The Importance of Declaring
Most people today do not know how or why they have lost their rights or that they ever lost them at all. People believe they have inalienable rights while never giving thought to what rights actually are and how they can be alienated i.e. having a lien placed on them by our conveyance or transfer of them.
Rights are literally, and factually, property; intangible property. All property, be it corporeal or incorporeal, can be conveyed or transferred voluntarily by law. The world has outlawed slavery which is an involuntary ownership and control of a person. So how is it we are treated like slaves if no one can lawfully own slaves?
Servitude is synonymous with slavery. It can be voluntary or involuntary. It is only involuntary servitude that is against the law today. However, voluntary servitude is perfectly “legal”. No where is this more clear than in the United States of America’s own organic document known worldwide as the
Constitution.
The 13th Amendment reads:
“Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude...shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”
This law does nothing to protect against voluntary servitude. Voluntary servitude, and thus slavery, is accomplished by contract/agreement. Once a contract or agreement is in place, both the obligor/contractor and obligee/contractee have certain rights associated with the agreement. If the contract is not verbal or written (express) but implied, than these certain rights are presumed to exist or not exist but it’s not clear. This is the grey area courts function in to determine where the rights attach or not.
Without a written or oral declaration (or affidavit) to affirm our rights as a matter of fact, they are presumed to have a lien on them which is to say we alienated them under a presumed agreement by conveyance and transfer to a lien holder. While drafting a declaration or affidavit expressing and affirming our rights can be fairly simple, it is best to cover our bases by declaring which rights to our status, property and obligations.
This is why it has taken me a few years to draft a template that’s simple yet covers the main areas of law in which our rights are affected. This declaration of status, property and obligation becomes the written expression needed to give me “capacity” in the law to operate the legal fiction person the State created in my likeness while creating a superior claim in all its property, including rights, in the legal and financial industries. Once I record my declaration in the county land records, a certified copy of it MUST be recognized by all courts and legal industry personnel as valid evidence of my claim.
This is my personal Declaration of Independence.
~Robert Michael