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adler.txt

adler.txt
Posted Aug 26, 2002

paper on soverign citizenship

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adler.txt

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Find out the Truth of who you really are

ARTICLE #1:

by Scott Eric Rosenstiel
What is Sovereign Citizenship? Sovereign Citizenship is the status
held by our forefathers. George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and
everyone else who won their freedom from the British Empire had this
status. It was the birthright of all Americans, and we were generous in
extending this most important right to foreign-born persons through the
naturalization laws. With this status, our unalienable rights of life,
liberty, and property couldn't be infringed. During the Civil War a method
was discovered by the leading attorneys, financiers, and politicians of the
day to deprive us of this status. Fortunately, we can get it back.
This brings us to the question, "What are we getting back?" What does
it mean to be a Sovereign Citizen?
The word "sovereign" is defined in the 6th edition of Black's Law
Dictionary, published in 1990, as being, A person, body, or state in which
independent authority is vested; a chief ruler with supreme power; a king
or other ruler in a monarchy." Prior to the War for American Independence,
the British king was the sovereign and the American people were his
subjects. The war's outcome changed all this:

The sovereignty has been transferred from one man to the
collective body of the people - and he who before was a "subject of
the king" is now "a citizen of the State."
State v. Manuel, North Carolina, Vol. 20, Page 121 (1838)

Thus, the people became Citizens of their respective states. But more
importantly, for the first and only time in recorded history, the people
were recognized as being the true sovereigns:

It will be sufficient to observe briefly, that the sovereignties
in Europe, and particularly in England, exist on feudal principles.
That system considers the prince as the sovereign, and the people as
his subjects; it regards his person as the object of allegiance... No
such ideas obtain here; at the revolution, the sovereignty devolved on
the people; and they are truly the sovereigns of the country, but they
are sovereigns without subjects... and have none to govern but
themselves...
Chisholm v. Georgia, Dallas' Supreme Court Reports, Vol. 2, Pages
471, 472 (1793)

Each individual, at least so far as respects his unalienable rights is
his own sovereign. These rights weren't given to any government. In fact,
they can't be. Perhaps you can give up all of your rights, if you so
choose, but who has the power to give your rights up for you? In America,
no one can, because we're all equal.
In American this principle of popular sovereign is recognized by all
governments - state and federal. When the states became independent, the
state governments were formed, all of them based on the authority of the
people, and not the will of one man or a small body of men.
The federal government as we know it today was created in 1789 when
the federal constitution went into effect.
The constitution mentioned something previously unknown in American
law: Citizenship of the United States:
The term, citizens of the United States, must be understood to
intend those who were citizens of a state, as such, after the Union
had commenced, and the several states had assumed their sovereignties.
Before this period there was no citizen of the United States...
Manchester v. Boston, Massachusetts Reports, Vol. 16, Page 235
(1819)

Thus a Citizen of a state is, by the federal constitution, made a
Citizen of the United States. This means the following:

A citizen of one state is to be considered as a citizen of every
other state in the union.
Butler v. Farnsworth, Federal Cases, Vol. 4, Page 902 (1821)

A Citizen of any one of the states is considered and treated as being
a Citizen of all of them. The phrase "Citizen of the United States" does
not refer to a separate class of citizenship:

A citizen of any one of the States of the Union, is held to be,
and called a citizen of the United States, although technically and
abstractly there is no such thing. To conceive a citizen of the
United States who is not a citizen of some one of the States, is
totally foreign to the idea, and inconsistent with the proper
construction and common understanding of the expression as used in the
Constitution, which must be deduced from its various other provisions.
Ex parte. - Frank Knowles, California Reports, Vol. 5, Page 302
(1855)

Because of the principles enunciated in the above cases and others
like them, it's correct to say that the American people are Citizens of our
respective states. But we're more than this. We're in a very real sense
Citizens of all the states. We are, in the greatest sense, and proudly so,
Citizens of the several United States.
This brings us to what are considered as being the rights inherent in
Citizenship in America:

When men entered into a State they yielded a part of their
absolute rights, or natural liberty, for political or civil liberty,
which is no other than natural liberty restrained by human laws, so
far as is necessary and expedient for the general advantage of the
public. The rights of enjoying and defending life and liberty, of
acquiring and protecting reputation and property, - and, in general,
of attaining objects suitable to their condition, without injury to
another, are the rights of a citizen; and all men by nature have them.
Douglass, Adm'r., v. Stephens, Delaware Chancery, Vol. 1, Page
470 (1821)

These are the rights inherent in Sovereign Citizenship. So long as we
remained Citizens, they couldn't be taken away from us. So the key was to
take our Citizenship away from us.


To learn more, please call my BBS, The Sovereignty Workshop at (818)
762-1288. The board is FREE, and we give FULL access by the very FIRST call.
We have many files that will help educate you further about your
Constitutionally-protected RIGHTS, and what you can do NOW to preserve them.
This file is a composite of our 1st 5 "INTRO" files series, so when you call
you need not download those files. Hope to see you there!

Here's written information we offer to help you
understand Sovereign Citizenship, and to help you
assert it:

The Sovereignty Intro Program: $5.00 This is a
basic introduction (100 pages approx.) to the
concept of Sovereign Citizenship. This is the
quickest and least expensive way to become familiar
with Sovereign Citizenship.
The Complete Book On Sovereign Citizenship: $60.00
If you have some information on Sovereign
Citizenship, but you want to completely understand
it before you commit to it, then this was written
for you. It contains over 550 pages of material,
and after you digest all of it, you'll know enough
about Sovereign Citizenship to feel comfortable
about declaring it. If you were to go to the law
library and copy just the case law we put in this
primer, it would probably cost you more than $60.00
just for the inserted material.
Constitutional Jurisprudence $9.75 Written by
William Alexander Duer in 1833, this manual is a
book about the Constitution written to be used as a
textbook, and for the layman, so the information is
put forth in easy-to-understand terms. If you want
to understand the Constitution, but you don't know
"legal words," then this is the manual for you!
Commentaries on the Constitution $62.50
Published by Joseph Story of the Supreme Court in
1833, this three-volume set is the most complete
book on the Constitution ever written. This book
also contains large sections on American history,
the history of republics, etc. This is for those
that like to read!
The Establishment of State Government in California
$13.50 Written in 1914 by Cardinal Goodwin, M.A.,
this is the story of how government in California
was established, and contains excerpts from the
convention which wrote our state constitution in
1849, and contains an analysis of it. This book is
very important for those who want to understand the
California Constitution.

To place any order, please send a cheque or money
order, and add $4.00 postage & handling for the first
item, plus $2.00 for each additional item. If you have
any questions, please e-mail kenny.kenadler@loop.com
Send all orders to:

Ken Adler
c/o P.O. Box 950561
Mission Hills, California



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Updated : Wednesday, April 16, 1997 4:26:38 PMCreated: Friday Mar. 01, 1996 04:53:58 PM

© copyright 1995, 1996 Jah Red Productions
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