Method

Freeing Yourself: A Practical Toolkit

This article outlines a three-step process to understand and disengage from the legal fiction "person" system, moving towards self-sovereignty.

3 min read

The path to true freedom and self-sovereignty demands a clear understanding of the system you are operating within. It then requires practical steps to detach from it. This process can be broken down into three core stages: Learn, Unlearn, and Do.

Learn: Unmasking the Deception

The initial stage involves gaining a deep, conceptual understanding of the legal fiction. This means recognising that the "person" is a separate entity from you, a construct of law. It means seeing how this construct operates, its history, and its purpose. Without this foundational knowledge, any actions you take will be ineffective, similar to trying to navigate a complex game without reading the rulebook.

This phase is about educating yourself on the core principles:

  • The origin of the legal fiction: How did it come into being, and what was its original intent? Understanding its historical context is crucial for grasping its current application.
  • The nature of consent: How is your consent, often tacit or uninformed, manufactured and used to bind you to the system?
  • The true meaning of freedom: What does genuine sovereign freedom look like, beyond the limited permissions granted by the state?
  • Jurisdiction: How do different types of law apply, and how can you assert your position outside of certain jurisdictions?
  • The practical implications: How does this legal fiction impact your daily life, your finances, and your interactions with state apparatuses?

This learning phase helps you move past the initial shock and confusion, replacing it with clarity and a strategic understanding of the landscape.

Unlearn: Shedding the Programming

Once you understand the mechanisms, the next crucial step is to unlearn decades of programming. We have been conditioned from birth to identify with the legal fiction, to believe that WE are the "person", the name on the birth certificate, the citizen, the taxpayer. This identification is fundamental to the system's operation.

Unlearning means:

  • Detaching from the corporate identity: Recognising that the "Strawman" or legal person is a corporate entity, distinct from your living, breathing self.
  • Reclaiming your true identity: Shifting your self-perception from a subject of the state to a sovereign, free individual. This is a profound internal shift that precedes any external change.
  • Challenging ingrained beliefs: Questioning the narratives and assumptions about authority, law, and rights that have been implanted since childhood.
  • Understanding the language of control: Discerning how legal language and bureaucratic jargon are designed to manipulate perception and elicit your consent.

This unlearning phase is akin to shedding old software. It requires a conscious and often uncomfortable deconstruction of your worldview, allowing you to see the world as it truly is, rather than through the lens of the legal fiction.

Do: Taking Action and Reclaiming Authority

The final stage is where knowledge translates into action. This is not about abstract theory; it is about practical steps you can take to assert your sovereignty and disengage from the system's traps. This involves concrete procedures and strategies within the legal and commercial realm.

This "Doing" phase includes:

  • Crafting effective notices and declarations: Learning how to communicate your sovereign status in a way that is legally sound and understood by the system.
  • Understanding and executing commercial liens: Using commercial law principles to protect your assets and assert your claims.
  • Navigating interactions with authorities: Knowing your rights and responsibilities, and how to respond to demands from government agents or corporate entities.
  • Refusing custodial relationships: In finance, in identity, in property. Wherever an intermediary holds the keys to something that should be yours, the relationship can be ended, replaced, or restructured.
  • Building resilient systems: Creating personal frameworks that protect your freedom and assets from algorithmic control, digital ID, and other forms of systemic overreach.

This practical application is where the rubber meets the road. It is about equipping yourself with the tools and confidence to navigate the system effectively, ultimately moving towards a state of true self-governance and unencumbered freedom.