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Author Topic: Las Vegas judge gets attacked in court  (Read 162 times)
collinscoinz
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January 13, 2024, 06:52:17 AM
 #21

Relayable source said that this is
Not really the first time it has happened and most likely not the last
just like the assassination of Julius Caesar where he was literally stabbed during their meeting at the senate some people are greedy and violent unfortunately and attacks or assassinations would always be present in our world it is quite saddening and disappointing of course to think how could people do this it is also a question i can not answer.Lots of things sound stupid and ineffective to you. Remember that you have said several times that you are not a US citizen, and therefore don't know about how the US works... or words to that effect.

Declarations about being a sovereign citizen are stupid. Why? If you are a citizen, you are not sovereign. If you are sovereign, you aren't a citizen. If someone uses that term, he needs to add explanation about it so that it's not contradictory on its face.

There are people in the US who have used the idea of 'no contract' with the government to contract out of problems with government. As I have explained in other posts, writing the words "non-assumpsit" on the signature line ahead of your signature means "no-contract" regarding what you are signing. Depending on the info that you write in the contract, it can mean exactly that, no contract. However, if you show that you are contracting by the words within the body of the contract, you are contradicting yourself by using "non-assumpsit," and your word and signature are deemed not trustworthy. A wise person won't do business with you in this case.

Consider "Fraud upon the Court," and "Fraud upon the Court by the Court." Those are legal terms that have been used by many people regarding their case for over a hundred years... where the judge has made a mistake and will not correct it. All it is, is contracting out of a judicial decision where the decision seems to be wrong. Also, if you are really interested, check out https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Fraud+upon+the+Court+by+the+Court%2C+cornell&ia=web. This will start to show you both the simplicity and the complexity of the US legal system.
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