'm not sure he's used overtly Freeloader arguments in his adventures through the courts alleging fraud, but his supporters (one of whom gave his name to the court as King Charles III) certainly do.
He's associated with Action4Justice, who have featured here previously, if memory serves, and as mentioned in the court case, Rapid Response. His YT channel features guest appearances from Tobe Hayden.
This video has a jovial bailiff mocking the wet signature business.
AnOwlCalledSage wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 10:12 amAndrew Stansfield started telling everyone who would listen that he had discovered the whole banking system was corrupt, and now appears as the darling "expert" on many of the unhinged FotLer podcasts. I think he even once appeared in a video involving Neelu.
Think it's Anthony Stansfield. O'Bonkers has done an interview with him that features heavily in his TGBMS trash piece.
rosy wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 5:54 pm
I'm not sure he's used overtly Freeloader arguments in his adventures through the courts alleging fraud, but his supporters (one of whom gave his name to the court as King Charles III) certainly do.
.... It just so happened that on this occasion the underlying complaint was true. Hence, Andrew Anthony Stansfield started telling everyone who would listen that he had discovered the whole banking system was corrupt, and now appears as the darling "expert" on many of the unhinged FotLer podcasts. I think he even once appeared in a video involving Neelu.
Edit: Correcting name error
Oh Neelu loves Anthony Stansfield. She has posted loads of videos with and about him. She's also been hanging around the Trevor Mealham case too. I'm sure her contribution was helpful.
“Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.'”
my husband also believed that nanoparticles in the Covid-19 vaccine would be used to integrate us with the Internet of Things (if the vaccine didn’t kill us from myocarditis first); that digital ID would limit our travel and affect financial independence; that debt was a social construct and could be avoided using “maritime law”; and that only cryptocurrency could save us.
The next day, I woke to find the car being clamped for an “unlawful” fine that Arlo had challenged. One of many, as it turned out. The dog needed walking and I needed the car to get to the park. I was fuming. I stormed out to meet the bailiff without shoes on my feet and a face like thunder.
“This is my husband, right?” He read out the name on the paperwork, as if it needed confirming.
I stumbled attempting to explain Arlo’s rationale for nonpayment (something to do with strawmen and maritime law), before stabbing my pin number into the bailiff’s card machine and parting with £600. He gave me a tight smile, intended to show empathy. “Yup. I hear it more and more, that conspiracy talk.”
It was summer and Arlo had been hanging out at a London wellness space founded by some conspiracy theorists, where he heard about a company called Matrix Freedom. Without my knowledge, Arlo paid them £8,000 to write off his loans, credit card and mortgage debt using “maritime law” and access webinars about the process.
Don't know if anyone's seen this but the Spin vs Truth website says that a lady in Ireland who stirred up stuff online when the Hampstead Hoax was going on has been served papers from the UK Attorney General. https://spinvtruth.wordpress.com/2024/1 ... tuous-two/
CrankyBoomer wrote: ↑Wed Nov 20, 2024 2:24 pm
Don't know if anyone's seen this but the Spin vs Truth website says that a lady in Ireland who stirred up stuff online when the Hampstead Hoax was going on has been served papers from the UK Attorney General. https://spinvtruth.wordpress.com/2024/1 ... tuous-two/
If this is true it's been a long time coming. There were certainly rumours that a case was being prepared against her 4 years ago for the Hampstead case but as a result of her fleeing the country, it did fall into the out of jurisdiction quagmire.
For those new to Angela Power-Disney World here's a handy video from El Coyote.
TL;DR She's barking mad.
Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity - Hanlon's Razor
hucknallred wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2024 6:55 am
The guy called Too Tall on there dishes out some staggeringly bad advice, but presents it in a way that the freeloaders lap up as legal advice.
Not many come back to say it worked.
I love this:
Too Tall 1 September: For Sale land Rover Discovery. Full 12 Month MOT....... Bank transfer only for security and peace of mind.
Andrew Clifford: I'll give you a promissory note for it.
Too Tall: Andrew Clifford: Technically it would work but I would have to pressure the bank to credit my account......
