Requirement for Consent

14. The Moral Limits of Consent as a Defense in the Criminal Law , Dennis J. Baker, King's College London, School of 1 Law 2 http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1973331 3 15. Consenting Under Stress , Hila Keren, Hebrew University of Jerusalem 4 http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2012013 5 16. The Social Foundations of Law , Martha Albertson Fineman 6 http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2132230 7

9.3 Domicile: You aren’t subject to civil law without your explicit voluntary consent 8

The purpose of establishing government is solely to provide “protection”. Those who wish to be protected by a specific 9 government under the civil law must expressly consent to be protected by choosing a domicile within the civil jurisdiction 10 of that specific government. 11 1. Those who have made such a choice and thereby become “customers” of the protection afforded by government are 12 called by any of the following names under the civil laws of the jurisdiction they have nominated to protect them: 13 1.1. “citizens”, if they were born somewhere within the country which the jurisdiction is a part. 14 1.2. “residents” (aliens) if they were born within the country in which the jurisdiction is a part 15 1.3. "inhabitants", which encompasses both "citizens", and "residents" but excludes foreigners 16 1.4. "persons". 17 1.5. "individuals". 18 2. Those who have not become “customers” or “prot ected persons” of a specific government are called by any of the 19 following names within the civil laws of the jurisdiction they have refused to nominate as their protector and may NOT 20 be called by any of the names in item 1 above: 21 2.1. “nonresidents” 22 2.2. “transient foreigners” 23 2.3. "stateless persons" 24 2.4. “in transitu” 25 2.5. “transient” 26 2.6. “sojourner” 27 2.7. “alien friends” 28 In law, the process of choosing a domicile within the jurisdiction of a specific government is called “ animus manendi ”. 29 That choice makes you a consenting party to the “civil contract”, “social compact”, and “private law” that attaches to and 30 therefore protects all “inhabitants” and things physically situated on or within that specific territory, venue, and jurisdiction. 31 In a sense then, your consent to a specific jurisdiction by your choice of domicile within that jurisdiction is what creates the 32 "person", "individual", "citizen", "resident", or "inhabitant" which is the only proper subject of the civil laws passed by that 33 government. In other words, choosing a domicile within a specific jurisdiction causes an implied waiver of sovereign 34 immunity, because the courts admit that the term "person" does not refer to the "sovereign": 35

“Since in common usage, the term person does not include the sovereign , statutes not employing the phrase

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are ordinarily construed to exclude it.”

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[United States v. Cooper Corporation, 312 U.S. 600 (1941)]

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“ Sovereignty itself is, of course, not subject to law for it is the author and source of law; ”

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[Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356 (1886)]

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“There is no such thing as a power of inherent Sovereignty in the government of the United States. In this country sovereignty resides in the People , and Congress can exercise no power which they have not, by their

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Constitution entrusted to it: All else is withheld.” [Juilliard v. Greenman, 110 U.S. 421 (1884)]

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Those who have become customers of government protection by choosing a domicile within a specific government then 45 owe a duty to pay for the support of the protection they demand. The method of paying for said protection is called “taxes”. 46 In earlier times this kind of sponsorship was called “tribute”. 47

Even for civil statutory laws that are enacted with the consent of the majority of the governed as the previous section 48 indicates, we must still explicitly and individually consent to be subject to them before they can be enforced against us. 49

Requirement for Consent

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Copyright Sovereignty Education and Defense Ministry, http://sedm.org Form 05.003, Rev. 7-23-2013

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