Reclaim

Reclaiming Your Authority: Action Beyond the System

This article outlines how to reclaim personal authority by understanding and using the distinction between your natural self and your legal "person" in interactions with those operating within the established system. It covers responding to official communications and asserting your true status.

9 min read

When you understand that the system's jurisdiction and power are limited to the legal "person", a fiction, you can begin to act as your true self and assert your authority. This involves understanding the mechanisms of consent that bind the legal "person" into contracts and obligations, and then choosing not to consent to those which do not serve you.

This isn't about escaping all responsibility. Instead, it is about shifting your status from a defaulting, presumed "person" to a self-aware, sovereign individual. The aim is to establish a clear distinction between the living, breathing human and the legal entity. Officials, courts, and institutions operate strictly within the realm of legal fictions. They can only interact with the legal "person".

Responding to Communications

The most common ways the system attempts to interact with your legal "person" are government letters, bills, and various notices. These are usually addressed to the all-caps name, implying a corporate entity or a trust account.

Your initial step is to understand that these communications are not addressed to you, the living man or woman. They are addressed to the legal fiction. Therefore, any response you give should reflect this understanding, making a clear distinction.

Consider sending a conditional acceptance, acknowledging receipt of the communication from the perspective of the legal 'person', but then asserting your true identity. For example, you might state that you are the living man/woman known by the birth name, but not the legal entity written in all caps. You could then conditionally accept their offer to contract, provided they can prove their authority and the validity of their claims against you, the living being, not the 'person'.

Crucially, all communications from you should be signed "without prejudice" or "all rights reserved", meaning you are not entering into any adverse contract and you are not waiving your rights as a living man or woman. You are asserting control over your identity, rather than allowing a third party to define it for you through presumptions.

Court Appearances

If you find yourself in court, remember that the court's jurisdiction is over legal "persons", not natural men and women. The judge and counsel will look at you as if you are the legal fiction. This is where your understanding of your true status becomes vital.

Before any proceedings begin, and usually before you are asked to state your name, you must make a clear statement on the record about your status. You could say something like:

"I am here today as the living man/woman, [your full birth name], the beneficiary of the trust known as [all-caps legal name]. I am not the legal person. I am here by special divine appearance, not under the jurisdiction of this court or its statutes, which apply only to legal fictions. I am here to witness these proceedings and to protect my interests."

Making this statement clearly and calmly puts on record that you are not consenting to the court's presumption that you are the legal "person". The court will likely try to ignore this or steer you back to acting as the legal "person". You must firmly, but politely, reiterate your stance.

The judge might ask if you are "Mr/Mrs/Miss [legal name]". You must maintain your position: "I am the living man/woman, [your full birth name]. I am here in propria persona (in my own proper person), as a minister of God, to protect the Trust known as [legal name]."

This distinction is fundamental. If you answer to the legal "person" name, you effectively consent to being that entity and thus fall under the court's jurisdiction. This is a subtle yet powerful mechanism of consent.

Your True Self

The system is designed to trap you in the role of the legal "person". From the moment of birth registration, your legal identity is created, and you are presumed to be that identity. Your actions, your signature, your responses to official communications all reinforce this presumption.

To step outside this presumption requires a conscious effort to understand the game being played. It means shifting your behaviour from automatically responding as the legal "person" to consciously choosing to respond as the living man or woman.

This is a continuous process. You must be prepared for officials to push back, to try to enforce their presumptions. But with each clear statement of your true status, you chip away at the system's presumed authority over you, and you reinforce your own.

This reclaim of authority extends beyond legal interactions. It fosters an internal shift, a deeper understanding of your own self-sovereignty. When you understand that no one can compel you to contract against your will, you gain a powerful tool that impacts all areas of your life, from financial to personal interactions.