Hans
Philosopher
- Joined
- May 10, 2007
- Messages
- 9,214
Rob is freeman number 1
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I beg to differ; more like .73, he cannot travel as he would like now can he?
Rob is freeman number 1
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Just a thought, but you might have to offer to pay Rob's 'travelling expenses' as we know he has a little problem getting on planes.
Actually had you been paying attention, you would know the primary legal theory, which you completely missed and which all others pretty mush rest upon, is that a claim of right establishes a lawful excuse to disobey the people in the government and courts. That is the king daddy of the theories.
Then please free to go to the forum in question and state your case there. The person who started that thread did so by positing both a strawman argument and a false dichotomy. I hardly believe it is a sign of insanity to point that out.
In fact I do not think laymen without the necessary training in psychiatry should be even attempting such a diagnosis. I have never called you insane - misguided perhaps, possibly even deliberately dishonest and certainly evasive. But I have not questioned your mental health as you have mine.
So let's leave the ad homs in the playground please.
The solutions I offer are well known - seek reliable legal help when you need it. If you want to understand law, study law. Just like in all those fmotl sites disclaimers in fact!
The problem in the past has been that those sites were always freeman friendly and banned many people with a different viewpoint so the people had no choice but to post links here.But why? When others post a link to the WFS, or DIF, or TPUC or any other forum, for the purpose of having a laugh at the idiocy they see, you never tell them to go post it on the forum from whence it came, do you?
Dont give up on this forum now Rob, its all you have left.Plus I am just doing what everyone else here does... making fun of people who do not think as I do, for that reason. It is a waste of time and energy though, and I do not see the benefits so many here must.
Actually had you been paying attention, you would know the primary legal theory, which you completely missed and which all others pretty mush rest upon, is that a claim of right establishes a lawful excuse to disobey the people in the government and courts. That is the king daddy of the theories.
All the rest flow from it. So is there any evidence that has worked? Well yes there is, it was presented here and discussion of that if I recall correctly was abandoned in favour of continually insulting the freemen, with that passing for 'debunking'.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/marlborough-express/news/4561346/Dome-slasher-to-speak-at-spy-base-protest
Wow look at that! A claim if right defense was successful! In a court no less! In a common law jurisdiction!
That is what you wanted right?

He asked for one case where a freeman theory worked.
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Originally Posted by R v. Sergeant Beregeron
The opinion in the case law is unanimous in saying that it is impossible to give a general definition of lawful excuse. If the law that creates the offence does not assign it a precise meaning, as is the case in prosecutions under section 87 of the Criminal Code, its meaning must be inferred from the purpose of the charge but also having regard to the context and circumstances of the case. It is clear, however, that determining whether an excuse is lawful is not a matter left to the accused to decide. Whether there is a lawful excuse will be determined based on an objective rather than a subjective standard.[emphasis added]
R. v. Sergeant J.J.G.M.L. Bergeron, 2006 CM 41
Wow, look at that a jury in New Zealand found in favour of 3 people who did something popular to an unpopular thing in 2008.Wow look at that! A claim if right defense was successful! In a court no less! In a common law jurisdiction!
Rob, you're not presuming to know what we think are you?That is what you wanted right?
You mean defence, and only where it is allowed.Big fat not guilty using the foundational freeman tenet. COR is lawful excuse.
I don't need to claim it had nothing to do with freemenardism, I can tell you what the defendants - a teacher, a farmer, and a Dominican friar - said:But now you will reject it, maybe claim it had nothing to do with freemanery
Nope. Political/moral protest maybe, but no freeloadery.when it did.
Given the circumstances, that would be a very sensible request. I don't suppose you have anything more cases?Or say 'but that's only one, show us ten more!" or some such other silly stuff.
Excuse?And it works in and out of court to establish lawful excuse.
I would like to leave the ad hominems out of a discussion.
