Defending People

the tao of criminal-defense trial lawyering

Redemption Theory vs. Reality

When you are pros­e­cuted for a crime, it is not your “straw man” that is pros­e­cuted. The fact that your name on the papers is in all caps is as irrel­e­vant as the fact that there is or is not gold fringe on the flag. You can’t get out from under the U.S. legal sys­tem by “redeem­ing your straw man.” The Uni­form Com­mer­cial Code (UCC) is not the supreme law of the land.

I could explain all of this in terms of what the law actu­ally says, but it’s been done before and if you are among those who have bought the non­sense being sold by the “Redemp­tion The­ory” or “Nat­ural Sov­er­eignty” or “Moor­ish Nation” crowds, then you prob­a­bly think that I’m a mem­ber of the British Accred­i­ta­tion Reg­istry (BAR) with an inter­est in per­pet­u­at­ing the slav­ery of the Amer­i­can jus­tice sys­tem. So instead of explain­ing the law to you, I’ll lay down some practicalities.

Whether it is true or not, there are lots of peo­ple who believe that the YOU that can be pros­e­cuted for com­mit­ting a crime is the same you that walks, talks, and breathes. These believ­ers include every judge, pros­e­cu­tor, cop, agent, and prison guard in the coun­try. So if, based on some­thing you heard at a sem­i­nar put on by Win­ston Shrout or his ilk you cre­ate a fic­ti­tious com­mer­cial instru­ment and deposit it in a bank, you’re likely to wind up get­ting arrested by real (not straw) agents with real badges, hauled before a real court with real power to send you to real prison (maybe you can share a cell with Roger Elvick, the white suprema­cist who dreamt up all of this Redemp­tion non­sense) where real guards can kill the real you if you try to escape. None of these peo­ple are dis­ci­ples of Elvick or Shrout; even if they rec­og­nize that the only value our money has is agreed value, all of them are will­ing to use vio­lence to main­tain that agreed value.

And Mr. Shrout? He’ll take your money for his non­sense, but he dis­claims his advice as any­thing but “edu­ca­tional” … and “enter­tain­ing”. He’s not going to stand up to defend you when you get caught. That job will fall to a criminal-defense lawyer, who might not much care for the gov­ern­ment but will nonethe­less be left wish­ing that you had a a bet­ter defense than “They can’t pros­e­cute me because I am sov­er­eign.”

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About The Author

Mark Bennett got his letter of marque from the Supreme Court of Texas in May 1995. He is famous for having no sense of humor when it comes to totalitarianism.

Comments

55 Responses to “Redemption Theory vs. Reality”

  1. Windypundit says:

    I’m fas­ci­nated by the exis­tance of this stuff. I’m not inter­ested in the details—the expla­na­tions I’ve read never make sense—but I think the phe­nom­e­non is prob­a­bly an indi­ca­tion of some inter­est­ing aspects of the human men­tal process.

    Does some of this pseudo-law stuff make sense to you lawyers? I ask because I have a sci­ence back­ground, and a lot of patho­log­i­cal pseudo-science makes a strange kind of sense: It fol­lows the form and struc­ture of nor­mal sci­en­tific think­ing, but it’s lost all moor­ings in real­ity. These peo­ple are build­ing man­sions in the air…and mov­ing into them.

  2. shg says:

    Peo­ple really do show up our offices insist­ing that their alter­nate real­i­ties exist. They state it emphat­i­cally, buy­ing into these beliefs hook, line and sinker. It’s painful to be around and exas­per­at­ing when they demand to know why their fan­tasies won’t prevail.

  3. Greybear says:

    Ahhh yes. I get a few of these every year. I’ve come to the con­clu­sion that it is “mag­i­cal think­ing.” That is, they are con­vinced that by recit­ing the proper “spells” the judge’s eyes will go vacant and he will say some­thing like “these aren’t the droids we’re look­ing for” and the case will just go away.

    Never works.

  4. Bill says:

    Mag­i­cal think­ing?” Inter­est­ing term. I won­der if this kind of think­ing is more com­mon around law. I can think of two rea­sons (based on my com­plete lack of knowl­edge of psy­chol­ogy) that it would be. Either because:

    1) Law itself seems so arcane, the forms, the rit­u­als, rules. Every­one fears the dreaded “tech­ni­cal­ity” that destroys their ver­sion of jus­tice, and so they feel they should invoke the “tech­ni­cally” to revive their jus­tice. Alternately,

    2) Peo­ple trapped in the legal sys­tem feel so utterly help­less that they need to invent a systme that again gives them power over their envi­ron­ment (basi­cally, a deathbed con­ver­sion with­out the death).

    Of course, if Windy­pun­dit sees the same phe­nom­ena in sci­ence, I’m not sure how well they expla­na­tions track to that field.

    BTW, Windy­pun­dit, where I try to click on your site, my work com­puter fil­ter starts scream­ing Pornog­ra­phy!!! and locks down. I am now sus­pected a perv. Would it have been worth it? Why is my fil­ter offended by your site?

  5. Windypundit says:

    Bill, Sorry about that.

    I’ve had sev­eral recent posts about the P-word includ­ing a few cases involv­ing young human off­spring (I’m try­ing to avoid get­ting this site banned as well). In con­nec­tion with a non-youthful case, I think I linked to some sites with con­tent your fil­ters may not like. If you could email me the name of your com­pany con­tent fil­ter, maybe I can fig­ure out how to unblock myself.

  6. Mark Bennett says:

    Bill, I think both of your expla­na­tions are sound.

    If you Google the terms (e.g. “redeem straw man”) you find lots of forums filled with peo­ple who are look­ing for ways to stop cred­i­tors (usu­ally credit card com­pa­nies) from suing them for debts. They’ve got­ten in too deep, they’ve exhausted all the plau­si­ble ways out, and they are look­ing for any solution.

    We all cling to dif­fer­ent things when we’re caught in extremis. The same think­ing sup­ports quack doc­tors, tel­e­van­ge­lists, and nation­al­ist parties.

  7. Windypundit says:

    Mark has a good point, a lot of phony sci­ence is related to health, which prob­a­bly pro­duces the same kinds of des­per­ate search for solu­tions as legal trou­ble does.

    Also, I think a lot of peo­ple feel empow­ered by hav­ing spe­cial knowledge—that humans are descended from aliens, that the Illu­mi­nati con­trol our government—that shows how much smarter they are than the peo­ple around them…even if those peo­ple seem to live hap­pier lives.

    • cg says:

      I take it you guys are all lawyers of some type and all have made a pretty good liv­ing. Also you are prob­a­bly liv­ing a sat­is­fied life because you doing the thing that you have pas­sion for… “doing the law”. I, on the other hand, hap­pen to be one of “those guys”. You know, the one who was laid off and fell into finan­cial hard­ship etc, etc.
      You know, it’s strange, I used to spend my time talk­ing around the water cooler like you guys and even though I knew that the gen­eral mech­a­nism of this world was a twisted piece of crap I would never look at those cra­zies twice because life was good.
      In read­ing some of your com­ments it would be great if you guys were to stick to the hard core facts in refut­ing men such as Win­ston Shrout on the sub­jects like the incep­tion of HJR192, his take on the pro­ce­dural aspects and use of Admi­ralty in crim­i­nal courts. The valid­ity of birth cer­tifi­cates and such being nego­tiable instru­ments WITH value, the Trea­sury not being part of the US since 1920 and the IMF and inter­na­tional bankers con­trol over our money sup­ply and the impos­si­ble audit­ing of the Fed Reserve’s books. Refute all of it but refute it all with lawyer-like details and you can save a water cooler spot for me. Even at my best of times I always smelled a rat about how lawyers, com­merce and the sys­tem in gen­eral worked. The false con­sid­er­a­tion given by banks for mort­gages was my first actual tip to the BS I had learned all my life and right now I need a real heavy dose of hard core NON BS to bal­ance MY books. You see it is not that peo­ple want to live fan­tasies, PEOPLE want to live. and I guess the big prob­lem is that the stuff the cra­zies teach FINALLY makes this ass back­wards, kill for a dol­lar soci­ety we live in finally make sense. The banks cre­ated a sys­tem based on credit (fan­tasy) that has enslaved all of us and increased our jail ranks expo­nen­tially. WE are the only energy back­ing the credit. If any­thing in your research can refute that basic prin­ci­ple of how our soci­ety works you will have an ardent lis­tener. But until then take it easy on those going through hard­ship, you guys come off a lit­tle cal­lous, even for lawyers.

