Debt Collection Credit Repair (FDCPA & FCRA) For HoMF Members
This is an article on Unsecured Consumer Debt disputing including Lawful Proof, Clean Records, and Rights‑Based Remedies for both debt and credit reporting.
Service, Not Sales; Building a Lawful Church-and-Auxiliary Structure Outside Commercial Systems
An educational law-review style primer explaining how a church and integrated auxiliaries can be structured for a life of service outside commercial selling, while maintaining lawful tax posture, proper worker classification, and a clean separation for any public-facing LLC activity.
The Difference Between REAL ID & "Regular" State ID
This article explains the legal and practical differences between REAL ID-compliant cards and standard state IDs, including what each can be used for in daily life, domestic flights, and federal access points. It also analyzes the REAL ID framework’s built-in privacy and data-sharing implications and outlines lawful, minimal-exposure options such as using a passport for flying and declining voluntary TSA facial comparison while staying fully compliant.
Unalieanable & Legal Rights; How They Interact
This article explains how unalienable (natural) rights and legal rights work together: natural rights set moral limits on power, while legal rights provide enforceable rules, procedures, and remedies. It rejects “straw man/secret trust” birth-registration theories as unprovable and shows how rights and obligations actually attach through jurisdiction, social membership, and recognized legal frameworks.
A Brief Explanation & Suggestions for Expecting Parents
This article explains, in plain language, how U.S. law treats personhood and parental rights from birth, why “straw man” claims fail as legal doctrine, and how families instead protect themselves by asserting real constitutional and statutory rights early and consistently. It also shows how sincerely held religious beliefs and disciplined privacy practices can be documented and preserved without turning private family life into a public-interest regulatory target.
Biometrics as Personal Private Property - A Practical Legal Frame
Biometrics, such as face geometry, fingerprints, voiceprints, even gait, function as personal, property-like interests under U.S. law. We connect Zacchini, Jordan, Rosenbach, Patel, McDonald, and Cothron to show how courts protect consent and control (quick cites for Canada, the UK, Ireland, New Zealand, and Australia).
A beginner's Guide to the New Zealand Constitution
This article explains New Zealand’s constitutional system in simple terms, including how Parliament, the executive government, and the courts are organized and how “constitutional rules” are spread across key statutes rather than a single written constitution. It shows where everyday rights protections are found (especially in the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990) and identifies the main lawful remedy channels such as courts and judicial review, information-access tools, and independent oversight bodies, used to enforce those rights in practice.
Legal Mailing for Notices (U.S., Canada, U.K., Ireland, Australia, New Zealand)
This article explains, in practical plain language, why documented mailing matters for notices and how good mailing records reduce “you never told me” disputes to provable facts. It outlines a non-legal-advice, step-by-step procedure for creating proof of posting, tracking, and delivery records in the U.S., Canada, the U.K., Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand using each country’s standard registered/signed mailing options.
A Beginner's Guide to the Australia Constitution
This article explains Australia’s Constitution in plain language: how the Parliament, executive government, and courts fit together, and how the Commonwealth and States share power. It identifies where Australians find constitutional rights protections (including key express protections like jury trial, religion limits on federal power, and “just terms” for property acquisition) and where the legal system provides remedy channels, including High Court constitutional remedies and federal–State conflict rules.
A Beginner's Guide to the Ireland Constitution
This article gives a simple, practical overview of how Ireland is governed under Bunreacht na hÉireann—who makes laws, who carries them out, and who decides disputes. It shows where everyday rights are protected (especially the “Fundamental Rights” provisions) and explains the main legal channels people use to assert and enforce those rights when something goes wrong
A Beginners Guide to the U.K. Constitution
This article explains the U.K. Constitution in plain language, including why it is not a single written document and how Parliament, the Government, and the courts each fit into the system. It identifies where modern rights protections are found (especially the Human Rights Act 1998 and foundational constitutional statutes) and outlines the main remedy channels, including judicial review and human-rights-based court remedies.
A Beginner's Guide to the Canadian Constitution
This article explains Canada’s Constitution in plain language: what it is made of, how it creates Canada’s federal system, and how power is divided between Parliament and the provinces. It also shows where rights protections are found (especially the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms) and where the law provides direct remedy channels through the courts (including Charter remedies and constitutional supremacy).
A Beginner's Guide to the Constitution for the U.S.A.
This article explains the U.S. Constitution in simple terms: what it created, what each Article does, and how it limits government power. It also shows where your rights are written down (especially the Bill of Rights and Amendments 11–14) and where the law provides channels to enforce those rights when government violates them.
Subject-Matter Jurisdiction as a Structural Constraint on Public Power
Subject-matter jurisdiction is the legal boundary that determines whether a court or agency has authority to decide a particular kind of dispute at all. This article explains how that boundary works across six common-law nations and how disciplined record-building can expose and preserve jurisdictional defects for later review and reform.
Personal Jurisdiction as a Procedural Objection
Courts do not get “jurisdiction over the person” because they say so; they get it, in every serious legal system, through specific legal gateways such as service, presence, consent, and statutory reach and they lose it if those gateways are not properly used BUT ONLY IF those objections are raised at the right time and in the right form.
Core Constitutional Standing - Record Creation
A transnational, law review-style essay explaining how the Core Constitutional Standing Record, the HoMF's two foundational affidavits on identity and sincerely held beliefs, function as an orthodox, non-fringe procedural tool to build due process and religious-freedom claims across six common-law countries without pretending to be a magic remedy.
Sovereign Theory Series - UCC 1 Secured Party Creditor
A persistent internet claim holds that the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) “governs everything,” that one can “become a secured party,” file a UCC-1 financing statement, or tender some private instrument to “discharge” public debts and fines. That claim fails as a matter of first principles.
Why “We the People” Are Treated as Subjects - Status & Due Process Must Be Asserted at the Beginning
This article explains why, despite the constitutional mantra of “We the People,” individuals are functionally treated as subjects of the legal system rather than owners of it, and how that presumption is locked in through jurisdictional and procedural defaults. It then shows why a litigant must assert legal status and due process rights at the very onset of any matter be it civil, criminal, or administrative, using established doctrine and case law rather than fringe theories.
Sovereign Theory Series - Exclusive Equity
This article was written by both Robert Michael and A.I. to explain how equity actually works in our courts as non-exclusive.
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