Jurisdictionary
House of Marcus Fellowship members who are looking to represent themselves in court are strongly encouraged to get the Jurisdictionary course, because it gives a simple and practical understanding of how courts actually work. Courts operate through rules of procedure and evidence, and that many cases are won not through online legal theories, but by understanding the rules, using facts, and holding the other side accountable when they fail to follow proper procedure.
We have found Jurisdictionary transformative after studying it in 2010. For anyone serious about protecting themselves, handling a legal matter, and learning how to move through the courts correctly, we recommend taking the course, following it closely, and treating it as the first step before or during any litigation situation.
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For House of Marcus Fellowship members that are looking to litigate something themselves, represent yourself in any matter, we strongly suggest getting the Jurisdictionary course. For $250, or just under $250, it is worth every penny and will really help members understand how courts work through a basic, simple process. This course is put together by an attorney that has been an attorney for over a third of a century, and a very good one, and he put this course together many years ago. I studied it in 2010 and found it to be completely transformative and helpful in being able to actually understand how courts function, rather than listening to people online, and understanding that the people online have no clue on how courts actually operate.
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So courts operate through rules of procedure. You have rules of procedure and rules of evidence. You have civil rules, and you have criminal rules, depending on which court you're in. Legal arguments are made by the stuff that you see people teaching online. Those are legal arguments based on legal theory. We want to use a lot of legal fact and use a defensive theory that can be backed up by fact so we can actually win. And most cases that I've helped with and been involved with have won because the other party fails at the rules. They fail at following the rules, and we're able to poke holes in everything that they do and catch them based on their failure to operate correctly and honorably. I was able to do that, and I am able to do that because of studying Jurisdictionary. There is a lot of information there in teaching people how to actually maneuver through court.
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Now, I'm not an attorney. I can't teach that, and I don't feel I should teach it when there's an excellent course online that does it for you. So if you're looking to represent yourself and handle your legal matter, the first thing I suggest you do is click the link and get Jurisdictionary. Take the course, follow it to the letter, learn, keep going through it. You have a year to learn it all, and honestly, you can learn it all in a few months. And you can learn it as you're going through your case, too, which isn't always the best, in my opinion. It's better to really sink into it and learn it before you actually get into a litigating situation. But please, if you want to really learn how to protect yourself and how to move through these courts and how to hold people accountable, Jurisdictionary is definitely your first step.