      • Mark Bennett says:

        CG, thanks for commenting.

        The sys­tem is bro­ken. Read around this blog some more, and you’ll see that you’ll get no argu­ment about that here.

        Among other things, the notion of sov­er­eignty in Amer­ica is all messed up. The Peo­ple are sup­posed to be sov­er­eign over the gov­ern­ment (which We The Peo­ple cre­ated), but we’ve allowed the gov­ern­ment sov­er­eign immu­nity, and the abil­ity to pros­e­cute peo­ple twice based on dual sov­er­eignty. The prin­ci­ple is that The Peo­ple (not you, not me, but all of us together) are sov­er­eign; the prac­ti­cal­ity is that we lost our sov­er­eignty a long time ago.

        I wouldn’t even argue that we are not, in an impor­tant sense, enslaved. We buy things we don’t need with money that has no intrin­sic value that we give up our valu­able time to acquire. When we take a job, we give up free­dom. When we bor­row money, we give up free­dom. When we live in soci­ety, we give up freedom.

        If you want a cheer­leader for the way things are, go to a prosecutor’s blog.

        But there is so much through-the-looking-glass crazi­ness in the Per­sonal Sov­er­eignty move­ment that it’s hard to even know where to start. Admi­ralty doesn’t have any­thing to do with crim­i­nal court. It just doesn’t. There’s no lawyerly refu­ta­tion, any more than there’s a lawyerly refu­ta­tion to the propo­si­tion that Venu­sian law applies on Earth.

        Any of us could walk away from soci­ety — there’s lots of empty space out West — but if we’re going to remain in it we have to rec­og­nize the way things actu­ally (not the­o­ret­i­cally) work. The ques­tion is the same in a warlord’s king­dom as in a Repub­lic: who has a monop­oly on vio­lence, and how do they use it?

        The best refu­ta­tion of Shrout’s voodoo is the sim­plest: it has been empir­i­cally tested, and doesn’t work. The gov­ern­ment, with its monop­oly on law­ful vio­lence, says that it’s not the law, so it is by def­i­n­i­tion not the law.

        Peo­ple have paid hard-earned money for Shrout’s advice, and then gone to prison for fol­low­ing it. This both­ers me.

        • ew keane says:

          There is a strug­gle between two minoritys

          One minor­ity believes in life, lib­erty and property

          The other minor­ity, in deten­tion, licence and seizure.

          And in the mid­dle, cops, crooks and the team­ing millions.

          If you want your lib­erty, keep away from com­mer­cial paper and insti­tu­tions with a pub­lic fla­vor. Pub­lic means that it is sure to be reg­u­lated by gov­ern­ment in the inter­est of who ever has a stake
          in the ple­nary power of gov­ern­ment, and that means the guys who loan your gov­ern­ment money, and they insist that their inter­est pay­ments be paid no mat­ter what. No mealy mouth lawyer is going to dis­turb that system.

          Pub­lic insti­tu­tions exsist for one cause. To main­tain a sta­tus quo where aris­to­crats get a bite of all pub­lic activ­ity, be it ped­dling hot dogs on the street cor­ner, or fleec­ing mil­lions with hypo­thet­i­cated notes.

          My best advice to any­one is to do busi­ness in kind or cash with peo­ple you trust and who are discrete.

        • Pedro Alfaro says:

          Hello Mark Ben­nett, It appears that the same garbage is being sold in Aus­tralia by Con Artists who pre­tend to be Admi­ralty Law Experts. I have been for some time try­ing to warn Aus­tralians about a per­son named Mark Pytellek who is con­duct­ing what he calls Hon­our Dis­hon­our Sys­tem in which he teaches peo­ple the garbage about UCC, Admi­ralty Law and how to harass cred­i­tors with the alle­ga­tions of pre­sent­ments and other garbage. Peo­ple are pay­ing him A$400– and up for his alleged valu­able mate­r­ial for which he has alleged Bar­ris­ters have told him his time is worth A$1500 per hour. For the A$400 that peo­ple pays him they get an alleged valu­able man­ual and a copy of a DVD of his pre­vi­ous sem­i­nars. Many peo­ple that have try the lunacy of Mark Pytellek has got in deep trou­ble with the Court and some have been jailed for refus­ing to sign Bail con­di­tions alleg­ing that they are sov­er­eigns and that the law does not apply to them.
          The Fed­eral Court of Aus­tralia on 24 April 2008 decided the case of Paul John Rana who try to use the garbage that the Con Artist Mark Pytellek sold to him and the Fed­eral Judge was less than impressed with the doc­u­ments pre­pared by the so called Admi­ralty Law Expert Mark Pytellek.
          Peo­ple that I know per­son­ally, have got them­selves into trou­ble by fol­low­ing the teach­ing of Mark Pytellek whom like oth­ers have alleged that freemen and women do not need to reg­is­ter their vehi­cles or have a driver’s licence to drive on the roads and this peo­ple after they have been fined have com­menced to harass the Police Offi­cers, Sher­iffs and other Gov­ern­ment employ­ees with Notices of dam­ages for mil­lions of dol­lars and UCC doc­u­ments and claims of dam­ages.
          But it appears that after all the Cases decided by the Courts and all the evi­dence against the teach­ing of Con Artist like Mark Pytellek , these peo­ple do not want to hear the truth that they have been conned and per­sist on the way to their own down­fall and that of the fam­i­lies. One exam­ple is that of Arthur and Fiona Cris­t­ian who own a web­site called Love for Life http://www.loveforlife.com.au and whom I know and my fam­ily con­sid­ered our friends, but can­not longer watch them destroy their own fam­ily by fol­low­ing the alleged Admi­ralty Law Exper­tise of Mark Pytellek. I have try for a long time to make them see that they are going the wrong way. But what can you do when they do not want to see the real­ity that they have been conned. Fiona Cris­t­ian was arrested for unli­censed dri­ving and dri­ving an unreg­is­tered vehi­cle and now has to attend Court on 6 April 2009 and maybe that would make them under­stand that the alleged admi­ralty law exper­tise of Mark Pytellek is garbage.
          I would also to take this oppor­tu­nity to thank you for the much valu­able infor­ma­tion and mate­r­ial that I have obtained from read­ing your web­site and I will make sure that oth­ers visit your site so that the intel­li­gent per­son stay away from the Con Artists that are pro­mot­ing all these garbage in coun­tries like Aus­tralia, Canada, USA and other Com­mon­wealth coun­tries.
          Sin­cerely
          Pedro Alfaro

        • Jon Elms says:

          II’ve been study­ing the UCC for 12 years along with infor­ma­tion con­cern­ing redemp­tion. I believe a lot a peo­ple go to jail because they don’t under­stand what they are doing. They don’t under­stand con­tracts or even bank­ing, tax’s, inter­na­tional law, real estate, accounting…the list goes on. When you say things as if the UCC is not the supreme law of the land or lands…I begin to won­der how much you really know!? Do you really believe the con­sti­tu­tion applies to us this very day? The notion of free­dom has lost it value. We truly are not free men, but what is a free man? We do not run under any com­mon laws to this very day, so what do you sug­gest is the supreme law of today sir? And no one ever said that if you redeem your straw-man that you break free…It’s only a small…very small step into con­trol­ling your own life, and tak­ing respon­si­bil­ity of it…when you make argu­ment that redeem­ing your straw-man does not make you free or sovereign…Is like argu­ing that 2 plus 2 does not equal 3…everyone that under­stands that math­e­mat­ics knows that…just like every­one that truly knows redemp­tion knows that just because you redeem your­self doesn’t mean you know how to func­tion as a creditor…or how to func­tion under a bankruptcy…or how to pay your taxes when you enter into a court setting..Ask elvik…he’ll tell you! He learned the hard way…but he knows…they even know that, but any time you go against the gov­ern­ment, you’re a fool. I know many true freeman…and if you knew them you would shut down your site…but its good because free­dom is for those who are hum­ble, not the greedy…or the easy way to make money because you’ll end up in prison under statues..Not law…and what reg­u­lates stat­ues? What reg­u­lates com­merce? What reg­u­lates the way we live? Read yourself…study yourself…know yourself…then watch free­dom enter into your life!

