This is an old revision of this page, as edited by C.Dember (talk | contribs) at 20:12, 23 November 2005. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 20:12, 23 November 2005 by C.Dember (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Paradigm for orientation in the U.S.A.: To begin, I will briefly define education as the mastery of accepted forms, cumulative towards a discrete practice. As such, varied credentials can't be represented in a Venn diagram. Still, we each set our goals and reach our objectives within this limited frame of reference. When it comes to our Identity however, many individuals function like robots, without a keen awareness of what is actually stated. The best example of this would be how we contract our services. Any concatination representing this would do well to include the corporate fiction alias. This convention in business is actually a fiction outside what most real people have come to recognize as themselves. This corporate fiction alias is your name, in all capital letters, with the social security number assigned to it. Such an identity is not how real people have been trained in school to write their names. It is the contractual alias a person accepts to represent themselves when operating under contract to some entity having jurisdiction over them via a contract. Do you remember when you got a bank account? Do you remember the small paper you signed whereon you agreed to abide by all the rules of the Bank? Well, do you think those proprietary rules you became signatory to were part of your rights under the constitution? They were. The constitution states You have an UNLIMITED power to contract. However, the devil is in the DETAILS of those contracts you sign, when you fail to exercise due dilligence. If some of the terms here are unknown to you, don't panic. A law dictionary which does not assume a knowledge of law will help you to see what you're doing more clearly. It's really important for you to know what you're saying in any contract, so that you may complete your end of the deal. I'm going to tell you about 4 things that can happen to you in a contract for illustration. After carefully reading, comprehending and agreeing with the terms in a contract (1) You do what is stated in the boiler plate (contract as written). You are feasant. (2) Something gets done, but not the way it is spelled out in the contract. You are misfeasant. (3) Nothing is done although the contract clearly states it shouild have been done. You are nonfeasant. (4) what got done is at odds with what was agreed to and this deviation was intentional. You are malfeasant. Anything less than feasance on your part means you will be named a defendant in a Tort Feasor process, where it will be determined how you wronged or damaged any parties. You see, it's all very predictable unless you sign something without knowing what the contract has spelled out. In a contract the body of it's text is supposed to include things valued by those striking the deal. Are your full rights and priviledges in law included in contracts? Not if you didn't include such a caveat. For such situations we skip law entirely and use Proof of residency to substitute jurisdictional codes to determine what your entitled to.As long as you don't mind having Congress as your lord and master, your set. If you only need Congress for representation & If you want your full rights and priviledges in law, you must say so in sworn form before the court. An Affidavit will elevate your hearsay ramblings to sworn testimony, which will secure your rights if you've read,said and know what your asking for under the constitution and your bill of rights. Remember, education is the mastery of accepted forms cumulative towards a discrete practice. The standard bearers don't suffer heracy gladly. Ask Galilao. Plunko