting person.
persona ficta (pdr-soh-nd fik-td). [Latin "false
mask"] Hist. A fictional person, such as a corporation.
"But units other than
individual men can be thought of as capable of acts, or of rights and
liabilities: such are Corporations and even Hereditates lacentes. Accordingly
the way is clear to apply the name of person to these also. The mediaeval lawyers
did so, but as they regarded Corporations as endowed with personality by a sort
of creative act of the State, and received from the Roman lawyers the
conception of the hereditas iacens as representing the persona of the deceased
rather than as itself being a person, they called these things Personae Fictae,
an expression not used by the Romans." WW. Buckland, Elementary Principles
of the Roman Private Law 16 (1912).
And just so any reader that gets this far, here are all the jurisdictions listed in Black's Law Dictionary!!
jurisdiction
juris
(joor-is), adj. [Latin]!.
1.
Of law.
2.
Of right.
juris divini (di-vI-m).
Roman law. Of divine right; subject to divine law. -The phrase appeared in
reference to churches or to religious items that could not be privately sold.
juris positivii.
Of positive law.
juris privati
(pri-vay-tI). Of private right; relating to private property or private law.
juris publici
(p~b-li-Sl). Of public right; relating to common or public use, or to public
law.
juriscenter (joor-;;l-sen-t<lr
or joor-;;l-sen-t"r), n. Conflict of laws. The jurisdiction that is most
appropriately considered a couple's domestic centre of gravity for matrimonial
purposes. [Cases: Divorce <>:::2; Marriage 3.]
jurisconsult
(joor-is-kon-s<llt or -k;m-s~lt). One who is learned in the law, esp. in
civil or international law; JURIST.
jurisdictio
contentiosa (joor-is-dik-shee-oh k<'ln-tenshee-oh-s3). [Latin] Roman
law. Contentious as opposed to voluntary jurisdiction. See contentious
jurisdiction (1) under JURISDICTION.
jurisdictio emanata
(joor-is-dik-shee-oh em-a-nay-t<l). [Law Latin "a jurisdiction
emanating from the court"] Hist. A court's inherent jurisdiction, esp. to
punish a contemner. See CONTEMNER.
jurisdictio in
consentientes (joor-is-dik-shee-oh in k<lnsen-shee-en-teez). [Law
Latin "jurisdiction over parties by virtue oftheir consent"] Scots
law. Consensual jurisdiction. See consent jurisdiction under JURISDICTION.
jurisdiction, n.
(14c)
1. A government's general power to exercise authority over
all persons and things within its territory; esp., a state's power to create
interests that will be recognized under common-law principles as valid in other
states <New Jersey's jurisdiction>. [Cases: States C=>1.]
2. A court's power to
decide a case or issue a decree <the constitutional grant of
federal-question
jurisdiction>. -Also termed (in sense 2) competent
jurisdiction.; (in both senses) coram judice. [Cases: Courts C-=>3; Federal
Courts C=>3.1, 161.]
"Rules of jurisdiction in a sense speak from a position
outside the court system and prescribe the authority of the courts within the
system. They are to a large extent constitutional rules. The provisions of the
U.S. Constitution specify the outer limits of the subject-matter jurisdiction
of the federal courts and authorize Congress, within those limits, to establish
by statute the organization and jurisdiction of the federal courts. Thus,
Article III of the Constitution defines the judicial power of the United States
to include cases arising under federal law and cases between parties of diverse
state citizenship as well as other categories. The U.S. Constitution,
particularly the Due Process Clause, also establishes limits on the
jurisdiction of the state courts. These due process limitations traditionally
operate in two areas: jurisdiction of the subject matter and jurisdiction over
persons. Within each state, the court system is established by state
constitutional provisions or by a combination of such provisions and
implementing legislation, which together define the authority of the various
courts Within the system." Fleming James Jr., Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr. &
John leubsdorf. Civil Procedure § 2.1, at 55 (5th ed. 2001). jurisdiction
3. A geographic area within which political or judicial
authority may be exercised <the accused fled to another jurisdiction>.
4. A political or judicial subdivision within such an area
<other jurisdictions have decided the issue differently>. Cf. VENUE.
jurisdictional,
adj. agency jurisdiction. The regulatory or adjudicative power of a
government administrative agency over a subject matter or matters. [Cases:
Administrative Law and Procedure ~303,447.]
ancillary
jurisdiction. (1835) A court's jurisdiction to adjudicate claims and
proceedings related to a claim that is properly before the court. • For
example, if a plaintiff brings a lawsuit in federal court based on a federal
question (such as a claim under Title VII), the defendant may assert a
counterclaim over which the court would not otherwise have jurisdiction (such
as a state-law claim of stealing company property). The concept of ancillary
jurisdiction has now been codified, along with the concept of pendent
jurisdiction, in the supplemental-jurisdiction statute. 28 USCA § 1367. See
supplemental jurisdiction. Cf. pendent jurisdiction. [Cases: Admiralty ~1(3);
Courts ~27, 201; Equity ~35; Federal Courts ~20.]
anomalous
jurisdiction. (1864)
1. Jurisdiction that is not granted to a court by statute,
but that is inherent in the court's authority to govern lawyers and other
officers of the court, such as the power to issue a pre-indictment order
suppressing illegally seized property. [Cases: Criminal Law ~394.5(1); Federal
Courts ~7;Searches and Seizures ~84.]
