Victor Beck - your birth certificate is NOT identification

Started by /tab, August 10, 2010, 02:36:07 PM

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/tab

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Victor Beck - your birth certificate is NOT identification


[youtube:mmretwc7]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aUzt4g67V8I[/youtube]mmretwc7]

[youtube:mmretwc7]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pP1_Z3zVNvc[/youtube]mmretwc7]

[youtube:mmretwc7]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-kq8TpskPY[/youtube]mmretwc7]

[youtube:mmretwc7]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fps_xUKEpvs[/youtube]mmretwc7]

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targa2

Victor is right.  His letters to the Registrar General and her answers prove this. BUT,  so what ?  Don't get me wrong, I know Victor and love the guy. I have bought him lunch before so I could command his full attention.  It is not just the document ( s )  that matter. It is your actions.  If you walk, act and quack like a duck in law, you will be deemed to be , and prosecuted like a duck despite your paperwork or lack thereof.   Forget statutes and codes and start reading Maxims of Law. Look them up on line and read a bunch for an hour or so.  It is a real eye opener.  These are the operation underpinnings of what is secretly being used against you to prosecute you.

targa2

Here are a few Maxims to start you off.

Benefits and Privileges
Favors from government often carry with them an enhanced measure of regulation.
Any one may renounce a law introduced for his own benefit.
No one is obliged to accept a benefit against his consent.
He who receives the benefit should also bear the disadvantage.
He who derives a benefit from a thing, ought to feel the disadvantages attending it.
He who enjoys the benefit, ought also to bear the burden.
He who enjoys the advantage of a right takes the accompanying disadvantage.
A privilege is, as it were, a private law.
A privilege is a personal benefit and dies with the person.
One who avails himself of the benefits conferred by statute cannot deny its validity.
What I approve I do not reject. I cannot approve and reject at the same time. I cannot take the benefit of an instrument, and at the same time repudiate it.
He who does any benefit to another for me is considered as doing it to me.


Commerce
Caveat emptor (let the buyer beware).
Let the purchaser beware.
Let the seller beware.
The payment of the price stands in the place of a sale.
The payment of the price of a thing is held as a purchase.
Goods are worth as much as they can be sold for.
Mere recommendation of an article does not bind the vendor of it.
It is settled that there is to be considered the home of each one of us where he may have his habitation and account-books, and where he has made an establishment of his business.
No rule of law protects a buyer who willfully closes his ears to information, or refuses to make inquiry when circumstances of grave suspicion imperatively demand it.
Let every one employ himself in what he knows.
He at whose risk a thing is done, should receive the profits arising from it.
Usury is odious in law. [Exodus 22:25, Leviticus 25:36-37, Nehemiah 5:7,10, Proverbs 28:8, Ezekiel 18:8,13,17; 22:12]


Common Sense
When you doubt, do not act.
It is a fault to meddle with what does not belong to or does not concern you.
Many men know many things, no one knows everything.
One is not present unless he understands.
It avails little to know what ought to be done, if you do not know how it is to be done.
He who questions well, learns well.
What ever is done in excess is prohibited by law.
No one is bound to give information about things he is ignorant of, but every one is bound to know that which he gives information about.
No man is bound to have foreknowledge of a Divine or a future event.
No one is bound to arm his adversary.


Consent and Contracts
Consent makes the law. A contract is a law between the parties, which can acquire force only by consent.
Consent makes the law: the terms of a contract, lawful in its purpose, constitute the law as between the parties.
To him consenting no injury is done.
He who consents cannot receive an injury.
Consent removes or obviates a mistake.
He who mistakes is not considered as consenting.
Every consent involves a submission; but a mere submission does not necessarily involve consent.
A contract founded on a base and unlawful consideration, or against good morals, is null.
One who wills a thing to be or to be done cannot complain of that thing as an injury.
The agreement of the parties makes the law of the contract.
The contract makes the law.
Agreements give the law to the contract.
The agreement of the parties overcomes or prevails against the law.
Advice, unless fraudulent, does not create an obligation.
No action arises out of an immoral consideration.
No action arises on an immoral contract.
In the agreements of the contracting parties, the rule is to regard the intention rather than the words.
The right of survivorship does not exist among merchants for the benefit of commerce.
When two persons are liable on a joint obligation, if one makes default the other must bear the whole.
You ought to know with whom you deal.
He who contracts, knows, or ought to know, the quality of the person with whom he contracts, otherwise he is not excusable.
He who approves cannot reject.
If anything is due to a corporation, it is not due to the individual members of it, nor do the members individually owe what the corporation owes.
Agreement takes the place of the law: the express understanding of parties supercedes such understanding as the law would imply.
Manner and agreement overrule the law.
The essence of a contract being assent, there is no contract where assent is wanting.

/tab

QuoteHere are a few Maxims to start you off.

Worthy path to get into and increase our knowledge about, thx targa2 !


Maxims of Law

http://ecclesia.org/truth/maxims.html
http://www.google.com/search?hl=sv&q=Maxims+of+Law

http://www.lawfulpath.com/ref/bouvier/maxims.shtml

Latin legal phrases, maxims and writs with translations

http://www.inrebus.com/legalmaxims_a.php

http://www.google.com/search?hl=sv&q=Legal+maxim&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&oq=&gs_rfai=


Henry Campbell Black



Henry Campbell Black (October 17, 1860 – March 19, 1927) was the founder of Black's Law Dictionary, the definitive legal dictionary first published in 1891.

Born in Ossining, New York, he was also the editor of The Constitutional Review from 1917 until his death in 1927.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Campbell_Black


Legal Maxim  Videos

http://www.google.com/search?hl=sv&q=Legal%20maxim&um=1&ie=UTF-8&tbo=u&tbs=vid:1&source=og&sa=N&tab=wv

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targa2

Ecclessia. org is where I got the maxims from. Other than his belief in Preterism, Richard Anthony is spot on.