I'm not sure how much research you did...
I'll refer you to my earlier post asking for evidence from ANY court of record showing his methods EVER being used successfully.
I'm not sure how much research you did...
This ^^^, plus your insistence he is making an argument, and your earlier conflation with "sovereign individuals" leads me to believe your research wasn't very deep, if there was any research at all.I'll refer you to my earlier post asking for evidence from ANY court of record showing his methods EVER being used successfully.
This ^^^, plus your insistence he is making an argument, and your earlier conflation with "sovereign individuals" leads me to believe your research wasn't very deep, if there was any research at all.
I don't see how there could be. If you had even a basic understanding of what Stevens claims (forget results, just his claims) you wouldn't be posting this stuff.
That sounds a lot like Freeman on the land, where you make comical nautical terms in the vague hope of trolling the judge into just telling you to get lost.I wouldn't bother with any "sovereign individual" arguments. The mistake a lot of people seem to make when dealing with the courts is that they try to form an argument in the first place. As soon as you take a position, then you have to defend it. THEY are the ones making a claim against YOU, let them prove that the claim is valid. Keep the burden of proof on them (i.e. asking for evidence that they have jurisdiction).
Why would a lawyer want to take this approach? Their livelihood depends on the legitimacy of the court system.
As far as some success stories, http://marcstevens.net/successes
I don't suppose anyone will ever hear a judge say "Okay, you figured us out. Excellent work. Case dismissed!" In most successful cases it seems the courts will dismiss the claim without stating a reason or maybe stating a vague reason (or on some other kind of technicality). Just like disingenuous people in every day life who won't ever directly own up to being in the wrong.
Obviously there is a risk involved, which is to be expected whenever dealing with delusional people in robes who have people with guns that do what they say.
Now if you pop out a couple kids, I'm assuming once they become teenagers in order to continue residing in your community they're going to have to abide by the shared responsibilities & rules, correct? I mean, if one of your household's responsibilities is to help keep the roads clear, your son is going to have to help out with that when he gets older, right?
What happens if he doesn't?
Or what happens if he's an aggressive little shit, and doesn't agree with the NAP? Then what? He has to go live elsewhere?
He didn't signup to be born to you, or in that community, so how / why can anyone force him to help clear the roads?
Nobody can make him do anything he doesn't want to.
The rules need to be natural, people need an incentive to do something that benefits everyone else. Clearing the roads if you have the ability helps both you and the community, just because it helps the community isn't a reason not to clear / maintain the road for yourself.
"Because we said so" is not a valid reason to do something.
And you really believe this would be a good way forward for humanity, and help launch us into an era of enlightenment and freedom that doesn't yet exist?
To my point, how is the above any different whatsoever from what we have today? How is the above not going to morph into what we already have? The only difference is, we came late to the game. The wars have already been fought over the past several thousands of years, the borders have been drawn, the massive communities comprising of 10s of millions are already in place.
Children aren't property of their parents. They are human beings and make no more mistakes than an adult does.
If I understand you correctly your presumption is that the government owns all the land that it governs?
From a legal standpoint the state does own all of the land that it governs. That's why if you don't pay your property taxes (ie your permanent rental rebill on the land you're using) they take the land back because you can never actually own land. That's also how they are able to justify eminent domain land seizures, zoning ordinances etc. The only way to ACTUALLY own land is to obtain allodial title and as far I know that isn't possible in the US.
You can argue against the morality of it all you want, but it doesn't matter. What's legal is what matters, and what's legal is decided by those with the coercive force of the state.
You've already demonstrated that you don't even understand the basics of what he's talking about.Marc Stevens is a fraud. He can claim anything he wants, and he makes a good living tricking some people with those claims, but when it comes time to show some actual results he can't and neither can his supporters. As someone who despises our court systems with every fiber of my being, I wish like hell it wasn't the case, but it is.
Marc Stevens doesn't say anything will work in a court of law. He doesn't make claims like that.I can claim I'm the President of the Moon, but people would be foolish to believe it. Just like they're foolish to believe anything Marc Stevens says will work in a court of law.
You were linked to it earlier. Since it's available for anyone to find or see online, you should have found it when you did your "research" that I think we both know, you never really did.If anyone would like to prove otherwise, just link to some court records where anything he's tried or advised people to try has actually worked.
It is explicitly not Freemen on the Land, and Stevens regularly corrects people who call up his radio show wanting to use those tactics in court.That sounds a lot like Freeman on the land, where you make comical nautical terms in the vague hope of trolling the judge into just telling you to get lost.
Freeman on the land - RationalWiki
Nothing personal, but saying that children make no more mistakes than adults might be the dumbest non-Pewep thing I've read on here in quite some time.
This may be objectively true, but if you're talking to someone who is affected by Dunning-Kruger as the person you're discussing with is, then the point is completely lost on them.A typical person gets dumber as they get older. They develop bad habits over the years and acquire an impressive portfolio of garbage in the brain.
Proof?From a legal standpoint the state does own all of the land that it governs.
If you don't pay the mafia, they break your legs. So?That's why if you don't pay your property taxes (ie your permanent rental rebill on the land you're using) they take the land back because you can never actually own land.
That's how the mafia can give your property to someone else and can stop you from starting any business you want.That's also how they are able to justify eminent domain land seizures, zoning ordinances etc.
This is also not completely true. What's legal is irrelevant. Perception is what matters. Perception is derived from the belief in the legitimacy in the state.What's legal is what matters, and what's legal is decided by those with the coercive force of the state.
This may be objectively true, but if you're talking to someone who is affected by Dunning-Kruger as the person you're discussing with is, then the point is completely lost on them.
And as I've said, there is a guy on WF Stevens helped out. I know, because I referred him to Stevens.
Now you're just engaging in ad hom and slander. And that's lame. I mean, if you don't know what you're talking about, be a big man and own it.
Marc Stevens doesn't say anything will work in a court of law. He doesn't make claims like that.
What Stevens proposes doing is very simple. Get the judge to explain what they are trying to do. And when it inevitably isn't supported by facts or contradicts the mission of the court, the judge will frequently (but not always) dismiss the case.
You were linked to it earlier. Since it's available for anyone to find or see online, you should have found it when you did your "research" that I think we both know, you never really did.
That's not ad hominem. Please do not use terms you do not understand.I would like you to extend the same courtesy to me that I've extended to you so please quit with the ad-hominem attacks.
LOL. I don't think I am the one with a credibility issue in this thread.If you say so.
You claimed he was a fraud. Can you tell us one specific instance where he engaged in fraud? Or where something he has said was fraudulent (dishonest)?Because he knows it doesn't work, and claiming it does and/or charging money for said advice could land him in prison. He might be quack, but he's not a dummy.
Why would the claims be unverifiable? He posts scans of court documents, and recordings of conversations with lawyers and agents.No, I was linked to HIS personal blog, where he makes unverifiable claims.
That's an appeal. The case was already lost.the only case that we can publicly verify he lost and cost his buddy $6k for filing a frivolous claim.
If your definition of verified is government documentation, then you're right, it's probably undocumented except a high frequency of cases he works on being dismissed.So like I said, the only positive results we see are unverifiable and posted on his blog which he uses to monetize his sophistry.