          • Mark Bennett says:

            Well, that set­tles it, then. You’ll end up in prison under statues.

            You’d bet­ter be care­ful, though. You’re approach­ing dan­ger­ously close to the truth with that last sentence.

  8. […] For the defen­dant: …If, based on some­thing you heard at a sem­i­nar put on by Win­ston Shrout or his ilk you cre­ate a fic­ti­tious com­mer­cial instru­ment and deposit it in a bank, you’re likely to wind up get­ting arrested by real (not straw) agents with real badges, hauled before a real court with real power to send you to real prison (maybe you can share a cell with Roger Elvick, the white suprema­cist who dreamt up all of this Redemp­tion non­sense) where real guards can kill the real you if you try to escape. […]

  9. CS says:

    Some­one recently told me about this “Straw­man” set-up using our birth cer­tifi­cates.
    I haven’t done much research on it yet. Are you say­ing it is not true? There has never been a per­son who has redemed his straw­man with­out get­ting into legal trouble?

    • Mark Bennett says:

      I don’t know that it’s never been done, but I have never seen it done, there is no legal rea­son that it should work, and I know of sev­eral peo­ple who have gone to prison for trying.

  10. CS says:

    Well, I guess those who have gone to prison for it really did get some­thing for free… room and board in the “pen” LOL… sorry , my bad humor.
    I am just a “reg­u­lar” per­son and don’t under­stand all the legal­i­ties of the straw­man struc­ture and it’s use as a bond how­ever, it does seem the gov­ern­ment has over­stepped their bounds by doing this. What makes it okay for them (var­i­ous gov­ern­ment orga­ni­za­tions) to use us (humans) when they (gov­ern­ment offi­cials) are elected by us ( cit­i­zens) to work for us?
    Why do we not get a choice in this mat­ter? Isn’t the gov­ern­ment act­ing “above the
    law” by doing this with­out our per­mis­sion? Yet, if we as indi­vid­u­als per­sue claim­ing our full self by redem­ing our “Straw­man”, we are doing some­thing ille­gal? I know this must sound so igno­rant to you but, it is baf­fling to me.

    • Mark Bennett says:

      The law is the com­mand of the sov­er­eign, to which a sanc­tion attaches. Which is to say that the law is what the gov­ern­ment (leg­is­la­ture, exec­u­tive, and courts), with its guns and its pris­ons, says it is.

      But there are no “legal­i­ties of the straw­man struc­ture.” There is no straw­man to redeem. Fnord.

  11. ew keane says:

    Here is some­thing I found that was too old fashoned when I was in school.

    http://www.archive.org/details/Despotis1946

  12. ew keane says:

    The only escape from the com­mer­cial sys­tem is to leave it alone.

    Mod­ern men cant do it. For one thing, mod­ern men lack the skill to live on the land.

    Sec­ond, if you try to live in some­ones woods, they will call the sher­riff, and you will be hauled off to jail for tress­pass­ing. Same thing with national parks. They dis­cour­age peo­ple mov­ing in per­ma­nently, and have camp fees (theres the com­mer­cial paper thing again) to dis­cour­age loitering.

    Mod­ern men cant live with­out money, and who ever con­trolls the value and avail­abil­lity
    of money is the mas­ter. The rest, just vassils.

    The straw man is noth­ing more than book keep­ing entrys…file jack­ets, sec­tors on com­puter tape and hard dri­ves. It is the civil per­sona that in the old days of out
    law­ing a man ment strik­ing the name from the books. It is a rep­re­sen­ta­tion for
    leg­is­la­ture, a hypo­thet­i­cal sub­ject, a play­thing of jurists. Mod­ern man, sadly, is
    num­bered for life, a human resource to be tracked, counted and exploited for
    ’the good of the com­mon­wealrh’, and the mid­dling draughts­men that wrote this
    sys­tem into existance.

  13. I’ve known alot of these types of peo­ple for years. One “shin­ing” exam­ple is Pey­mon Mot­tade­heh, http://www.livefreenow.org, who runs the “free­dom law school.” He invited me to speak at one of his “sem­i­nars” once, on juries. He didn’t like the fact that I kept tear­ing apart the fal­lac­ies he was pushing.

    The only thing these peo­ple have on their side is their gulli­bil­ity. Cer­tain tax offenses require that you know or believe you owe the taxes to be crim­i­nally liable. His cus­tomers who hon­estly (though igno­rantly) fall for his schtick have been acquit­ted. Of course, he takes this as prov­ing his schtick is true.

    But it isn’t — and being acquit­ted doesn’t get you off the hook for taxes, penal­ties and inter­est. So instead of being incar­cer­ated, his clients just go broke. Woo-hoo!!!

    Alot of these folks glom onto jury nul­li­fi­ca­tion, but don’t bother to learn much about juries. So they spout psuedo law, essen­tially (to use a militia-type term that they can under­stand) end up shoot­ing blanks while sit­ting on real ammunition.

    I know of a case in which, while a “pro-per” defen­dant was mak­ing his admi­ralty law argu­ment based on the gold fringed flag, the judge had the bailiff sim­ply remove the flag from the court­room. By the time the arcane argu­ment was over, the defen­dant found that the flag was gone… What I’ve told peo­ple is that inte­rior dec­o­ra­tors do not get to dic­tate the juris­dic­tion of the court.

    I would go so far as to say that 80–90% of what these peo­ple spout is true. How­ever, ask a pros­e­cu­tor what he gets for prov­ing 80–90% of the ele­ments in his case. (OK, in Har­ris County, maybe a con­vic­tion, but in a fair county…) That’s why peo­ple fall for it: give them enough you CAN prove, and they’ll buy the part they know noth­ing about on a leap of faith. And then, when lawyers say that Psuedolaw Guy is full of BS, they remem­ber that 80–90% of what they were told was ver­i­fied, and the lawyers lose cred­i­bil­ity, not the Psuedolaw Guy. And when the 10–20% that they took on faith later bites them in the butt, they blame the cor­rupt lawyers.

  14. Dave Thompson says:

    Well, you are absolutely wrong, there is a piece of paper with the same name as you, which belongs to the gov­ern­ment, it can be called the “secu­rity of the person”.

    Peo­ple in Canada have got­ten the proof that the human being and the per­son are two dif­fer­ent enti­ties, from the courts, from the gov­ern­ment, even from the bank. Jacques-Antoine:Normandin is an exam­ple of this, his per­son died years ago, but the human being is still alive, and a judge in the Court of Que­bec rec­og­nized this.

    I will only defend myself as a true human being in a Com­mon Law court, never as a per­son in pri­vate law courts.

  15. Sov­er­eignty is a fact! It does work!!!

    My wife and I have closed down the local court FOUR times. Visit my site and above all click on the link to lis­ten to the audio record­ing of her court appearance.

    http://runnymede1215.wordpress.com

    I have not got my car back but with­out my con­sent there is no juris­dic­tion and with­out juris­dic­tion they are check-mated!

