The single mission of the lawful rebellion movement is to reassert the consttution so that British law (created by the people) can be used within all courts of law to stop the destruction of our sovereignty.
The command to rebel is a royal command by a constitutional monarch, it is apart of the equal cnsideration expressed within the peace treaty of 1215.
Once again, PAYG reveals that he paid little or no attention during his school history lessons. King John wasn't a constitutional monarch and wouldn't have recognised the concept, which is a recent one. Wait, does he really mean the current royal incumbent? Didn't pay any attention in English Language, either.
whereby the people promised not to harm the monarch or its heirs as long as there was a peaceful remedy against the usurpation of the monarch.
Oh, please. MC 1215 was indeed a peace treaty, pausing a civil war between King John & his barons. As such, it was drafted in haste by clerics and 'the people' had absolutely nothing to do with its content, nor any interest either. Its relevance to history is as the first tentative step taken on the subsequent centuries-long path to the current UK Parliamentary democracy.
The 3 clauses that remain in force today reflect that position. Nothing however remains of the right to lawful rebellion by the barons expressed in the original MC as signed, under duress (for which read imminent defeat), by King John in 1215. That right was in any case dubious, certainly not one intended for the average 13C peasant; never mind the 21C UK citizen trying to avoid their dues to society.
Most casual visitors to PLD will see that 99.99999999999999% of the attempts to use this minor article in a 800-yr old document in a modern context have failed. Even the vanishingly small number of 'successes' claimed for the process can probably be put down to bureaucratic indifference and the law of diminishing returns. Hence the numbers signed up continue to fall.
Our future is like that of the passengers on a small pleasure boat sailing quietly above the Niagara Falls, not knowing that the engines are about to fail. James Lovelock.