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| Jayy |
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 Jayy Mr. Ponzi
Joined: 08 Jun 2009 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:42 - 09 May 2010 Post subject: Free Man Of The Land |
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https://www.bbc5.tv/eyeplayer/video/john-harris-its-illusion
Basically, things like driving licenses, speeding fines, insurance etc all operates under contractual law.
The United Kingdom is a limited company
The police are a limited company
The courts are a limited company
MPs are limited companies
Political parties are limited companies (interestingly, labour operate under Alistair Darling MP Ltd and he's also a diplomat, making them able to bend rules as they trade under his diplomatic status)
Contractual meaning, something you agree to. What happens if you don't agree? These laws don't apply. |
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| Itchy |
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 Itchy Super Spammer

Joined: 07 Apr 2005 Karma :     
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 Posted: 22:50 - 09 May 2010 Post subject: |
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He is wrong of course, the kicker in this is the question you ask what happens if you do not agree.
The UK is a despot state whereby violence is used to force compliance of individuals, ALL governments are based on violence and force.
The difference is efficiency
So while Kim of North Korea and Somalians to enforce their will have to execute people regularly.
The propaganda and conditioning is so powerful people do not realise we live under a despot government. The propaganda and activism sponges are so powerful people hardly ever rise up.
The clue also is in the fact we use fiat money, not the gold standard, Fiat means the government to apply law to support the value of the money. Law is enforced by guns, guns = violence.
Fiat money ergo is based on the ability of the government to oppress you. ____________________ Spain 2008France 2007Big one 2009 We all die. The goal isn't to live forever, the goal is to create something that will. In the end, your life will flash before your eyes. Make sure it is worth watching. |
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| yuri2085 |
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 yuri2085 World Chat Champion
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 Jayy Mr. Ponzi
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| Itchy |
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 Itchy Super Spammer

Joined: 07 Apr 2005 Karma :     
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 Posted: 23:15 - 09 May 2010 Post subject: |
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| Recoil Jay wrote: | Our police don't have guns by standard either, only the fire arms trained ones? They don't execute people in the UK either. So what violence do they use to enfore their policies? Alright, they might rough you up a bit if they arrest you but you don't have to acknowledge statute law only common law. |
As I said the UK is still tightly controlled efficient and stable state (subject to change) therefore the real guns do not need to come out yet .
It is not carte blanche however and willy nilly do what they like though as there are certain rules which are followed to maintain the facade. If you bring the guns out the facade falls and you have to start executing people regularly to maintain order.
But currently the UK favour's kidnapping, extortion and theft. Prison, fines & taxes to enforce their will. The above three things and merely the threat of prisons, fines & taxes are enough to scare and cow people into compliance most of the time, hence the difference being efficiency.And the need not to execute people all the time.
You see it on BCF all the time when people say but the government will do this and that... if we do this and that, this is the efficiency and brain washing in action.
Think of it this way bloke comes to your house with a bat, demands money if you give it to him he leaves you alone. If you do not he breaks your legs.
Think of it this way and organisation comes to your house unarmed but demands money, if you refuse to give it to them they go away and have somebody kidnap you. If you do give him money he leaves you alone.
What is the difference?
The only difference is the organisation (government) uses cloaked threats and it spends some of the money you are FORCED to give them on things to placate the masses. But nobody asked you what these things were. ____________________ Spain 2008France 2007Big one 2009 We all die. The goal isn't to live forever, the goal is to create something that will. In the end, your life will flash before your eyes. Make sure it is worth watching. |
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| Jayy |
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 Jayy Mr. Ponzi
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| Itchy |
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 Itchy Super Spammer

Joined: 07 Apr 2005 Karma :     
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 Posted: 23:42 - 09 May 2010 Post subject: |
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| Recoil Jay wrote: |
The fact is though, what they're doing is simply not enforcable by contractual law and they can threaten you with legal proceedings but if you challenge it with their own language, what can they do? I don't believe they would have you kidnapped or kidnap someone you know over not paying a speeding fine or getting stopped for having no insurance/license. |
I know I joked about Sickpup's case plenty of times, I said it in the above post whereby they have a set of rules which they must play by to maintain the facade and they do not have carte blanche. So while they control heavily they also give you some priviliedges*
Remember they control the rules as well, so if somebody does use their own mechanisms to defeat their rules, you simply change the rules.
Like when people stopped admitting to being the driver in speeding cases they changed the rules. I fully expect Sickpup's case to be phrric as they will change the laws and tighten them up to remove his defence.
It is like standing in the middle of a cage blind folded you reach out all around you, yo u don't see bars or feel them but the cage exists.
*UK people have no rights btw, the give away was the London police propaganda campaign , it said somrthing along the lines of your rights can be restricted or removed temperarily for reasons of national security. But this goes against the idea of rights that rights can never be removed, ergo all of the freedoms you see are merely priviledges. ____________________ Spain 2008France 2007Big one 2009 We all die. The goal isn't to live forever, the goal is to create something that will. In the end, your life will flash before your eyes. Make sure it is worth watching. |
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| Jayy |
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 Jayy Mr. Ponzi
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| smegballs |
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 smegballs World Chat Champion
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| D O G |
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 D O G World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Dec 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 10:06 - 10 May 2010 Post subject: |
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| colin1 |
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 colin1 Captain Safety
Joined: 17 Feb 2005 Karma :  
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 Posted: 12:22 - 10 May 2010 Post subject: |
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It's a while since I have seen this. I like it. He may be technically correct, but whether people acting for the law would understand it or be willing to accept it is another matter.
A policeman upholds the law, or at least controls peoples behaviour. A policeman knows when he can break the law without consequences, or where he would be seen as being allowed to break the law to do his job.
If you do something a policeman thinks you shouldnt, he can detain you just because he wants to and cite some public order offence.
So when it comes to going against the state, I think you are trying to stand in front of the way of an oil tanker, when its only a metre from you, expecting it to be able to change its course to go round you.
It wont go round you, even if it should technically. Its unable to and you would be seen as wrong for getting in its way.
If you win a legal judgement in court using this free man stuff, maybe you could get other agents of the state to respect it, but until then legal arguments to them would just make no sense.
However I think the contract law stuff does apply to a lot of dealings with companies that are private companies not connected to the state.
Courts are not so likely to side with them by assumption.
For example, although I would pay a parking fine from the council, I would not pay a parking fine from a private company, as they have no legal authority to fine me. The only basis they have for attempting to extract money from me, is to say I had entered into a contract with them in which I agreed to their terms.
Maybe the council dont have a right to extract money either, but they probably have a much closer relationship with the courts. ____________________ colin1 is officially faster than god |
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| Jayy |
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 Jayy Mr. Ponzi
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| -Savage- |
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 -Savage- World Chat Champion