    They only got them­selves deeply into shit.

    Cheers

    Bernard
    And then have the chutz­pah to tell me you know any­thing about the law!

    Bernard

  16. Gavin Grimshaw says:

    Your title is fal­la­cious. “Redemp­tion The­ory” v “Real­ity” means only one can be real. Redemp­tion OR Real­ity is what you are say­ing. Obvi­ously Real­ity is Real and can not be dis­puted, there­fore you are cal­im­ing that “Redemp­tion” is not Real­ity.
    Your Title shows your illog­i­cal intention.

    You Say: “When you are pros­e­cuted for a crime, it is not your “straw man” that is prosecuted.”

    I Say: In order to accept your state­ment as real­ity, Proof of Claim is required.
    .…

    [“Mr. Grimshaw” — a pseu­do­nym, I pre­sume — goes on at great and excru­ci­at­ing length.]

  17. Gavin Grimshaw says:

    Does cut­ting my dialec­tic with you short, regard­less of length (unless you can show your sub­ject mat­ter is sim­ple) show you can not rebut my argu­ments with real evi­dence backed with valid logic?
    Why do you not take respon­si­bil­ity for your claims by fur­nish­ing proof to back them up (if you can)?
    Are you not now in dis­hon­our? Where does that law­fully place your standing?

    Until you do prove up all your claims, my judge­ment will be your per­sua­sion is lack­ing of real evi­dence and log­i­cally invalid — rhetoric of a sophist pro­pa­gan­dist unwor­thy of my seri­ous con­sid­er­a­tion. Have a Good day.

    • Mark Bennett says:

      Rec­og­nize, please, that post­ing under a pseu­do­nym sub­jects you to my whim even more than just posting.

      You insist on log­i­cal proof of truths that can be observed any day in the crim­i­nal cour­t­house. Appar­ently you define “law” dif­fer­ently than I do. Which is fine—define it how you will—but as a result none of your “dialec­tic” shed any light on anything.

      So I’ll tell you what, “Gavin”: Tell me how you define “law” (“Law is…”), and I’ll either demon­strate to your sat­is­fac­tion why what the guys with the gavels and the guns say is law is law, agree with you that law (as you define it) is what you say it is, or express puzzlement.

      Fair?

      • Gavin Grimshaw says:

        Show what­ever I call myself rel­e­vant to this dialec­tic?
        Are you attempt­ing to atack the mes­sen­ger instead of the messenger’s mes­sage, being to prove your claims true?
        If so, show your attack is not illogical.

        What I recog­nise, is that I am a man, that you are a man and that you are try­ing to get me to believe your claims and I have not seen any rel­e­vant valid proof of your claims although I have now given you two oppor­tu­ni­ties to fur­nish proof.

        Unless you can show that all men are not equal before the law, then I take it we stand equally.
        I reserve all my rights and do not con­sent to what­ever terms and/or con­di­tions you think you can sub­ject me to in this forum.
        If you dont like that, then delete my posts — or even bet­ter, retract your claims by delet­ing the whole web page, but I will take any action you take other than prov­ing up your claims as your admis­sion to me that you can not prove up your claims and there­fore I will take it that your claims are unsubstantiable.

        Show your use of the word “whim” is not a fal­la­cial appeal to trig­ger the emo­tions fear and/or anger?

        Could you be doing so think­ing that it is eas­ier to trig­ger my emo­tions than it is to fur­nish my intel­lect with facts in sup­port of your claims?

        Why do you think it is up to me to “shed light” on your claims?
        Is that not your respon­si­bil­ity, as is it not you that made the claims?
        What are your rules of evi­dence?
        How is being silent inter­preted in your courts?

        For me to believe your claims, all I need is sup­port­ing rel­e­vant and valid proof.
        You are the Teacher, and there­fore I am the Stu­dent.
        Is a wise stu­dent not a cau­tious one? Does a cau­tious stu­dent not require proof?

        So, my Teacher I have many ques­tions about your ref­er­ences:
        Is your ref­er­ence to a “court” not an illog­i­cal over­gen­er­al­i­sa­tion?
        What classes of “laws” do you find in the courts?
        Com­mon law? Civil law? Com­merce? Admi­ralty? Chancery?
        Is it one, some or all, or is there more?
        Is “law” exactly the same as “Law” and exactly the same as “LAW”? If not, what are the dif­fer­ences?
        What does rem­edy mean? What does cure and main­te­nance mean?
        What exactly is a per­son? Is a per­son a cor­po­ra­tion? If so, isn’t a nat­ural per­son still a per­son? Did God cre­ate Man or a Per­son?
        What is a ces­tui que trust? What are the roles in a trust and what are their rela­tion­ships?
        How can the aver­age state edu­cated man be dis­tin­guished in all this?
        How does he know what pre­sump­tions are being made by the court if they are done silently and with­out his knowl­edge?
        How can he ques­tion and/or cor­rect pre­sump­tions should they not be real­is­tic?
        Is full dis­clo­sure and full dis­cov­ery not manda­tory in law?
        What chance does the aver­age man have of pro­tect­ing his rights with­out know­ing law? Could that explain what you claim to see in court?

        My dialec­tic is only intended to give you the oppor­tu­nity to prove your claims nec­es­sary for me to allow my belifs to align with yours or for me to realise by your inac­tion of pre­sent­ing proof, to con­clude that you have no rel­e­vant valid proof in sup­port of your claims.


        Are you attempt­ing to solicit a con­tract?
        Is there not already an agree­ment, being you fur­nish all avail­able valid rel­e­vant proof and I will belive your claim?

        So what are you ask­ing of me?
        –You want me to define Law to you?
        –Would me defin­ing “Law is…” not be con­sid­ered as legal advice?
        –Could it have some­thing to do with me hav­ing no “cer­ti­fied” legal exper­tise?
        –Does this not mean I can not give legal advice to you?
        –If I can not, why would you ask me to fur­nish you with legal advice?
        –Do you not have suf­fi­cient “cer­ti­fied” legal knowl­edge?
        –Do you not have bet­ter access to those who do have “cer­ti­fied” legal advice?
        –Why else would you turn to me for legal advice?
        –Are you try­ing to entrap me into giv­ing legal advice?
        –Could this be why Win­ston says his pre­sen­ta­tions are only for enter­tain­ment pur­poses only?

        So what are you offer­ing in exchange?

        Why do you intend to “demon­strate” (to my sat­is­fac­tion) guys with gavels and guns when use or avail­abil­ity of such con­trap­tions enable duress, tyrrany, ter­ror, war all of which can be taken to aid the guys in kid­nap, injury and loss of life?

        When you say “why what the guys with the gavels and the guns say the law is the law”, are you offer­ing me

        to “ben­e­fit” from first hand expe­ri­ence from these “guys” equipped with “gavels” and “guns”?

        Are you attempt­ing to get me to con­sent to your offer to receive “why” in the pres­ence of “guys” with “gavels” and “guns”.

        Is this not another fal­la­cial appeal to the emo­tions fear and anger and there­fore log­i­cally invalid?

        I do not give con­sent to con­tract, with­out dis­hon­our. There is no need to con­tract and for the rea­son that there is poten­tial to do harm.

        Prove up your claims. I will not offer you any more oppor­ti­ties. Three oppor­tu­ni­ties are enough.
        My own judge­ment will be there is no valid claim with­out valid and rel­e­vant proof and there­fore my action will be to dis­gard them as erroneous.

        I am a peace­ful man. I intend no harm, but I can not pre­vent you from doing harm to your­self.
        If you can’t prove up your claim, I urge you to con­sider delet­ing this whole web page as could oth­ers be mis­led? Is that what you intend?
        Your fail­ure to do or not to do so is solely your respon­si­bil­ity.
        You made your claims, not me.

        • Mark Bennett says:

          This. This is what we deal with when we deal with peo­ple who think that there is a hid­den legal sys­tem that can trig­ger using magic words.

