Thursday, September 18, 2014

Constitution Day: Not Our Constitution


There is a HUGE misconception these days. This misconception is that somehow or other, the Constitution for the People of the United States belongs to the public-at-large when it does not. The compact we know as the U.S. Constitution is a debt instrument signed by 39 men to pioneer what we know today to be the United States. If we know anything about contract law, we know that only those who sign a document are those whom are a party to the compact…and nobody else.

The U.S. constitution ought to be understood as a demonstration of what can be. Most of us do not understand contracts, thus we do not understand law. This is a pity. We would be much better served as a society if we better understood the fundamentals of a contract as this would lay to rest many grievances before claims are filed and alleviate back log in the Courts.

There is a constitution for every Statehood and there are signatory members for every State as every constitution must have signature parties to form and empower it. The goal for everyone with an interest in political freedom and independence is to become a signature member of a State because, without it, we remain chattel on the pastures we tread on.

So, to recap, "We the People" refers to those who signed the document and their posterity being that all nouns are capitalized into pronouns. Everyone else, a citizen, merely play a role as a utility for "the system" as they neglect to self-govern. In order to advance one's political status, we are required to form or expand a State and this is what the Right of Self-Determination is all about. Think of it as a co-operative, like a credit union, where all members are shareholders, some are managing partners, and all members are obligated to participate.

Business Model of a Cooperative

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