searcher wrote:To: The Observer,et.al.,I thank all of you for your comments.
Re: "... even as he confronted the injustice of the law. "
The so called sovruns,& sovrunts apparently think that some of the "laws" they are subjected to are also "unjust." Still, I shake my head repeatedly in disbelief at most of the "tactics" they use to get a point across, e.g."No, I do not have a driver license but my person does." I am trying hard to understand what they are trying to get across but confusion only begets more confusion. Here is my question. Do any quatloos members think there are any laws that they(quatloos members) are subjected to, that are unjust?
Just about every person can think of one law or another that he or she feels is unjust. So what?
Whether a given law is unjust is not an important question.
One of the important questions about so-called "sovereigns' is: "Can a sovereign, by revoking his or her 'agreement' to comply with a law, thereby
legally remove himself or herself from the 'jurisdiction' of the legal system?
The answer is no. With a few exceptions (such as in the case of persons with diplomatic immunity), you are subject to the laws of the place where you are located, regardless of whether you "agree" to be subject to those laws or not, and regardless of whether you believe you are subject to those laws or not.
In one sense in which the sovereign wackadoosters use the term "sovereign," there is no such thing as a "sovereign citizen." That is: The concept that a person who was born in or resides in the geographical area of the United States of America (and yes, that means the fifty states, the District of Columbia, etc.) can somehow not be subject to federal, state or local laws is nonsensical.
The term "sovereign citizen" is indeed a term that these wackos use to describe themselves, and it's a term that normal people use to describe them as well. It's just that these people
do not have the legal status that they claim to have.
Sovereignty means, fundamentally, political independence. Sovereignty means that foreign governments will recognize you and treat you as politically independent. This means that the government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland will treat the United States of America as a sovereign nation. For example, the government of the United Kingdom will enter into treaties with the United States.
The government of the United Kingdom will not enter a treaty with James Timothy Turner, or Francis August Schaeffer Cox, David Myrland, Edward Lewis Brown, Monty Ervin, Anson Chi, Samuel Lynn Davis, Shawn Rice, or other such individuals who may claim to be "sovereign citizens," and the government of the United Kingdom will not recognize such individuals as having any authority to deal with any sovereign entity. James Timothy Turner, for example, has claimed that his is "president" of the "Republic for the united States of America," or whatever he calls it. The government of the United Kingdom will not recognize any such claim by Turner.
Sovereignty -- in the real political and legal sense -- is not based merely on how you view yourself. You can't make yourself sovereign (in the real political and legal sense) merely by declaring yourself to be so. Sovereignty is based in large part on how others view you, and how others treat you.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet