By Anna Von Reitz
A one time or another in your life you have heard the question
asked, "What's your capacity?" or "In what capacity were you acting?"
This might have come up in any number of situations. You might have
even heard it in a court room or in relation to someone driving "in an
impaired capacity".
Identifying your capacity
has two main components --- describing the role you are playing at a
given time or in a given situation , and secondly, the authority under
which you are playing that role.
Some
capacities are mutually exclusive, such that you cannot be acting in
both capacities at the same time. You can't be a "sovereign citizen"
because it is impossible to act as a sovereign and as a slave at the
same time. You can't be a "private citizen" because you can't act in a
private capacity at the same time that you are acting in a public
capacity.
People who attack me and call me a
"fake judge" and who otherwise attempt to discredit my credentials don't
understand the capacity in which I am acting.
I
explain it this way: there are two jurisdictions, land and sea. This
in turn gives rise to two different jury pools, one called a "jural
assembly" and another called a "jural society".
I work for the Jural Assembly of the Alaska State as a Justice operating a land jurisdiction court.
I do not work for the Jural Society of the State of Alaska in any capacity whatsoever.
Thanks
to the Great Fraud perpetuated against us, the courts owed to the land
jurisdiction of this country have largely been vacated since 1965 and
people have forgotten about them.
Not understanding the capacity in which I act then gives rise to false assumptions about the requirements of my office.
People
assume that I must be a member of the Alaska Bar Association, but in
fact, the opposite is true. Bar Members can't serve in a land
jurisdiction court.
In an effort to keep
things straight, land jurisdiction judges are properly called "justices"
and sea jurisdiction judges are called "judges" but since average
people don't know the difference anymore, it does little good to make
the distinction.
Perhaps we, the growing body
of American Justices, need to wear green robes and our counterparts in
the sea courts need to wear blue robes, to help people grasp the
difference in capacity and jurisdiction--- land and sea --- that is
involved.
Another common confusion about
capacity arises when people claim back their birthright political status
and then want to do things like sign petitions and vote in federal
elections and call "their" Congressman.
Lets
be very clear about this. When you reclaim your birthright status you
are no longer acting in the capacity of a "voter". You are declaring
yourself to be an "elector".
You no longer
sign "petitions" in the capacity of a British subject begging for
relief. You direct your public servants to do your Will.
You
also recognize the fact that these people deceptively calling
themselves "Congressmen" are not your Congressmen. They are members of
the Territorial United States Congress and the Municipal United States
Congress, not the National United States Congress, which has been vacant
since 1861.
When you claim your birthright
estate and correct the falsified public records, you are able to act in a
different and new capacity. You are no longer acting as a British
conscript, obligated to obey every whim of a foreign government. You
have a new capacity as a non-citizen American national to fulfill.
That
capacity enables you to form your local County Jural Assembly, to elect
your county land jurisdiction Sheriff, to elect your land jurisdiction
Justices to your actual land jurisdiction County Court --- and from
there, you are able to assemble your State Jural Assembly and elect your
State Justices and also elect State Deputies to attend the
National-level Congressional Assembly.
Finally, you are also enabled to elect National Deputies to attend the Continental Congress.
This is how the organizational structure of your lawful government looks:
American non-citizen national forms:
County Jural Assembly forms:
State Jural Assembly elects:
National Congressional Assembly (Washington, DC / Delegated Powers)
Continental Congressional Assembly (Philadelphia /Non-Delegated Powers)
As
you will note there are two (2) Congressional Assemblies, one that
meets in Washington, DC to administer the delegated powers, and one that
(originally)
meets in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to administer the non-delegated powers.
After
the new capitol was built, Congress moved all its meetings to DC --
which turned out to be a mistake. With the same men acting in two
different capacities but meeting in the same location, it was natural
for the lines to get blurred between their administration of the
delegated powers and their administration of the non-delegated
powers----- and also for their loyalties to get confused.
Today the members of Congress, even the Senators, do not act as Fiduciary Deputies chosen by electors.
Instead, they act as unaccountable "Representatives" of corporate shareholders, holding proxies from voters.
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See this article and over 900 others on Anna's website here: www.annavonreitz.com
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