Jul
18
CITIZENSHIP FROM THE GROUND UP: FIGHTING A PARKING TICKET
Filed Under Articles of Confederation, CONGRESS, CONSTITUTION, Declaration of Independence, LEARNING THE LAW, Northwest Ordinance, Oath of Office, ORGANIC LAWS, PRESIDENTS, Territorial Jurisdiction
The law that permits a parking ticket to be written and placed under your windshield wiper is written law, which is based on the Organic Laws of the United States of America not on the English common law.
A quick review: the basis of all written law is the Organic Laws of the United States of America they are: the Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776, the Articles of Confederation of November 15, 1777, the Northwest Ordinance of July 13, 1787 and the Constitution of September 17, 1787.
The Declaration of Independence initiates independence from the legal and political system founded on the English monarchy. In place of a feudal society, this document proposes an “All men are created equal” society based on the unwritten laws, which include the “Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God,” and an unwritten constitution which comprises all these ideals.
The Articles of Confederation is the document that begins the formation of a perpetual Union of the thirteen States, which signed on to the Declaration of Independence. In this Confederacy, the perpetual Union called the United States of America, the member States retain their “sovereignty, freedom and independence,” but they delegate certain powers which are best exercised by a central or general government. Expansion of these delegated powers by the central government is checked by the expressed right of the people of the States to remain free inhabitant without loss of rights afforded to citizens.
The third Organic Law, the Northwest Ordinance of July 13, 1787 elevated the Confederacy under the Articles of Confederation from nation to nation State status on par with the other nation states of the world through the annexation of the Northwest Territory and its population. Without a population the United States of America, though a Confederacy of States remained a mere nation.
The Constitution of September 17, 1787 extended the temporary government provided by the Northwest Ordinance by two year increments and established a permanent executive officer in the Article II Section 1 Clause 1, President of the United States of America. Article I Section 7 created an employment called the President of the United States whose only duties were to sign Bills he approved and to make his objections on Bills which he did not approve.
George Washington prevented the formation of a new government under the charter of the Constitution of September 17, 1787 by taking both offices, President of the United States of America and President of the United States. When nine States of the first and perpetual Union ratified “this Constitution,” the Constitution of September 17, 1787 they created an executive officer for the Confederacy and a chief employee of the United States, the President of the United States. By combining both offices, Washington made certain no employee beneath the President of the United States had greater power than the person who held both offices.
George Washington created a dictatorship when he combined the office of the head of the nation State, the United States of America with the head of government of the United States, the territory owned by or subject to the exclusive legislative power of the United States of America. Washington created a republic in the style of the Roman Republic complete with a Senate. Washington personally extended his dictatorship beyond federal territory by his use of military force in early October, 1794 to put down the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania.
The dictatorship George Washington built has been handed down from President to President and has been expanded to include every State, county and city. All governments operate the same as Washington’s—by signing or objecting to legislation. When you dig deep into any written law, you will find George Washington’s fingerprints all over it then you will know that law was written for a piece of Washington’s Republic.
Where do you start? Ideally, you begin by taking my “Basic Course in Law and Government.” My Basic Course will teach you no Constitution adopted or not authorized legislation or taxation outside the territory owned by or subject to the exclusive legislative power of the United States of America. This means all laws made which are constitutional are limited to federal territory. You can take the Course for as little as $50 by contacting me at edrivera@edrivera.com
Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera
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