          As I said in the orig­i­nal post, I could explain all of this in terms of what the law actu­ally says, but it’s been done before and if you are among those who have bought the non­sense being sold by the “Redemp­tion The­ory” or “Nat­ural Sov­er­eignty” or “Moor­ish Nation” crowds, then you prob­a­bly think that I’m a mem­ber of the British Accred­i­ta­tion Reg­istry (BAR) with an inter­est in per­pet­u­at­ing the slav­ery of the Amer­i­can jus­tice sys­tem. So instead of explain­ing the law to you, I’ll lay down some practicalities.

          Practicalities—observable behav­ior of the system—laid down, and ignored in favor of vaguely UCC-sounding demands and claims.

          Gavin” is not will­ing to say what he thinks “law” means—not a legal ques­tion, but a philo­soph­i­cal and epis­te­mo­log­i­cal one. A per­son who can’t dis­cuss that ques­tion and pro­vide a work­ing def­i­n­i­tion can’t have mean­ing­fully dis­cus­sion about the law in soci­ety. You don’t have to be a lawyer to say what law is. I’ll give my work­ing def­i­n­i­tion: law is the com­mand of the sov­er­eign, to vio­la­tions of which a penalty attaches. It’s not might-makes-right, but might-makes-law. It’s a func­tional Aus­tin­ian pos­i­tivist def­i­n­i­tion. It is the same whether we are deal­ing with caselaw, statu­tory law, reg­u­la­tions, bar rules, admi­ralty, crim­i­nal, civil, UCC, or any other set of rules intended to guide people’s con­duct in society.

          Con­tract law does not apply to every­thing. The UCC is not author­ity that gov­erns ordi­nary rela­tions among human beings. Can I prove it? Not to the sat­is­fac­tion of some­one who wants so badly to believe it that he will dis­re­gard the system’s observ­able behav­ior. It’s just not. Try­ing would be a fool’s errand. Which is why I lay down the prac­ti­cal­i­ties and let peo­ple decide what con­clu­sions they will draw from those practicalities.

          I lead the horse to water, but I don’t care whether it drinks.

  18. Oooooh! Sophistry! Keep it up, Gavin! Yeah! Of course, most peo­ple who prac­tice such sophistry in court are pro-se defen­dants who end up in jail, but they are SOOOO much fun to watch! Don’t ever stop!

    (I real­ize that sar­casm doesn’t always come through on the inter­net. That is what makes it so much fun… )

  19. Albert Wilson says:

    It’s not might-makes-right, but might-makes-law!
    I have a cou­ple of ques­tions regard­ing this:
    “Might also fol­lows law almost let­ter per­fect as well does it not?“
    ” And for every law there is a redemp­tion to go with it; is this not so?“
    Also, please share with us non-lawyer read­ers by answer­ing these two part ques­tion:
    ” What is the full lawyer’s oath that one swears to when pass­ing the BAR (or is that B.A.R.?) and what is the juris­dic­tion of lawyers?”

    • Mark Bennett says:

      It’s not might-makes-right, but might-makes-law!

      That’s exactly what it is.

      Might also fol­lows law almost let­ter per­fect as well does it not?”

      This makes no sense, so I sus­pect that the answer is, “it does not.”

      ” And for every law there is a redemp­tion to go with it; is this not so?”

      The ques­tion also makes no sense, so I sus­pect that the answer is “this is not so.”

      ” What is the full lawyer’s oath that one swears to when pass­ing the BAR (or is that B.A.R.?)…

      It’s the bar, not the BAR or the B.A.R. Here is the Texas lawyers’ oath. If there is another, I haven’t taken it.

      …and what is the juris­dic­tion of lawyers?”

      I don’t think lawyers have “jurisdiction.”

      • Albert Wilson says:

        Ah so, the ‘might’ doesn’t fol­low law let­ter per­fect then and there are no reme­dies to a law; wow, if you’re right matey then law be damned.
        You have an inter­est­ing blog site but I sus­pect by the care­fully worded state­ments and replies that you’re as trust­wor­thy as a politi­cian; bye.

        • Mark Bennett says:

          Yes, the law be damned. Break it and risk the con­se­quences or, at your option, fol­low it.

          Go where they’re say­ing what you want to hear. You can’t han­dle the truth.

  20. Albert Wilson says:

    I’ll go where I will go not because an ego said so with use­less cliches or because I’m blindly look­ing for what I want to hear; you have noth­ing to offer except your inflated atti­tude and truth is some­thing that I can han­dle just not bs espe­cially when as a sup­posed lawyer you don;t even know the juris­dic­tion of lawyers! Bye for the last time as I won’t bother with any more of your IDen­tity mate:o)

    • Mark Bennett says:

      You will not be sorely missed, “Albert.” Your type are a dime a dozen around here: poor deluded souls with their made-up legal-sounding lan­guage, look­ing for a magic pill that will save them from reality.

  21. Albert Wilson says:

    The only true fool is one who doesn’t know it, fool; you can keep your bs and your bs blog for you have noth­ing to offer peo­ple except your insults stem­ming from your inflated men­tal­ity. I am not look­ing for any magic pill, nor am I deluded; this only shows your nitwited nonsense.

    • Mark Bennett says:

      You just won me twenty bucks. I bet that you would come back, despite your “bye for the last time.”

      Now watch me turn that into $40.

      I’m bet­ting double-or-nothing that you’ll reply again, because only the inor­di­nately weak-willed are attracted to redemp­tion theory.

  22. Hi,

    I am Bernard, the one who started this dis­cus­sion. This is the first time in more than a year that I had a look at Mr Bennett’s site.

    In one respect Mr Ben­nett, you are, of course, right, as you point out fre­quently: there is the power of the gun! That power is used by vio­lent crim­i­nals, such as rob­bers and mur­der­ers, and, of course, gov­ern­ments — all of them all over the world. In a shoot­ing war with the gov­ern­ment we, the Peo­ple, have the same chance of win­ning as a small nation, say the Vat­i­can State or Liecht­en­stein, has in a shoot­ing war against Ger­many or Italy or the USA or.…name almost any other country.

    My claim that the prin­ci­ples of sov­er­eignty work has not been refuted here by any­one here. True, the gov­ern­ment holds my prop­erty — by force, like any other thief might. As I do not have the same kind of resources at my dis­posal as the gov­ern­ment there is noth­ing I can do about it — for the moment at least.

    It is true that there are snake-oil sales­men in the sovereignty-and-redemption busi­ness. There are, how­ever, a lot more work­ing quite legal­lyin the sys­tem: the gov­ern­ment, banks, big busi­ness, police clergy and the legal system.

    But my sov­er­eignty has NOT been touched: none of their attempts to drag my wife and me into their kan­ga­roo courts and their juris­dic­tion have worked. We are free and will remain so.The Com­mer­cial Liens placed against the crim­i­nals (two cops, a mag­is­trate, two min­is­ters and a pre­mier) have been pub­lished on my blog — with­out any reper­cus­sions because what I am doing is per­fectly law­ful under Com­mon Law. And they know it or I would find myself in very hot water.

    Thanks to the Inter­net knowl­edge is com­ing out that was not widely avail­able before and the days of the sys­tem are clearly num­bered. The gun-control cam­paign in the US is not about pro­tect­ing peo­ple. Tak­ing away the guns is about pro­tect­ing the gov­ern­ment from the wrath of the peo­ple. Assert­ing your rights in the courts is another way of deal­ing with the cor­rupt gov­ern­ment. And it works — for the one who uses the exist­ing laws wisely!

    PS
    As for the men with the guns: even they can be dealt with suc­cess­fully. On my blog I doc­u­ment an encounter with 3 armed high­way­men, euphemisti­cally called police offi­cer, who arrested me, well, sort of, for not com­ply­ing with their instruc­tions to get out of the car. This arrest was unlaw­ful as I had not breached the peace and I there­fore did not accept it. The out­come: forty min­utes later I drove off and no more men­tion of being arrested.

