A Freemans Guide

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Freeman on the land - RationalWiki

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http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Freeman_on_the_land

Freeman on the land From RationalWiki Freeman on the land, also known as FMOTL, FOTL, Footle or simply freeman, is a form of pseudolegal woo in various English-speaking countries. Freemen believe they can opt out of being governed, and that what normal people understand to be "laws" are merely a form of "contract" that applies only if people consent to it.[1] Freemen hold that we are all subject to a massive international legal conspiracy perpetrated for the profit of the elites, but you can hack the system if you just use the right form of words.[2] They believe only in their version of natural law, which they call "common law." In practical terms, they believe this means they do not have to pay taxes, debts, mortgages, etc. because we were all deceived and if you say the right form of words this fact will be accepted. Freemen believe they can declare themselves independent of government jurisdiction using the concept of "lawful rebellion": that all statute law is contractual and therefore only applicable if an individual consents to it. They assert that what everyone else regards as "the law" doesn't apply to them as they have not consented to a contract with the state,[3] even going so far as to claim they have a lawful right to refuse arrest if they do not consent. They insist that the government is a corporation, are obsessed with maritime law, and call themselves things like "John of the family Smith." Essentially, they're hilarious and somewhat less threatening sovereign citizens. No freeman arguments have ever succeeded in court; some have even explicitly ruled that the term "freeman on the land" has no legal significance when the argument is raised.[4] Actually using the arguments gets people into worse trouble, including fines, asset seizures, contempt convictions and criminal records. This won't stop freemen from claiming the arguments work.

It's not even a good idea

Pseudolaw

I have a theory, which is mine Brian Gerrish Crime woo David Wynn Miller John Harris Militia movement Paul Randle-Jolliffe Peter Hendrickson Provisional Imperial Government Pseudolaw Robert Beale Sovereign citizen States' rights Tom Cryer v - t - e (http://rationalwiki.org /w/index.php?title=Template:Pseudolaw& action=edit)

Contents 1 History 2 How it's marketed 3 How it works (or not) 3.1 Common law 3.2 Legal person or strawman 3.2.1 Notice of understanding and intent and claim of right 3.2.2 Fee schedule 3.2.3 Lawful rebellion and the Magna Carta

5/30/2012 1:03 AM


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