Ed Rob Menard's FOTL Claims

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Nicely put, and 100% accurate.
The nail's head has received a blow from the hammer.



Blow:

n.
1. The act or an instance of blowing.
2.a. A blast of air or wind.
2 b. A storm.
3. Informal An act of bragging.
4. Slang Cocaine.


:rolleyes:


Yes, let's all worry bout this allegedly coked-up hammer of yours! [/Freeman]
 
All the retardedness regarding driving/driver, berths, benches, security, etc, are simply not present in French.
I always used to make the same point with the freeman definition of the word "Understand" meaning to "stand under" someones authority.
Any other language and it isn't relevant (not that it's actually relevant in English either for that matter)
 
I have found an old post of Menards on how he learned to read Statutory acts
http://forum.davidicke.com/showpost.php?p=652815&postcount=3
When I first started my journey, I tried to deconstruct an Act and was mystified. Some things just did not fit. I then 'trained my brain' using LSAT's. The first one I did, I passed with about a 60%. About three weeks later, having spent at least two hours a day on them I tested myself again and was scoring above 95%, and did perfectly on a couple.

I then went back to the Act I was deconstructing after reading up and studying Maxims of Law.

I then clearly saw what and how they were doing what they do. You can too.


Rob

PS- Jesus Christ was a Freeman-on-the-Land. That is why he appeared to walk on water, to those still 'in the boat'.

if he's so good at LSATS heres one for him to try
A man offers DVDs for sale on the internet and alludes that the information contained can free them from all statutory legislation.

What can we most glean from this statement
1. The man is honest
2. The information is real and the man has himself used it to verify its authenticity.
3.The man is misleading people.

Take your time.
 
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Yes, let's all worry bout this allegedly coked-up hammer of yours! [/Freeman]

:D The FOTL-Waffle is strong in you my young Robiwan. :D

ETA: I like this game.
As a tribute to Menard and JackieG I shall now deconstruct "The Owl and the Pussycat" by Edward Lear:

The Owl and the Pussy-cat went to sea
In a beautiful pea green boat,
They took some honey, and plenty of money,
Wrapped up in a five pound note.
The Owl looked up to the stars above,
And sang to a small guitar,
'O lovely Pussy! O Pussy my love,
What a beautiful Pussy you are,
You are,
You are!
What a beautiful Pussy you are!'

owl
noun
1. any of numerous, chiefly nocturnal birds of prey, of the order Strigiformes, having a broad head with large, forward-directed eyes that are usually surrounded by disks of modified feathers: many populations are diminishing owing to loss of habitat.
2. one of a breed of domestic pigeons having an owllike appearance.
3. night owl.
4. a person of owllike solemnity or appearance

pussycat
noun
1. an informal or child's name for a cat
2. informal ( Brit ) an endearing or gentle person

sea
noun
1. the salt waters that cover the greater part of the earth's surface.
2. a division of these waters, of considerable extent, more or less definitely marked off by land boundaries: the North Sea.
3. one of the seven seas; ocean.
4. a large lake or landlocked body of water.
5. the degree or amount of turbulence of the ocean or other body of water, as caused by the wind.

beau·ti·ful
adjective
1. having beauty; having qualities that give great pleasure or satisfaction to see, hear, think about, etc.; delighting the senses or mind: a beautiful dress; a beautiful speech.
2. excellent of its kind: a beautiful putt on the seventh hole; The chef served us a beautiful roast of beef.
3. wonderful; very pleasing or satisfying.

pea green
noun
a medium or yellowish green.

boat
noun
1. a vessel for transport by water, constructed to provide buoyancy by excluding water and shaped to give stability and permit propulsion.
2. a small ship, generally for specialized use: a fishing boat.
3. a small vessel carried for use by a large one, as a lifeboat: They lowered the boats for evacuation.
4. a ship.
5. a vessel of any size built for navigation on a river or other inland body of water.

hon·ey noun, plural hon·eys, adjective, verb, hon·eyed or hon·ied, hon·ey·ing.
noun
1. a sweet, viscid fluid produced by bees from the nectar collected from flowers, and stored in nests or hives as food.
2. this substance as used in cooking or as a spread or sweetener.
3. the nectar of flowers.
4. any of various similarly sweet, viscid products produced by insects or in other ways.
5. something sweet, delicious, or delightful: the honey of flattery.

mon·ey  noun, plural mon·eys, mon·ies, adjective
noun
1. any circulating medium of exchange, including coins, paper money, and demand deposits.
2. paper money.
3. gold, silver, or other metal in pieces of convenient form stamped by public authority and issued as a medium of exchange and measure of value.
4. any article or substance used as a medium of exchange, measure of wealth, or means of payment, as checks on demand deposit or cowrie.
5. a particular form or denomination of currency.

pound
noun, plural pounds, ( collectively ) pound.
1. a unit of weight and of mass, varying in different periods and countries.
2. a. (in English-speaking countries) an avoirdupois unit of weight equal to 7000 grains, divided into 16 ounces (0.453 kg), used for ordinary commerce. Abbreviation: lb., lb. av.
b. a troy unit of weight, in the U.S. and formerly in Britain, equal to 5760 grains, divided into 12 ounces (0.373 kg), used for gold, silver, and other precious metals. Abbreviation: lb. t.
c. (in the U.S.) an apothecaries' unit of weight equal to 5760 grains, divided into 12 ounces (0.373 kg). Abbreviation: lb. ap.
3. Also called pound sterling. a paper money, nickel-brass coin, and monetary unit of the United Kingdom formerly equal to 20 shillings or 240 pence: equal to 100 new pence after decimalization in Feb. 1971. Abbreviation: L; Symbol: £
4. Also called pound Scots. a former Scottish money of account, originally equal to the pound sterling but equal to only a twelfth of the pound sterling at the union of the crowns of England and Scotland in 1603.
5. any of the monetary units of various countries, as Cyprus, Egypt, Ireland, Lebanon, Sudan, Syria, and of certain Commonwealth of Nations countries.

