Posts Tagged ‘proprietary power’
Your “Sovereign Citizen” Government
The origin of sovereign power as far as government is concerned is protection from harm provided by the criminal law and the common law, which together we call “Involuntary Protection (IP)” on this website. The CIVIL statutory code is optional and unnecessary and turns the government as servant into a Master. It functions as a…
Read MoreHOW TO: Understanding Sovereign Power v. Proprietary Power
A metaphor‑first onboarding into the distinction between Sovereign Power and Proprietary Power, grounded in Section 10 of Establishing USPI Through Laws of Property and Section 14.4 of the Subject Index. This page teaches readers how to distinguish sovereign authority from proprietary authority, how each operates, and how to avoid the category errors that collapse the two. Key…
Read MoreDEFINITIONS: Proprietary Power
⭐ Mainstream Authorities Discussing the Government Acting in a Proprietary Mode Below is a structured list of real, third‑party, non‑FTSIG, non‑SEDM, non‑FamGuardian authorities that explicitly discuss the government acting in a proprietary, commercial, or non‑sovereign capacity. These authorities do not support the “taxpayer = agent” theory, but they do discuss the sovereign/proprietary distinction in legitimate…
Read MoreREFERENCE: Governmental/Proprietary Distinction Memorandum of Law
Your PUB/PRI Doctrine Artifact Suite is ready — a single, unified document containing all five integrated litigation artifacts: The closing section ties all five artifacts together as a complete analytical and advocacy toolkit. You can export this directly as a Word document for use in pleadings and strategic advocacy. Let me know if you’d like…
Read MoreHOW TO: How to distinguish “sovereign power” from “proprietary power” in the context of taxation
TABLE OF CONTENTS: “The rich rules over the poor,And the borrower is servant to the lender.”[Prov. 22:7, Bible, NKJV] “The State in such cases exercises no greater right than an individual may exercise over the use of his own property when leased or loaned to others. The conditions upon which the privilege shall be enjoyed being…
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