On the question of whether inventing pseudolaw is hard, we may in Canada have a very interesting opportunity to examine that hypothesis in a tangible way.
Our federal government has announced it will implement the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Persons [UNDRIP]. Now, if you read UNDRIP, it contains some general statements about aboriginal self government. For some time what are legally defined as "Indian Bands" instead have been referring to themselves as "First Nations", and this language has been broadly adopted in public and government circles. There is also increasing reference to Aboriginal or Indigenous Law as a kind of separate domain of law, or as its own distinct legal apparatus.
When you combine all that, there is a foundation off of which to build an entirely new pseudolaw, separate from any other that has existed to date. In a nutshell, UNDRIP recognizes we aboriginal populations aren't Canadians and can control ourselves, you already recognize us as Nations, and we have a law of our own. And that's why I don't need a driver's licence.
The intriguing thing is that so far in Canada, aboriginal-based pseudolaw schemes have been nothing more than the old Freeman/Sovereign Citizen Pseudolaw Memeplex, with an aboriginal icing on the cake. You still encounter the Strawman, silence means consent rules, etc.
Here's an example, the Squamish Sovereign Government (
http://sovsqugov.org). Burnaby49 - looks like they have a new website, are they back in action? If you poke around you'll see the same old familiar concepts, there's a defacto government, copyright in name motifs, the usual stuff.
Now, it doesn't have to be that way ... or so that's my hypothesis. It ought to be possible to actually use historical aboriginal-related resources to build a new and novel pseudolaw scheme which provides advantages to its practitioners. That would take more work, yes, but seems plausible to me.
There would be the distinct advantage of not having to face Meads v Meads.
But will that happen? My suspicion is it won't, and instead we'll see more aboriginal grounded pseudolaw schemes which simply take the Pseudolaw Memeplex, and swap in that UNDRIP is what authorizes rejection or reduction of Canadian government authority.
Donald