    • Mark Bennett says:

      There is much that you and I agree on. Tak­ing away the guns is about pro­tect­ing the gov­ern­ment from the wrath of the peo­ple; the gov­ern­ment holds your prop­erty (still?!? Four years later!?!) by force, like any other thief might; if they wanted you in jail they would hold you by force, like any other kid­nap­per might.

      If oth­ers hold your prop­erty (and could jail you) by force, and with impunity (I hope you’ll let me know when one of the crooks pays a penny on your fraud­u­lent liens) you are not free.

  23. Dear Mr Bennett,

    It is clear that we will never see eye to eye on this mat­ter and so I sug­gest we part com­pany ami­ca­bly. Yes, I do con­sider myself free, regard­less of what you think or say and regard­less of what the gov­ern­ment thinks. We obvi­ously have a dif­fer­ent inter­pre­ta­tion of free­dom. But that’s ok. It would be a bor­ing world if we were all the same.

    Believe it or, hav­ing my car stolen by the gov­ern­ment has been the best thing that hap­pened to me in many many years. It forced me to take stock of myself, focus on a few things that are more impor­tant than the get­ting and spend­ing of money and caused me to change direc­tion. And again, believe it or not, even your input regard­ing my view of the law has been use­ful: it gave me food for thought.

    Allow me to sum it all up: I think it does not mat­ter how the gov­ern­ment and its var­i­ous agen­cies, includ­ing your pro­fes­sion, define and inter­pret the law. We, the Peo­ple, are the ulti­mate arbiters.

    For a while it may seem that the psy­cho­pathic money-and-power elite can with impunity oppress us, steal our hard-earned wealth from us, deprive us of our rights and our free­dom. For a while it may seem that a gov­ern­ment gets away with mur­der — both fig­u­ra­tively and literally.

    But there is only so much that peo­ple can take and I think the break­ing point is very close. If you dis­agree on that point then you are per­haps not pay­ing enough atten­tion to what is hap­pen­ing in the world. The natives are rest­less and the tom-toms can­not be ignored by any sen­si­ble man or woman.

    His­tory is full of exam­ples of failed sys­tems, polit­i­cal, eco­nom­i­cal, reli­gious. Ours will go the same way. Whether it will change peace­fully or in a bloody rev­o­lu­tion I do not know. I advo­cate peace­ful solu­tions to prob­lems. But let’s face it:when peo­ple have noth­ing to lose — they, unfor­tu­nately, lose it!

    And another thought: when peo­ple do lose it, believe me, it won’t be all that safe for peo­ple who will be seen to have taken the side of the oppres­sors. Let’s just hope you will not find the busi­ness end of a gun pointed at you! Will you still shrug it off as “might makes laws”? Please do not mis­un­der­stad: that is not intended as a threat.

    Regards

    • Mark Bennett says:

      As I said, you and I agree on a great deal. “Psy­cho­pathic” is a good word for gov­ern­ment, which killed more than 250 mil­lion peo­ple (exclu­sive of wars) in the last century.

      I am glad you’ve come to grips with the loss of your car. That’s a step toward real free­dom, which lies in valu­ing noth­ing that any­one can take away from you (or at least noth­ing that any­one can take away from you with impunity). (I com­mend to your atten­tion Thich Nhat Hanh’s Be Free Where You Are.) I hope those who fol­low you will accept that point—that the crim­i­nal enter­prise we call “gov­ern­ment” can take away your stuff and put you in a box if you don’t play by its rules, but that this doesn’t mean you aren’t free.

      You write on your blog, “The bailiff at the Toowoomba Mag­is­trates Court, one Allan Green, has become com­plicit in the crimes com­mit­ted against me by the above-mentioned crim­i­nals, by refus­ing to exe­cute a law­ful war­rant of seizure issued in my juris­dic­tion as a Sov­er­eign.” If the war­rant is law­ful and you are sov­er­eign, you don’t need the bailiff to exe­cute it. So why don’t you go exe­cute on your liens? Because you rec­og­nize that if you do you will go to prison, and you’re not so free that you’re okay with that. Until the rev­o­lu­tion, what the guys with the guns say is law is, for all prac­ti­cal pur­poses, law.

      I have friends who think the rev­o­lu­tion is very close. While I am well-prepared for that even­tu­al­ity, I disagree—I think most peo­ple are so sedated by pop­u­lar cul­ture, aroused only by the fear cre­ated by media and gov­ern­ment, that they will con­tinue trudg­ing meekly to enslave­ment and death. Those of us who see that the solu­tions to the world’s prob­lems are not in the hands of gov­ern­ment are few and far between. For­tu­nately, there are enough of us to keep the light burning.

      Also for­tu­nately, those who think that they have pulled back the cur­tain on a secret legal sys­tem, that the UCC is tran­scen­dent law, and that they can col­lect the money that gov­ern­ment has bor­rowed in their name are few and far between. Lawyers are not the enemy. Many of us fight the gov­ern­ment every day to try to pre­serve a mod­icum of free­dom. I sus­pect the gov­ern­ment of plant­ing this idea as a means of dis­tract­ing peo­ple from what is really going on—not a grand con­spir­acy, but the nat­ural con­se­quence of giv­ing any entity a monop­oly on the legit­i­mate use of force.

      Jefferson…Lenin…Gandhi… Has there been a rev­o­lu­tion in the last five hun­dred years not led by lawyers?

      • David Pemberton says:

        It’s a very minor point, but that great­est of Found­ing Fathers Alexan­der Hamil­ton wished for a rule by lawyers after the revolution.

      • Jefferson…Lenin…Gandhi… Has there been a rev­o­lu­tion in the last five hun­dred years not led by lawyers? ”

        I haven’t researched Jef­fer­son and will refrain from com­ment­ing on him. Lenin and Gandhi, how­ever, are not exactly inspir­ing trust.

        Apart from the fact that Lenin, as a lawyer was a fail­ure — he prac­tised only for a short time, and lost all of the six cases he was involved in as coun­sel for defence — does any­body seri­ously claim that his Bol­she­vik rev­o­lu­tion ben­e­fit­ted the Russ­ian peo­ple or the world?

        Gandhi like­wise failed as a lawyer in Bom­bay and he is far from being the hero he is made out to have been. He openly admired Hitler and advised the Jews to com­mit mass sui­cide. The 109th Con­gress of the United States con­demned him for his racism. He attempted to set up a caste sys­tem in South Africa and sup­ported every war the British were involved in. His rev­o­lu­tion and its legacy?A divided sub-continent and a rift between Hindu and Moslems that can prob­a­bly never be healed.

