Common Law. A man or a person. Person is a legalese term. A - TopicsExpress



          

Common Law. A man or a person. Person is a legalese term. A person is an artificial statute concept and does not exist except on paper. The plural is persons. Man or woman is a natural living body with a soul. Men (legalese) is not the plural of man, and women (legalese) is not the plural of woman. The plural of man and woman is we the people. The court will presume and assume your status as a person bound by statutes, acts and codes until you correct them. The State has power and persons (legalese) are bound by their jurisdiction, but the State has no lawful authority when it comes to forcing itself onto man. The state has no rights. The state cannot make a claim. A state can only make a complaint against you, It can file criminal complaints against you but it cant file criminal claims against you. Only a man can make a claim and in a court of record at common law court the man is the prosecutor in his claim against the person (or man) who harmed him. if he wins he can make an order for court costs, which include process server fees. Never go to court as a defendant. Before being hauled into the states court, a man should first make a claim and file it with the court clerk against whomever has harmed him, be it the neighbor who stole from him or the policeman who stopped him unlawfully goingfrom point A to point B in his car. Unless you are engaged in commerce you are not required to have a license, or register your car or have insurance. The US Supreme Court says this. Who are you going to believe, the cop who says you need a license or the Supreme Court?
Posted on: Sat, 28 Jun 2014 02:28:29 +0000

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