The person of owllike solemnity and the endearing person went to the ocean to measure the amount of wind turbulence,
In a satisfyingly yellowish green lifeboat,
They took some delightful,
and plenty of gold, silver, or other metal in pieces of convenient form stamped by public authority and issued as a medium of exchange and measure of value,
Wrapped up in a troy unit of weight, in the U.S. and formerly in Britain, equal to 5760 grains, divided into 12 ounces (0.373 kg), used for gold, silver, and other precious metals.

...I can see me winning the 2012 JackieG Award for Illiteracy!

il·lit·er·a·cy
noun, plural -cies for 3.
1. a lack of ability to read and write.
2. the state of being illiterate; lack of any or enough education.
3. a mistake in writing or speaking, felt to be characteristic of an illiterate or semiliterate person: a letter that was full of illiteracies.
 
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So two hours a day for 3 weeks and he is a candidate for Harvard
http://www.lsatprepcourse.com/law.htm

He certainly scores a BA Honours in BS

Isn’t it curious how so many of Bobby’s superlative achievements occur when there’s no one around who can back up his story.

Like the time he says he backed down a cop in Vancouver.

Like the rows and rows of crops he planted in freeman valley all by himself.

The countless ticket agents, Wall Mart clerks, waitress and cooks who have been stunned by his verbal brilliance.

These self packaged stories of greatness are consistent with the narcissistic personality.
 
Well, my understanding is that there is a reading comprehension component of the LSAT. I guess they don't cover concepts like "birth certificate" or "security of person"

It wouldn't matter. Rob would simply not consent to those questions.
 
Isn’t it curious how so many of Bobby’s superlative achievements occur when there’s no one around who can back up his story.

Like the time he says he backed down a cop in Vancouver.

Like the rows and rows of crops he planted in freeman valley all by himself.

The countless ticket agents, Wall Mart clerks, waitress and cooks who have been stunned by his verbal brilliance.

These self packaged stories of greatness are consistent with the narcissistic personality.

Isn't it also curious that no one ever backs him up anymore?
He boasts all these e-mails from hundreds of well wishers yet not one has the wherewithal to sign up here and back their hero.
Hell he's even closing down WFS website because theres only 10 members.

The guy is just a forum troll now, he may have made a few quid with his DVDs but I would wager the payday from Lance Thatcher was the pinnacle of his success.
 
Isn't it also curious that no one ever backs him up anymore?
He boasts all these e-mails from hundreds of well wishers yet not one has the wherewithal to sign up here and back their hero.
Hell he's even closing down WFS website because theres only 10 members.
Guess the BS got too obvious even for freemen.
The guy is just a forum troll now, he may have made a few quid with his DVDs but I would wager the payday from Lance Thatcher was the pinnacle of his success.
That is the downside of picking marks with next to no money and specifically looking for ways to avoid parting with them. ;)
 
The guy is just a forum troll now, he may have made a few quid with his DVDs but I would wager the payday from Lance Thatcher was the pinnacle of his success.

Far less now that I've started selling pirated copies for half price. ;)
 
Far less now that I've started selling pirated copies for half price. ;)

AUS$4.00 on Ebay.

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And for today's "Nutjobs Call Menard A Nutjob" quote I give you:

Robert Menard. (thinkfreeadmin@gmail.com) Is a Canadian that became involved in commercial law over a child custody action. The funny thing is, most of the stuff (garbage) he learned came from America, and now it came back here with him looking like it is his work. Said to have learned from Winston Shrout and Jordan Maxwell. Oh No! Not these guys!?! That is where his straw man came from. Also puts a hyphen and colon in his name, so he must have bumped into that nut David-Wynn: Miller. Round and round the confusion goes, where it stops nobody knows.*

Patriotards and Others that make Little or No Sense
 
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AUS$4.00 on Ebay.

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And for today's "Nutjobs Call Menard A Nutjob" quote I give you:



Patriotards and Others that make Little or No Sense

menard has at least one supporter there:

KY_MOLONLABE
Freshman
*
Posts: 7

MOLON LABE
Gender: gender.Male
Commonwealth Of Kentucky


Re: Hypocritical & Stupid Patriots
Reply #4 - May 26th, 2011 at 11:57pm Alert Moderator about this Post.
Robert Menard is no hypocrite and his stuff is not garbage. Some other people on the list deserve much more credit too...

George Gordon (who does mention nationality, Hebrew nationality), Larry Becraft (even though he is an attorney), Winston Shrout (eat the meat and throw away the bones), Devy Kidd & "newswithviews.com" are A+.

Check out some fun active people in Canada with Rob.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XmXIpSxoALw


"Lets kick this nazi nwo ◊◊◊◊ in the balls."

Robert Menard
 
Wow, this morning I saw an ad in a dutch newspaper that baffled me until I remembered this thread and the whole fotl oddness.
Some people 'claiming their name', it pointed to a website www.ikclaimmijnnaam.nl (in dutch) which is basically a FOTL thing, clearly translated to go with the whole common law thing.
Even though that has NEVER been a part of dutch jurisdiction ever and the fact that our judicial system works completely different (our laws are made by parliament and judges cannot amend them, if things clash the law goes back to parliament and they can then opt to alter the law). And people fall for that stuff and pay the guys to run ads.
Sad.
 
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