Like many of you, I cannot stand government. Arrogance and incompetence rolled into one creepy, stalkery package.
America the Free.
It's a free country right? None of us should be forced to interact with and do business with an entity we cannot tolerate. Some of us even believe government are the servants of evil, whether they know it or not.
So how do we get out of this pact with the devil?
Well...I do not know. But if anyone can contribute knowledge on the subject or useful resources - add them below.
Video - Courts have ruled no license necessary to drive: https://youtu.be/WTytQVZ-gTM?si=Nbn8yQwHhbftVq9M
Unfortunately, the particular case (People V Horton) referenced in that youtube clip is about probable cause. The officer in question pulled the car over because the passengers were young. That is not a probable reason for pulling over a car, so everything after that happening was considered below board. Basically, the right to travel is being applied to the passengers in the car who were young, which is why the cop pulled over the car. He was in the wrong to do so because they have the right to travel.
As for the driving without a license part, that isn't addressed in this specific case, so this specific case does not say whether or not a person can drive without a license on pubic roads. I've not looked into whether there are other cases detailing one's right to drive on public roads without a license, so I can't point to a case that allows for such a thing, nor can I point to a cause that disallows such thing. I can only say that, for this specific case, the right to travel is referring to the passengers, not the driver.
That having been said, according to this case, A police officer could not pull you over for suspicion of not having a license. They can only ding you for not having a license after already having pulled you over for "suspicious", "dangerous" or illegal behavior. I put those two in quotations because the definition varies depending on the police officer or judge who is using said definition. So, driving without a license on its own is not something that a cop can pull you over for, but I wouldn't know which court cases to point to for how to fight that as a secondary charge to say speeding or reckless driving. As with most anything in the US, a good enough lawyer can argue almost anything. So, yea, hypothetically, one could easily drive without a license, especially if they don't break any other laws. Of course, we also currently have a plethora of judges who think that the law and the constitution should bend to their will and unless you can find somebody with the guts to go after said judges (and other authority figures), well, they may well be correct.