Robert Menard was, back in his glory days, Canada's most influential Freeman. He essentially invented the movement here and a lot of your British grifters copied his scams. His biggest scam, the one he promoted the most frequently, was selling suckers the dream that they could write up promissory notes and use them instead of paying cash. He even tried it himself at a restaurant here in Vancouver and ended up arrested. Although he was totally discredited years ago and is barely remembered now he was still trying to flog his promissory note scam to a British audience last year, about a quarter century after he first tried it.
While he shifted positions and schemes in response to changing times he had one fixed, firm position during his entire sovereign career. Cash only, he refused to accept the promissory notes he flogged.
"Yes Burnaby49, I do in fact believe all process servers are peace officers. I've good reason to believe so." Robert Menard in his May 28, 2015 video "Process Servers".
Iain Clifford Stamp is back to his old nonsense despite his Civil Restraint Order, this time threatening Dan Neidle at Tax Policy Associates.
I Am the Occupant of the Office of:
[IAIN CLIFFORD STAMP], Estate.
As General Executor
Without Address
I Am Who I Am
I Am the Representative of lain Clifford
Twenty Sixth Day of November Twenty Twenty Four
Just catching up on last night's Police Interceptors on C5 (S23 E14), and a man suspected of driving whilst unfit through drink or drugs demanded an upfront payment of £88 before he would agree to the drugs wipe. The police eventually arrested him, while his friends started shouting about "reasonable articulable suspicion". He then claimed he'd been kidnapped and the price had risen to £1008. Later at court he was convicted of failure to provide, and fined £650 and banned for three years. Victory!
I have been watching a lot of sovcit, etc. videos, of late; and they often demand to know what the "reasonable articulable suspicion" of a crime caused their stops. Gee -- after the first hundred thousand or so times where those majik wurds failed miserably, you'd think that maybe... just maybe ... perhaps... the majik wurds DON'T WORK?
"We've been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of the culture." -- Pastor Ray Mummert, Dover, PA, during an attempt to introduce creationism -- er, "intelligent design", into the Dover Public Schools
aesmith wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2024 2:18 pm
Spotted on one of the "fit your own meter and get free electricity" groups ..
"Myself and one of the engineers were mislead and set up by under cover BBC operatives who were pretending to be members of this group.
Apparently the BBC are airing a programme (more brain washing material) on 16th Dec regarding the group."
The English major in me is compelled to point out that the unintentional ambiguity in the wording of their comment is amusing. Whose brainwashing material are they talking about? Their own or the BBC's?
It's always fun to see self-owns coming from the self-important humorless sods on the wrong side of the Dunning-Krueger effect.
JohnPCapitalist wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2024 2:49 pm
Whose brainwashing material are they talking about? Their own or the BBC's?
A quick check of the schedules means that this could only be a One Show segment (so very unlikely for such a massive "exposé) as the only other possible programme would be "Caught Red Handed", which finishes on the 13th, and doesn't have any pre-publicity blurb on the subject.
Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity - Hanlon's Razor
JohnPCapitalist wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2024 2:49 pm
Whose brainwashing material are they talking about? Their own or the BBC's?
A quick check of the schedules means that this could only be a One Show segment (so very unlikely for such a massive "exposé) as the only other possible programme would be "Caught Red Handed", which finishes on the 13th, and doesn't have any pre-publicity blurb on the subject.
Could be Panorama which is covering Telegram in general on the 16th. With "Free Energy Nationwide" aka Kayles and Gerry, making a cameo appearance as an example of the sort of whackos making use of it.
This programme will be available shortly after broadcast
Telegram and the Russian Billionaire
Panorama
"Telegram is the fifth most downloaded app on the planet, with almost a billion users worldwide. More than six million people in the UK have it on their phones, but the social media platform is also popular with criminals and extremists. Telegram has been called a one-stop shop for crime and now its billionaire owner is under investigation by French police. They have accused Pavel Durov of complicity in drug dealing, fraud and the sharing of child sexual abuse images on Telegram. Reporter Bronagh Munro investigates how the app can spread harmful and dangerous content."