  24. There isn’t really any­thing in your last com­ment that I could vehe­mently dis­agree with, just minor points:
    1)
    “If the war­rant is law­ful and you are sov­er­eign, you don’t need the bailiff to exe­cute it. So why don’t you go exe­cute on your liens? Because you rec­og­nize that if you do you will go to prison, and you’re not so free that you’re okay with that. Until the rev­o­lu­tion, what the guys with the guns say is law is, for all prac­ti­cal pur­poses, law.“
    You are right, of course: any attempt to recover my prop­erty would fail because it could only be car­ried out using force and that wouldn’t be wise because it will give the Beast the excuse it needs to use even more force. It would also not be a true long-term solu­tion because you can­not, to para­phrase Ein­stein, solve a prob­lem on the same level on which it was cre­ated.
    You tell me that I am not free enough to enforce the liens myself for fear of the con­se­quences! Could I not use the same argu­ment about you? If you came to the con­clu­sion that many of the prin­ci­ples of sov­er­eignty are valid and actu­ally work (as I can prove!) would you say so pub­licly? Would you risk the ire of your pro­fes­sional asso­ci­a­tion and pos­si­bly the loss of your licence?
    The wise man chooses his bat­tles! And holds his fire when shoot­ing would accom­plish noth­ing. If he does that he will get to shoot another time! Be wise as ser­pents, as a wise man once said.
    2)
    “Lawyers are not the enemy. Many of us fight the gov­ern­ment every day to try to pre­serve a mod­icum of free­dom.“
    True! Lawyers are not the enemy nor is police or any other group or groups you could name. The world is manip­u­lated from behind the scenes by a tiny but immensely pow­er­ful clique. I do not know who they are although I could make an edu­cated guess. This self-appointed elite is few in num­bers and can­not do the job of keep­ing us in line; it needs tools: politi­cians to make “laws”, police and the legal sys­tem to enforce them, teach­ers to indoc­tri­nate us from child­hood, reli­gions (all of them) to promise us sal­va­tion in the after-life to dis­tract us from the need to do some­thing NOW .….…. etc.etc.
    There is a Japan­ese proverb: The tallest nail gets hit first! Police and lawyers stick out like sore thumbs; their oppres­sive, out­ra­geous and fre­quently just plain crim­i­nal con­duct is not only plainly vis­i­ble to every­body but also painfully expe­ri­enced first-hand by mil­lions of peo­ple in their daily lives; you shouldn’t be sur­prised that they are seen as the attack dogs of the sys­tem. While I can still under­stand that cops, not being trained in the law or much else for that mat­ter, haven’t got a clue what is going on I can­not accept such an excuse for lawyers. So that means in plain Eng­lish: either a lawyer does not have a clue about what is going on or his silence will have to be inter­preted as acqui­es­cence. Either way, why would any­one trust a lawyer?
    3)
    I do agree with you on the con­cept of com­mer­cial redemp­tion. I am famil­iar with these teach­ings, for exam­ple, A4V, but I have seen no proof that it works. It is also cor­rect to say that many if not actu­ally most peo­ple look into the mat­ter and adopt these approaches because they hope to find a way out of the pickle they got them­selves into. My own approach is NOT based on redemp­tion the­o­ries but on Com­mon Law. You won’t find redemp­tion the­o­ries on my blog and I also do not try to sell any­body the sov­er­eignty idea. I do not con­duct sem­i­nars and do not sell arti­cles or ebooks. In fact I usu­ally issue a warn­ing to peo­ple that con­tact me for advice.
    4)
    You have on sev­eral occa­sions pointed out that my liens are fraud­u­lent with­out actu­ally sup­ply­ing any kind of proof. My liens are entirely law­ful; if they were not I would cer­tainly have “heard” from the respon­dents, as sure as God made lit­tle green apples. Three of the respon­dents are lawyers; they are silent. Isn’t there a maxim in law that says:
    Qui non negat fate­tur (He who does not deny admits) Black’s Law Dic­tio­nary Revised 4th Edi­tion
    Error qui no resis­ti­tur appro­batur (An error not opposed is approved) Black’s Law Dic­tio­nary Revised 4th Edi­tion
    “The abil­ity to place a lien upon a man’s prop­erty, such as to tem­porar­ily deprive him of its ben­e­fi­cial use, with­out any judi­cial deter­mi­na­tion of prob­a­ble cause dates back not only to medieval Eng­land but also to Roman times.“
    United States Supreme Court, 1968 — Sni­adach v. Fam­ily Finance Corp., 395 U.S. 337, 349

    • Mark Bennett says:

      The idea that you can avoid the juris­dic­tion of the court by not agree­ing to it is patent non­sense. You’re say­ing that you can avoid being robbed by politely declin­ing, and this is demon­stra­bly false.

      I know of many peo­ple who have gone to prison while main­tain­ing that they are sov­er­eign and do not con­sent to the courts’ juris­dic­tion. This dis­proves the thesis.

      How to rec­tify this dis­proof with the pos­i­tive evi­dence that you have (that they haven’t put you in jail)? After all, if this is the law it is the law in felony court as well as magistrate’s court.

      There are two obvi­ous pos­si­bil­i­ties: first, that every­one who has gone to prison after invok­ing his own sov­er­eignty did it wrong; or sec­ond, that you are too small a fish for them to bother with.

      I con­tend that the sec­ond is the sim­pler expla­na­tion and there­fore most likely true: your infrac­tions are small enough that the agents of the gov­ern­ment aren’t com­fort­able using vio­lence against you (though they are per­fectly happy to seize your prop­erty). This is use­ful infor­ma­tion (we want to know how far our adver­saries are will­ing to go) but not proof of any sort of fringed-flag upper­case Weck:Mann sov­er­eignty the­ory. Invok­ing per­sonal sov­er­eignty works for the same rea­son that wear­ing a bird on your head and drool­ing on your­self would work: because bureau­crats don’t want to deal with peo­ple who don’t share their real­ity if they don’t have to.

      If I came to the con­clu­sion that the prin­ci­ples of that the­ory are valid and actu­ally work, I would use them to get my clients out of trou­ble. (You con­tend that only the judges know about these prin­ci­ples, but that’s errant non­sense: lawyers become judges, and judges become lawyers. Account for their overnight edu­ca­tion and brainwashing.)

      The gov­ern­ment did not set up a com­pany called BERNARD WECKMANN (you claim that it is true; prove it), and a man or a woman is a per­son. Statutes don’t say “man or woman” because “per­son” cov­ers both instances.

      Your liens are “law­ful” works of fic­tion. As long as you keep them to your­self they are harm­less. As long as they are not filed, the peo­ple against whom they are directed are free to sell their prop­erty with­out any encum­brance. The unfiled liens are, as you have dis­cov­ered, worth the paper they are writ­ten on. For a lien to have an effect, it has to be filed (so that peo­ple con­sid­er­ing doing busi­ness with the sub­ject of the lien have notice of the lien).

      As soon as you try to col­lect on these liens (or file them so that oth­ers have notice), they become fraud­u­lent. In the US, peo­ple have gone to prison—held at pain of death—for such liens. Maybe Australia’s law is dif­fer­ent, but I don’t believe that your argu­ment is that Aus­tralia is some personal-sovereignty par­adise. If you wrote a lien against me, and didn’t file it with the county clerk, I would ignore it as well.

      No, it is not true that he who does not deny admits. No, it is not true that an error not opposed is approved. Your “legal max­ims” are noth­ing more than quotes from Black’s. Black’s is a dic­tio­nary. It gives def­i­n­i­tions for phrases, but that doesn’t give the phrases any weight.

      The quote from Sni­adach is from the dis­sent (the jus­tice whose view of the law did not pre­vail). Sni­adach was about cor­po­ra­tions’ abil­ity to do what you con­tend you can do—create liens sua sponte. The Court in Sni­adach found that such liens vio­lated the Con­sti­tu­tion. If you reflect, I think you will agree with me that Sni­adach is a good decision—that cor­po­ra­tions should not have the power to place liens on our prop­erty with­out judi­cial process. That rule would apply no less to non-corporate per­sons like you (in the US) than to corporations.

      There is noth­ing mag­i­cal about “com­mon law.” It is sim­ply judge-made law (as opposed to the law made by the exec­u­tive and leg­isla­tive branches). If you don’t trust judges (and you don’t), you can’t trust the com­mon law.

      (As far as I can tell you invented your prin­ci­ples of Com­mon Law. Per­haps a bet­ter phrase for what you are describ­ing than “com­mon law” is “nat­ural law.” (We lib­er­tar­i­ans espouse the “non-aggression prin­ci­ple,” but we rec­og­nize that gov­ern­ments don’t fol­low it—they can’t, because gov­ern­ment must ini­ti­ate aggres­sion to exist.)

  25. I give up.

    We could con­tinue this dis­cus­sion for ever and ever but words are cheap and come eas­ily to a lawyer

    So let’s wrap it up with the fol­low­ing Jef­fer­son quote:

    If the present Con­gress errs in too much talk­ing, how can it be oth­er­wise in a body to which the peo­ple send one hun­dred and fifty lawyers, whose trade it is to ques­tion every­thing, yield noth­ing, and talk by the hour?”

