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Reason: None provided.

technically we have rights in law

The IRS can tell the police to lock you up and throw away the key if any agent of the IRS (which is also an agent of the Fed) suspects you of a tax crime. They can take away all "your" property and sell it off under the same suspicions. No warrant is required, no other agency need say a word, nor can any other agency speak up on your behalf, because they own them all. The only entitles that can legally speak up on your behalf, without express permission from the Fed, is another citizen.

The reason they can lock you up and throw away the key is because the Fed is a sovereign entity, and technically owns you. The reason they can have the police (or FBI) lock you up and throw away the key is because technically, they own the Town, State, and Country (U.S.), and the police are beholden to those municipal or constitutional corporations.

While the Federal Reserve act is provably unconstitutional nine ways from Sunday, it has never been challenged in the courts nor in the congress, thus it, and all these other unconstitutional laws are legal unless and until a court, or congress, decides otherwise. Whether or not the complicity of the courts and congress is through legal means (hidden ownership of those bodies somewhere in the laws) or merely coercion I am not sure, but you only have "rights" in the eyes of the law if the law says you do, and the law says you don't whenever the IRS (The Fed) says you don't.

Of course you DO have rights; your rights are inalienable, but that's not going to help you in a court unless you are being judged by a jury, or happen to get an honest judge that agrees with you; which is where law is decided, i.e. its not actually decided in our "laws" themselves. That's that whole innocent until proven guilty thing, however, legally the IRS (AKA the Fed) can bypass that whole process and never involve the courts at all. After the Patriot act, the government can do so as well legally.

Thus, by law, you have no rights. You only live under the illusion of rights (in the eyes of the law). We are, lock, stock and barrel, completely owned by law.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

technically we have rights in law

The IRS can tell the police to lock you up and throw away the key if any agent of the IRS (which is also an agent of the Fed) suspects you of a tax crime. They can take away all "your" property and sell it off under the same suspicions. No warrant is required, no other agency need say a word, nor can any other agency speak up on your behalf, because they own them all. The only entitles that can legally speak up on your behalf, without express permission from the Fed, is another citizen.

The reason they can lock you up and throw away the key is because the Fed is a sovereign entity, and technically owns you. The reason they can have the police (or FBI) lock you up and throw away the key is because technically, they own the Town, State, and Country (U.S.), and the police are beholden to those municipal or constitutional corporations.

While the Federal Reserve act is provably unconstitutional nine ways from Sunday, it has never been challenged in the courts nor in the congress, thus it, and all these other unconstitutional laws are legal unless and until a court, or congress, decides otherwise. Whether or not the complicity of the courts and congress is through legal means (hidden ownership of those bodies somewhere in the laws) or merely coercion I am not sure, but you only have "rights" in the eyes of the law if the law says you do, and the law says you don't whenever the IRS (The Fed) says you don't.

Of course you DO have rights; your rights are inalienable, but that's not going to help you in a court unless you are being judged by a jury, or happen to get an honest judge that agrees with you; which is where law is decided, i.e. its not actually decided in our "laws" themselves. That's that whole innocent until proven guilty thing, however, legally the IRS (AKA the Fed) can bypass that whole process and never involve the courts at all. After the Patriot act, the government can do so as well legally.

Thus, by law, you have no rights. You only live under the illusion of rights (in the eyes of the law). We are, lock, stock and barrel, completely owned by law.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

technically we have rights in law

The IRS can tell the police to lock you up and throw away the key if any agent of the IRS (which is also an agent of the Fed) suspects you of a tax crime. They can take away all "your" property and sell it off under the same suspicions. No warrant is required, no other agency need say a word, nor can any other agency speak up on your behalf, because they own them all. The only entitles that can legally speak up on your behalf, without express permission from the Fed, is another citizen.

The reason they can lock you up and throw away the key is because the Fed is a sovereign entity, and technically owns you. The reason they can have the police (or FBI) lock you up and throw away the key is because technically, they own the Town, State, and Country (U.S.), and the police are beholden to those municipal or constitutional corporations.

While the Federal Reserve act is provably unconstitutional nine ways from Sunday, it has never been challenged in the courts nor in the congress, thus it, and all these other unconstitutional laws are legal unless and until a court, or congress, decides otherwise. Whether or not the complicity of the courts and congress is through legal means (hidden ownership of those bodies somewhere in the laws) or merely coercion I am not sure, but you only have "rights" in the eyes of the law if the law says you do, and the law says you don't whenever the IRS (The Fed) says you don't.

Of course you DO have rights; your rights are inalienable, but that's not going to help you in a court unless you are being judged by a jury, or happen to get an honest judge that agrees with you; which is where law is decided, i.e. its not actually decided in our "laws" themselves. That's that whole innocent until proven guilty thing, however, legally the IRS (AKA the Fed) can bypass that whole process and never involve the courts at all. After the Patriot act, the government can do so as well legally.

Thus, by law, you have no rights. You only live under the illusion of rights (in the eyes of the law). We are, lock, stock and barrel, completely owned by law.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

technically we have rights in law

The IRS can tell the police to lock you up and throw away the key if any agent of the IRS (which is also an agent of the Fed) suspects you of a tax crime. They can take away all "your" property and sell it off under the same suspicions. No warrant is required, no other agency need say a word, nor can any other agency speak up on your behalf, because they own them all. The only entitles that can legally speak up on your behalf, without express permission from the Fed, is another citizen.

The reason they can lock you up and throw away the key is because the Fed is a sovereign entity, and technically owns you. The reason they can have the police (or FBI) lock you up and throw away the key is because technically, they own the Town, State, and Country (U.S.), and the police are beholden to those municipal or constitutional corporations.

While the Federal Reserve act is provably unconstitutional nine ways from Sunday, it has never been challenged in the courts nor in the congress, thus it, and all these other unconstitutional laws are legal unless and until a court, or congress, decides otherwise. Whether or not the complicity of the courts and congress is through legal means (hidden ownership of those bodies somewhere in the laws) or merely coercion I am not sure, but you only have "rights" in the eyes of the law if the law says you do, and the law says you don't whenever the IRS (The Fed) says you don't.

Of course you DO have rights; your rights are inalienable, but that's not going to help you in a court unless you are being judged by a jury, or happen to get an honest judge that agrees with you; which is where law is decided, i.e. its not actually decided in our "laws" themselves. That's that whole innocent until proven guilty thing, however, legally the IRS (AKA the Fed) can bypass that whole process and never involve the courts at all. After the Patriot act, the government can do so as well legally.

Thus, by law, you have no rights. You only live under the illusion of rights (in the eyes of the law). We are, lock, stock and barrel, completely owned by law.

2 years ago
1 score