By Anna Von Reitz
You presume--wrongly, that I designed the oath you took and that I took the
same oath. Not so. I live in Alaska. Hello?
The Alaska State Oath is what I took as an oath to serve as an Alaska State
Justice, and that is the course I have always recommended to everyone regarding
any state court office: take the oath of office required for the land
jurisdiction state where you live. Look it up in the early Session Laws of your
state.
How could there be any such thing as a One-Size-Fits-All Oath for all fifty
states at the state level?
And yes, if that is what you've done, then you have all done it wrong and
need to go back and do it right.
I am well and truly stymied how anyone could ever think that they could
occupy a state office without taking the public office oath for that
state.
I am also well and truly amazed that you think such an office as "Superior
Court Judge of the united States of America" exists.
If you missed every civics lesson, every U.S. History lesson, every World
History lesson, all of it from third grade onward, how in creation could you
miss the fact that there are fifty nation-states?
Earth to "Court of Record".....Earth to "Court of Record"...... Hello,
Houston, we've got a problem here....
I am sorry if you have been cheated by the public school system and I am
sorry if I have failed to properly address questions that apparently
everyone had, but to be fair to me, nobody asked---- and I thought it was obvious.
everyone had, but to be fair to me, nobody asked---- and I thought it was obvious.
Also, I assure you that I am very, very far from being the "first declared
de jure judge of the Federal Postal District".
Up until about sixty years ago what we called "Federal Marshals" and
"Federal Courts" were common as dirt and almost all our courts functioned as
land jurisdiction courts. It wasn't until crooks took over the administration of
the United States Government and refined their racket to an art back in the
1930's that the court system owed to the people of this country was quietly
usurped by quasi-military tribunals operated under the Reconstruction Acts and
private bill collection agencies operated under color of law.
The corruption is bad, "Court of Record"---- and that I will grant, as I
have been one of the chief commentators on the subject for a long time, but it
seems to me that while the corruption threatens us on one side, our own
ignorance cripples us on the other, and if you are going to be an effective
defender of this country and the people who live here, you need to go back and
study very basic information about the history and government of both.
Start by looking at a political map of the United States and really
grasping the fact that those are fifty separate little nations, just like
Germany and Italy and France are separate nations. They all have their own
history, their own laws called "Session Laws" --not "Statutes"---and their own
offices. Our power lies in the land jurisdiction states. That is where the
people of this country have their vested sovereignty. And it is only through
the actual states that we can apply the Checks and Balances necessary to reform
the runaway criminal empire spiraling out of control in the District of
Columbia.
Now look at the big familiar outline of the whole United States--- that
whole thing is represented internationally by two entities: the United States
which is responsible for exercising the nineteen enumerated "powers" delegated
to it under the actual Constitution, and the United States of America which is
responsible for exercising the "undelegated powers" that were retained by the
states and the people.
That probably sounds like gobbledygook to you at this moment, but read it
over a few times and ponder --- "United States" is not the same as the "United
States of America". Say it several times out loud.
Now get a copy of the Constitution and read it with the understanding that
this document set up the so-called United States as a foreign entity on our
shores to provide the nineteen government services that the states delegated to
it. The Constitution doesn't say nary a word about our court system, because
that wasn't the subject of the Constitution. The Constitution sets up the U.S.
Court System which is foreign to us and which is designed to only address
Maritime and Admiralty issues (because under the Constitution that is the only
jurisdiction granted to the U.S. Courts) and its own in-house administrative
courts which are designed to deal with its own employees.
You are now on your way to a firm, basic understanding of who is who and
what is what.
If you want to fight corruption, you have to be able to recognize what the
healthy, lawful, fully restored government of the states and the people looks
like, how it is designed to function, how it is organized, and where your own
power lies sleeping within it.
Listen, learn, ask questions, and don't be afraid to correct mistakes. If
you took the wrong oath, take the right one. If you didn't understand the
unique nature and importance of your actual state government, go back and
learn.
See this article and over 400 others on Anna's website here:www.annavonreitz.com
1 comment:
The dumbing down of America has been a total success. Here is the state of Oregon, ignorance and apathy is mandatory through out the public fool system
I board of education here should be sued and criminal charges for ignoring a law that was put on the books back in 1923 and still has not been implemented, enforced let alone mentioned to this day. ORS 336.057 and 067 All by design? No question.
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