This was not FOTL theory and these were not FOTLers. You know this, therefore the inescapable conclusion is that you are lying again for your own purposes.He asked for one case where a freeman theory worked.
I gave it to him.
Now it will not be accepted with the claim being made that I have to establish MORE.
Standard practice here I see.
And now they will continue claiming that not one shred of evidence has been presented...
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You can easily google those Acts yourself and read the provisions where the defence is available. It is not a general defence against all offences and does not create a mechanism for rejecting the rule of law.AG v Leason said:Section 2 of the Crimes Act 1961 defines claim of right as:
in relation to any act, means a belief that the act is lawful, although that belief may be based on ignorance or mistake of fact or of any matter of law other than the enactment against which the offence is alleged to have been committed.
That defence is limited to those offences in the Crimes Act 1961 and Summary Offences Act 1981 which provide for it.
AG v Leason said:[142] In conclusion I note that aspects which emerge from the decisions in this area have generally regarded with deep suspicion any self-help remedies taken by protesting parties and the courts have specifically allowed those remedies to be resorted to only in very special circumstances.
[143] With this in mind, as I see it the defendants‟ arguments face a final and insurmountable hurdle in that they collide with fundamental principle. The defendants here, although I accept they were motivated by genuine beliefs, are effectively inviting the Court to authorise their general right of self-help in their activities at Waihopai. At one level this might be seen simply as a mask for anarchy. The notion that the Court might exonerate vigilante action is highly problematic. To take this approach as I see it would inevitably lead to unacceptable precedents being set in a range of areas
...
[145] In a free and democratic society governed by the rule of law, the existence of which the citizens of this country are justifiably proud, such vigilante justice actions cannot be countenanced. All citizens who live in this country, including the defendants, enjoy and have the privilege of its benefits on the basis that we all comply with its laws and the rule of law. Legitimate protest is always protected, but it must be carried out within the proper legal framework.
[146] With all these aspects in mind and for the reasons I have outlined above, I conclude that the plaintiff has clearly shown that the defendants have no arguable defence to the liability claim against them here. The essential facts at issue in this case and the questions of law raised by the defendants are clear cut. Those specific defences, for all the reasons outlined above, are not fairly arguable here.
http://www.nzlii.org/cgi-bin/sinodisp/nz/cases/NZHC/2011/1053.html
or the one espoused by Mr. Kovacevic?
While the spheres of the temporal and the spiritual have co-existed throughout our legal history, adherence to transcendent precepts does not relieve a person of temporal obligations. In this regard I observe that Mr. Kovacevic’s Claim-of-Right, which recited verses from the Bible, omitted the most significant scriptural reference upon which Christian political thought has rested over the centuries: “Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s”: Matthew 22:21. The Mercedes Benz, and Mr. Kovacevic’s obligation to return it, belong to the realm of Caesar.
[58] In conclusion, the Claim-of-Right, Commercial Security Agreement, Bonded Promissory Note, Acceptance (and attached documents), Peace Bonds and Bills of Exchange (Documentary Draft) created and signed by Mr. Kovacevic have no legal effect. None of those documents provides him with any legal excuse for failing to return the car or to disclose its whereabouts. Mr. Kovacevic’s debt to MBF remained outstanding, unaffected by that documentation, as does his obligation to comply with the Order.
It doesn't matter what the courts or judiciary think because its "the law" and they have no say over what "the law" is.
Which puts you in a bit of a hole as far as the FOTL reverence for "common law" is concerned, because "what the courts or judiciary say the law is" is precisely what "common law" means.
A Claim of Right is most certainly a valid legal defence - it is not something that allows you to ignore the law. The most common uses are:
a. Defence in an assault case where the defendant thoght he or she was protecting property they had a right to possess;
b. Defence in civil matters dealing with trespass, or real property issues; and
c. Defence in civil matters where a person is alleged to have violated the privacy of another.
Again, Claim of Right does not mean what you think it means.