Common Law and you and me

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Daddio5
Daddio5's picture
Common Law and you and me

People, I have been fighting this since my father tried and failed in the 1970's. I knew something was wrong, but I didn't know exactly what. Now I do. I have never surrendered my natural born right of self-determination. The courts will call you by your all caps name and you answer, BUT, do you answer "I am here on that subject matter", or do you just answer? I answer the former, then I DO NOT ENTER the "well" or board the ship of admiralty law. I stand my ground and object to everything and tell them the case is dismissed and I ask if I am being detained and I then leave. DONE. Please visit, if you have not, www.barefootsworld.net and read some of the posts, these are posts by 400 graduate professors and scholars who have spent years researching the common law. Everyone has a small piece to the puzzle, whether they know it or not, accept your piece and play it forward, accept your peace and lets free the world!!! Let us reinstate the original 13th Amendment and clean house of these BAR, british agents and set the world free!!! The time has come!!

Daddio5
Daddio5's picture

For those of you who have never heard it or under-stood it. You are a non-statutory Human Being. Having never surrendered your natural born right of self-determination. ALL license are void for fraud without full disclosure. You need no license to use your private property automobile or to hunt or fish, you need to abide by the regulations to make it fair for everyone though, THAT is the only restriction you may allow. Responsible men need no governing. Man existed long antecedent to the creation of government, THAT which MAN creates can NEVER have jurisdiction or authority over the MAN!!

bellrepair
bellrepair's picture

Very well said! I agree whole-heartedly. I will check it out. Thanks for sharing.
Maybe my piece fits-

NYcharles
NYcharles's picture

It is about the COURT @ the COUNTY level.
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The Declaration of Independence - 1776 -

The American Revolution did not start on the morning of April 19, 1775. When the British fired upon a small group of hastily assembled patriots on the Lexington Green, they were attempting to regain control of a colony they had already lost. The real Revolution, the transfer of political authority to the American patriots, occurred more than half a year before, when thousands upon thousands of farmers and artisans deposed every Crown-appointed official in Massachusetts outside of Boston.

During the late summer of 1774, each time a COURT was slated to meet under British authority in some Massachusetts town, great numbers of angry citizens made sure it did not. These patriots were furious because they had just been disenfranchised by the Massachusetts Government Act. Having lost control of the governmental apparatus, and in particular of the COURT, they feared that arbitrary rulers might soon seize their tools, their livestock, or even their farms.

Worcester was at the center of this massive uprising. It was the patriots of Worcester who first called for a meeting of several COUNTIES to coordinate the resistance. It was at Worcester, on September 6, 1774, that the British conceded control of the countryside. For the preceding month, General Thomas Gage had proclaimed he would hold the line at Worcester by sending troops to protect the COURT, but on the appointed day he backed down. When British troops failed to show, 4,722 militiamen from 37 towns in Worcester COUNTY lined both sides of Main Street and forced every official and every prominent Tory in town to resign or recant thirty times over, hats in hand, as they made their way through the gauntlet from Heywood's Tavern (at Exchange Street) to the COUNTY COURT House. (This was by far the greatest assembly of people ever to convene in the town of Worcester, which had fewer than 250 voters. Some towns, having armed and trained for a month, sent virtually every adult male.) Shortly thereafter, the town of Worcester was the first to urge that a new government be formed "as from the Ashes of the Phoenix."

Through it all, the revolutionaries engaged in a participatory democracy so thorough it is difficult for us to fathom today. At every turn, all decisions were made by the full body of the people. No action could be taken without running the matter through the entire rank-and-file.

(Read More)
http://www.barefootsworld.net/doi1776.html

Lairm4you
Lairm4you's picture

I recieved after doing a anwer to a summons in the mail mandatory arbitration.  That I had to choose somone instead it going straight to court.  I have to do a exemption to the mandatory arbitration to see if the Judge will except.  What about my rights to defend in court.   Isn't this against the constituion rights.