2. An appellate court's provisional jurisdiction to review
the denial of a motion to intervene in a lower-court case, so that if the court
finds that the denial was correct, then its jurisdiction disappears -and it
must dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction -because an order denying a
motion to intervene is not a final, appealable order. See
ANOMALOUS-JURISDICTION RULE. [Cases: Federal Courts ~555.]
appellate
jurisdiction. (18c) The power of a court to review and revise a lower
court's decision.
• For example, U.S. Const. art. III, § 2 vests appellate
jurisdiction in the Supreme Court, while 28 USCA §§ 1291-1295 grant appellate
jurisdiction to lower federal courts of appeals. Cf. original jurisdiction.
[Cases: Appeal and Error ~17; Courts ~203-209; Federal Courts ~541.]
arising-in
jurisdiction. A bankruptcy court's jurisdiction over issues relating to
the administration of the bankruptcy estate, and matters that occur only in a
bankruptcy case. 28 USCA §§ 157, 1334. [Cases: Bankruptcy ~2043-2063.]
assistant jurisdiction. The incidental aid provided by an
equity court to a court of law when justice requires both legal and equitable
processes and remedies. Also termed auxiliary jurisdiction.
common-law
jurisdiction.
1. A place where the legal system derives fundamentally from
the English common-law system <England, the United States, Australia, and
other common-law jurisdictions>.
2. A court's
jurisdiction to try such cases as were recognizable under the English common
law <in the absence of a controlling statute, the court exercised common law
jurisdiction over those claims>. complete jurisdiction. A court's power to
decide matters presented to it and to enforce its decisions. [Cases: Admiralty
~5(3); Courts ~1; Equity ~ 39.]
concurrent jurisdiction. (l7c)
1. Jurisdiction that might be exercised simultaneously by
more than one court over the same subject matter and within the same territory,
a litigant having the right to choose the court in which to file the action.
[Cases: Admiralty ~1(1); Courts ~472,489, 510; Federal Courts ~1131.]
2. Jurisdiction shared by two or more states, esp. over the
physical boundaries (such as rivers or other bodies of water) between them. -Also
termed coordinate jurisdiction; overlapping jurisdiction. Cf. exclusive
jurisdiction. "In several cases, two States divided by a river exercise
concurrent jurisdiction over the river, no matter where the inter·state
boundary may be; in some cases by the Ordinance of 1787 for organizing
Territories northwest of the Ohio River, in some cases by Acts of Congress
organizing Territories or admitting States, and in some cases by agreements
between the States concerned." 1Joseph H. Beale, A Treatise on the Conflict
of Laws § 44.3, at 279 (1935).
consent jurisdiction. (1855) Jurisdiction that parties
have agreed to, either by accord, by contract, or by general appearance
• Parties may not, by agreement, confer subject-matter
jurisdiction on a federal court that would not otherwise have it. [Cases:
Courts ~ 22.]
contentious
jurisdiction.
1. A court's jurisdiction exercised over disputed matters.
2. Eccles. law. The branch of ecclesiastical-court
jurisdiction that deals with contested proceedings.
continuing jurisdiction.
(1855) A court's power to retain jurisdiction over a matter after entering a
judgment, allowing the court to modify its previous rulings or orders. See
CONTINUING-JURISDICTION DOCTRINE. [Cases: Courts ~30; Federal Courts ~26.1.]
coordinate jurisdiction. See concurrent jurisdiction.
criminal jurisdiction. (16c) A court's power to hear
criminal cases. [Cases: Criminal Law ~83.]
default jurisdiction. Family law. In a child-custody matter,
jurisdiction conferred when it is in the best interests of the child and either
(1) there is no other
basis for jurisdiction under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act or the
Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act, or
(2) when another state has declined jurisdiction in favour
of default jurisdiction.
• Jurisdiction is rarely based on default because either
home-state jurisdiction or significant-connection jurisdiction almost always
applies, or else emergency jurisdiction is invoked. Default jurisdiction arises
only if none of those three applies, or a state with jurisdiction on any of those
bases declines to exercise it and default jurisdiction serves the best
interests of the child. [Cases: Child Custody C=>730, 731.]
EDUCATE YOURSELF AND BE AWARE OF YOUR DOMINION!!!!!
research the law of the sea and it will start you on a journey to enlightenment!!
No comments:
Post a Comment