  26. I am not run­ning away from prob­lems. I am with­draw­ing from a dis­cus­sion that is clearly not going any­where. And since this is only a dis­cus­sion and we are not involved in a legal dis­pute that needs to be resolved — one way or the other — it seems to me that I can with­draw at any time with­out dishonour.

    He who leaves the bat­tle­field thereby yields and con­cedes defeat. Do you think of a dis­cus­sion as a bat­tle that you need to win? Do you, per­haps, have the need to prove some­thing, to be always right? And I am not talk­ing about prov­ing a point of law, I am talk­ing about prov­ing some­thing else .…..

    I don’t have that need. I have never seen our exchanges as more than just a dis­cus­sion even if it gets a bit “lively” at times.

    I am not blam­ing lawyers whole­sale! Didn’t I say in one com­ment that there isn’t any one group that is the enemy? I’d go fur­ther and say: as long as we have crim­i­nals amongst us we do need police as peace keep­ers and we do need courts to a) deal with wrong-doers and b) set­tle all sorts of disputes.

    Unfor­tu­nately, law enforce­ment has become a WEAPON, a weapon which gov­ern­ments use not only against crim­i­nals but against every­body they want to con­trol (except them­selves, of course). Law enforce­ment has also been turned into a cash cow. Need more money? Let’s milk the peo­ple! Let’s invent another “offence“and and ruth­lessly enforce it to fill our coffers!

    The gov­ern­ment man­u­fac­tures the weapons (statutes). Police and the legal sys­tem wield them and are there­fore com­plicit in the government’s crimes.

    But the real rea­son I think this dis­cus­sion isn’t going any­where and I’d be wast­ing time and energy is this: I have proved to my own sat­is­fac­tion that so-called author­i­ties, and that includes courts, have no power other than what we grant them, either expressly or by acqui­es­cence. When I go into court I do not have to prove any­thing! The bur­den of proof is on the court, and that includes hav­ing to prove to me that the court has juris­dic­tion over me!

    It’s pretty clear that you, for what­ever rea­son of your own, do not agree. But guess what! I do not care whether you agree with me or not; in fact, I can even under­stand that you have a vested inter­est in denying.

    None of your sneer­ing and none of your attempts to cast doubts on the san­ity of those of us that pur­sue free­dom both­ers me. By act­ing in this way you are actu­ally telling us more about YOUR char­ac­ter or per­haps lack thereof than about our sanity.

    I take you for some­one who always needs to have the last word. Be my guest!

    • Mark Bennett says:

      You can have the last word” is another bush-league rhetor­i­cal move, akin to your last. If you didn’t have to try to have the last word, you’d have quit already. But since this is my blog, you are my guest, and I do not require your per­mis­sion to do any­thing here.

      Face the truth: you have no real evidence—evidence that would con­vince some­one who didn’t already devoutly want to believe—of any of your theories.

      You have proved to your own sat­is­fac­tion that courts have no more power than you grant them. That’s because you’ve never faced the gov­ern­ment when it’s seri­ous about some­thing you’ve done. File those liens, or try to exe­cute on them your­self, and I think you’ll see that the courts can exer­cise juris­dic­tion over you with­out your acqui­es­cence. (In fact, I think you know this, as evi­denced by your fail­ure so far to file the liens or exe­cute on them.)

      You seem to con­cede that (other than the fact that it has worked for you) you have no evi­dence of your the­o­ries. This is cargo-cult think­ing: “I did X and they did Y, so my doing X made them do Y.” But when asked for an iota of evi­dence that the gov­ern­ment set up a com­pany called BERNARD WECKMANN you fold like a cheap suit: “oh, you’re a lawyer so there’s no point in dis­cussing this…you can have the last word.”

      You’re enti­tled to your delu­sions (though if you didn’t have them you might still have your car), but the courts have exer­cised juris­dic­tion over many peo­ple with­out their acqui­es­cence, even when those peo­ple sub­scribe to the same beliefs as you. The proof of the court’s juris­dic­tion is the bailiff’s guns, and the pris­ons. What you’ve done is fun and games; some­body is going to fol­low you and wind up in prison. I’d rather they didn’t.

      Fight­ing for free­dom does not require sub­scrib­ing to your delu­sions. There are many who fight for free­dom with­out delu­sion. Some­day maybe you’ll join us.

      Of course you think call­ing it a delu­sion is uncalled-for. That’s because it’s a delu­sion.

  27. Below is the text of my new post. Enjoy!

    Lawyers — Fraud­sters Extraordinaire!

    PRESS RELEASE: 5th April 2003.

    JUDGES STEALING COMMON LAW:

    Com­mon Law is the law of the peo­ple, by the peo­ple and for the people.

    Com­mon Law is made by the peo­ple on juries when their judg­ments become precedents.

    Statute Law is made by the other two arms or branches of gov­ern­ment, ie: par­lia­men­tary and executive.

    In Com­mon Law coun­tires, “Com­mon Law doth con­trol Acts of Par­lia­ment and when adjudged against com­mon right to be void” (Lord Coke), ie: Com­mon Law over­rules Statute Law.

    Juries nul­lify Statute Law.

    Par­lia­ments amend and repeal Statute Law — and have no role in mak­ing Com­mon Law.

    Judges have no role in mak­ing either Com­mon Law nor Statute Law.

    AND YET: Con­vened in Syd­ney, between 7 — 11 April 2003,  here we have the WORLDWIDE COMMON LAW JUDICIARY CONFERENCE at the Law Courts Build­ing Queen’s Square, attended by 50 Chief Jus­tices from around the world to pro­mote the lie that “Judges make Com­mon Law”.

    Thomas Jef­fer­son warned that “The germ of destruc­tion of our nation is in the power of the judi­ciary, an irre­spon­si­ble body — work­ing like grav­ity by night and by day, gain­ing a lit­tle today and a lit­tle tomor­row, and advanc­ing its noise­less step like a thief across the field of juris­dic­tion, until all shall ren­der pow­er­less the checks of one branch over the other and will become as venal and oppres­sive as the gov­ern­ment from which we separated.”

    These judges must be stopped and put squarely in their place as noth­ing more than “Offi­cers of the Courts” to do the bid­ding of juries, ie: of the peo­ple. Let judges get away with steal­ing Com­mon Law — then Free­dom and the sov­er­eignty of Democ­racy, ie: when peo­ple con­trol their own fate, will be ult­terly and totally destroyed.

    John Wil­son
    PO Box 4520 North Rocks, NSW 2151
    Aus­tralia.
    http://www.rightsandwrong.com.au

    The arro­gance of mem­bers of the legal pro­fes­sion is as stag­ger­ing as is their igno­rance. The top of the hier­ar­chy arro­gantly usurps the People’s right to make laws while the rank-and-file is as igno­rant as their hap­less vic­tims, the People.

    Here is a per­fect exam­ple of an igno­ra­mus. It would prob­a­bly use­less to send him and his ilk back to law school because that’s where they got their “legal knowl­edge and exper­tise” in the first place.

    There is noth­ing mag­i­cal about “com­mon law.” It is sim­ply judge-made law (as opposed to the law made by the exec­u­tive and leg­isla­tive branches). If you don’t trust judges (and you don’t), you can’t trust the com­mon law.”

    Mark Ben­nett
    Defence Lawyer
    Hous­ton Texas

    blog.bennettandbennett.com

    • Mark Bennett says:

      I guess that’s what passes for your “per­mit­ting” me to have the last word. Did I hurt your lit­tle feelings?

      I’d love to know where you get your def­i­n­i­tion of “com­mon law.” Not Black’s, which you oth­er­wise quote so assid­u­ously as a legal author­ity. I guess you just made it up.

      MB

  28. You are not just an igno­ra­mus. You are a bloody thug!