Requirement for Consent
simultaneously in the records of the court. This tactic is employed in the following MANDATORY attachment to all 1 pleadings filed in any federal court against any government or government actor: 2 Federal Pleading/Motion/Petition Attachment , Litigation Tool #01.002 http://sedm.org/Litigation/LitIndex.htm The only hope that anyone can have of ever winning against any enemy is to invoke the same weapons in your defense that 3 they employ in their offense, and to insist that you have the right to do so under the constitutional requirement for equal 4 protection and equal treatment as described in: 5
Requirement for Equal Protection and Equal Treatment , Form #05.033 http://sedm.org/Forms/FormIndex.htm
6.2 The three methods for exercising our Constitutional right to contract 6
Within the legal field, there are three distinct ways that we exercise our right to contract and thereby surrender a portion of 7 our private rights or become the target of enforcement actions by the government: 8
1. Contract between two private parties: see Article 1, Section 10 of the Constitution. We can sign a contract or consent 9 to a contract by our behavior, and thereby forfeit our rights in pursuit of the benefits or special privileges that result 10 from availing ourself of the contract. 11 2. Government “codes” or “statutes” which are not enacted positive law and which therefore are a voluntary private 12 contract between you and the state. An example is marriage licenses and the family law codes in most states which 13 implement them are in fact entirely voluntary. If you don’t volunteer or consent to get a marriage license, then you 14 aren’t obligated to comply with the family code in most states, and especially those that do not recognize “common law 15 marriage”. 16 3. Enacted positive law. Law which the people directly or indirectly consented to because their elected representatives 17 “enacted” it into positive law. 18 The above list is in order of priority. The first two are based on our private right to contract. The last one is based on our 19 ability to contract collectively as a group called a “state” with the public servants who will enforce and protect our rights 20 using the law/contract. The parties to the contract are our representatives and the public servants who will enforce the 21 contract they enact called a “Public law”. In a society such as we have which is populated with sovereigns, our private 22 power to contract supersedes enacted positive law and in some cases is also used as a substitute for positive law in cases 23 where positive law cannot be enacted. No government, as we pointed out earlier in section 9.10.1, has the power to 24 interfere with our private right to contract. Likewise, no state has the ability to interfere with the right of the federal 25 government to contract with private people in the states to provide “social services” such as Medicare, Social Security, etc. 26 Below is a tabular summary that graphically depicts who the parties are to each of the above three types of contracts and 27 what form the contract takes in each case. The purpose of each of the tree types of contract is to protect and defend the 28 rights of the parties: 29
Table 4: The three methods for exercising our right to contract 30
# Type of contract
Form of contract
Enforcer of contract
PARTIES TO THE CONTRACT
Two consenting parties
The government and individually consenting parties
The “state” and every person individually
1 Contract
Private, notarized, recorded contract
Parties to contract and their counsel
X
between two private parties
2 Government “code” that is
Government application for benefits
IRS, Social Security Administration
X
not positive law
3 Enacted positive Positive laws Attorney
X
Requirement for Consent
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Copyright Sovereignty Education and Defense Ministry, http://sedm.org Form 05.003, Rev. 7-23-2013
EXHIBIT:________
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