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| colin1 |
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 colin1 Captain Safety
Joined: 17 Feb 2005 Karma :  
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 Posted: 13:05 - 10 May 2010 Post subject: |
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Another thing to bear in mind, is that when the police deal with a member of the public to modify their behaviour, their actions towards you depend on what a policeman I know calls "the attitude test".
Basically, if they tell you not to do something, and you are defiant, they almost see this as an attack, as you are not respecting their authority to tell you what to do.
If however, you appologise, say you wont do it again etc they are satisfied.
This comes from the fact that they need to feel they are in control of any situation, for real practical reasons. Defiance can turn to physical threat to them.
So the public are people who are compliant and people who arent. If you put yourself in the camp with the bad guys, the police will feel justified in doing whatever they can to get you back, even if its not stictly legal. Because to them, you are now a bad guy. ____________________ colin1 is officially faster than god |
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 Jayy Mr. Ponzi
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 colin1 Captain Safety
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| pa_broon74 |
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 pa_broon74 World Chat Champion

Joined: 28 Mar 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 13:52 - 10 May 2010 Post subject: |
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Not that I usually find myself on the wrong side of the law, if ever I do have to deal with the police, I never apologise on point of principal. You apologise to a person, you can't apologise to system and it's rules, what's the point.
It might be important to the policeman that I show deference and contrition, but its more important for me to show that he or she is not some moral barometer to which I should aspire.
I'll show exactly the same amount of respect as they show me, given that I'm not a nob end and not predisposed towards nobbish behaviour, usually it works. One thing I hate is being patronised, especially by someone who's yet to pass through puberty, so for some smooth cheeked pious tosspot to start in as if I've been throttling babies when infact all I was doing was speeding or had a tail light out; I cut them short and ask for the ticket.
I think i've seen this guy on youtube, he was going to deregister his car as the DVLA was a limited company and had no right to insist he keep it registered and pay the RFL money to them. He also pointed out that on paper (I thought it was a bit ropey tbh,) apparently he didn't awn his car as he was only down as the 'registered keeper'. I thought that was always to one side of ownership.
That said, how many people kept the receipt or invoice or whatever when they bought their car or bike. He talked like they could whip it away any time they pleased (which I suppose they can do.)
Anyway, interesting stuff but a wee bit moot. Statute law is consensus-based. If the majority of folk follow it then thats what you'll get.
 ____________________ Didn't catch anything. |
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 colin1 Captain Safety
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| pa_broon74 |
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 pa_broon74 World Chat Champion

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 Posted: 17:06 - 10 May 2010 Post subject: |
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It wouldn't surprise me if they did insist all vehicles being registered and taxed. They'll justify it by calling it a green tax.
I've just remembered, if its the same guy I saw on youtube, he also wrote to his council blethering on about not having to pay council tax for the same reason, the council being a PLC and him not being answerable to statute law.
Something to do with it applying to the legal entity of the person (you get that when your birth is registered I think,) he kept refering to himself as John of the Harris family... If its even the same person...
 ____________________ Didn't catch anything. |
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 Luke_Retrofly Silly Lesbian

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 colin1 Captain Safety
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 Luke_Retrofly Silly Lesbian

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| GhostRider |
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 GhostRider World Chat Champion

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 Posted: 17:20 - 10 May 2010 Post subject: |
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| pa_broon74 wrote: | It wouldn't surprise me if they did insist all vehicles being registered and taxed. They'll justify it by calling it a green tax.
I've just remembered, if its the same guy I saw on youtube, he also wrote to his council blethering on about not having to pay council tax for the same reason, the council being a PLC and him not being answerable to statute law.
Something to do with it applying to the legal entity of the person (you get that when your birth is registered I think,) he kept refering to himself as John of the Harris family... If its even the same person...
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Something like this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXv1a7yiN0w ?
GhostRider ____________________ I have all the characteristics of a human being: blood, flesh, skin, hair; but not a single, clear, identifiable emotion, except for greed and disgust. Something horrible is happening inside of me and I don't know why. My nightly bloodlust has overflown into my days. I feel lethal, on the verge of frenzy. I think my mask of sanity is about to slip. |
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| Jayy |
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 Jayy Mr. Ponzi
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 15 years, 240 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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