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Rights and Monopoly Money I
suppose most people by now, at least hopefully, are aware that the game of
life, i.e. commerce, is really played with funny
money. Like, as in fiat dollars. Federal greenbacks exchangeable for
stuff, but not substance. The
whole system itself is dishonest. Dishonest in the fact the true legal
ramifications of such a system are never willingly reveled to nor
understood by the people. This stuff isn't taught in schools from
what I know. People love to cite the In
a system where nothing backs the currency, except air, it is false and not
real, or a better way to say it . . . colored. According to Black's Law
Dictionary, "Colorable: That which is in appearance only, and not in
reality, what it purports to be; hence counterfeit, feigned, having the
appearance of truth." Black's Law Dictionary, 5th ed. This is
contrary to common law in that all contracts and exchange must be real
under common law. If any transactions between you and me under common law
involve any type of fraud, those transactions have been
"colored" and any contract we may have had, void. Hence when you
and I transact for the refrigerator I have for sale for $500 and you give
me cash, Federal Reserve Notes (FRNs) backed by the "debt" they
purchase, the fridge in this case, the fridge now becomes part of what
backs the money. So, technically, it can never be "paid" for.
Now if in our system of commerce the $500 you gave me was exchangeable
for, say, gold or silver--substance--then there is no basis for fraud. The
$500 you gave me for the fridge can be used to buy gold, which can either
allow me to "sit" on my money for a bit and see if the price of
gold goes up, or I can actually exchange my wealth, my gold, for another
commodity of equal value. The $500 in FRNs you gave me only allows me to
"exchange" that debt for another. In
a way, that doesn’t really sound all that sinister. Until I decide
to "sit" on those FRNs you gave me and not exchange them. Let's
say I put that $500 in my bank and now my bank balance is $10,000. If,
tomorrow the powers that be--the Federal Reserve Board--decide to charge
less for their money to their members by printing more currency, hence
lowering the value of their FRNs, I'm robbed because the purchasing power
of my $10,000 is diminished. The prices of goods and services rise in
accordance with the inflated value of the currency. Still,
again, not all that sinister. That may be troubling yes, but sinister? Not
just yet. It only gets sinister when one stops to realize that a
system of false money--colorable--can't operate under laws that represent
the truth. The laws themselves have to be colorable. The trouble with
removing the substance from the money is it also removes the substance of
law. If the word "colorable" means something that appears to be
real and genuine, but is not, you know maybe it looks like a dollar,
and maybe it spends like a dollar, but if it is not redeemable for lawful
money (silver and gold), then the appearance of any transaction is false.
If a Federal Reserve Note is used in connection with any contract, then
that very contract becomes a colorable contract, and all colorable
contracts must be enforced under a colorable law and jurisdiction. So by
creating Federal Reserve Notes, the government had to create a lawful
jurisdiction to cover the kinds of contracts that use fiat dollars. This
is now commonly referred to as Statutory Jurisdiction. Or as I like to
simply say, the code. The law is colorable because we are using
colorable money. So
again you might be saying, how does this directly affect me? Here's how.
If laws can be written as statutes, then any law can be written that
contradicts or even abolishes an individual right. Is life so complicated,
so hard to understand and follow, so deep and full of legalities that the
writing of laws has to be done by a Board
of Governors and compose a volume of law so vast that is
virtually impossible for the average person, including me, ever to
understand? Drug laws, for both declared "legal and illegal"
drug use, interfere with the natural right of people to heal themselves
and extend their lives as far as they can, and in any way they see fit,
are a perfect example. If a new experimental drug comes along that
you want to try and buy, the government can and almost always does
restrict the drug's use by way of statute and the code. As an
allegedly "free" person, your access to and use of that or any
other drug can be restricted. If you can be restricted in any way from
doing something that does no harm to another, you are not free. That's why
you can't swing a dead cat without hitting a law or statute that doesn't
restrict you and your business or personal life. If
all laws are statutes, then any notion can be
written and enforced as such. All courts are then statute courts or
commercial courts and not Constitutional courts. Those courts enforce
the provisions and meaning of the statute. So, even though the Fifth
Amendment of the United States Constitution says you cannot be deprived of
life, liberty or property without due process, you can be and
are regularly prohibited and deprived in many ways. Sales taxes and
property taxes are such statutes or provisions. Goods, services and
property are taxed in order provide all sorts of nefarious activity by the
state, yet absolutely no due process on any individual takes place
prior to the collection of funds. It is more usual that your neighbors,
friends and co-workers will gather together and conspire through secret
ballot for the confiscation of your property. Yeah, so what if it’s
highly un-Constitutional, but as commonplace as say, a lawyer running for
political office? Colored
money leads to colorable contracts and colorable law. Statutes are
restrictions to the pursuit of happiness. All of it is prohibited in the
Constitution. The Uniform Commercial Code was developed in 1951 through
1975 as law to counter the effects of playing with funny money. The funny
money game started in 1933 by executive order. The three types of law
granted in the Constitution--Common, Equity and Maritime--are all but a
memory, and so is this tired parchment called the
Constitution of the discuss this column in the forum David C. Moorman is a struggling professional landscape designer who recently went into business for himself on account no one can stand working with the guy. To help make ends meet and to keep his old lady off his back, he is a part-time corporate liaison for a large conglomerate specializing in the logistics of specialty (Italian-American) food distribution. As previously mentioned, he is married to a Puerto Rican version of Attila the Hun, but he still feels love much the way a dog that is relentlessly kicked by his master does. The writer has two wonderful children, although their names escape him at the moment. The writer has no hobbies or anything else in life that he enjoys, sans for one thing . . . The Oakland Raiders |