2872: The Summoning Authority from Lincoln County Watch
By Anna Von Reitz
When you are summoned to a court, what does that mean?
Most of us realize that this is a
request for you to get in contact with the court regarding some particular
matter, and if you don't reply, you may be held in contempt of court and various
other problems may accrue. The court has a duty to identify itself, to properly
address the summons, and to clearly state its business.
The Summoning Authority always has to
facilitate the action and provide the correct groundwork to proceed.
That's where the State Coordinators
come in.
These volunteers step up for their
State and take on the job of helping the State Assembly get organized. The
Coordinators are working for the Summoning Authority throughout this process,
and are engaged in four (4) principal activities:
(1) Opening the door. People
throughout this country need help determining their correct political status, so
the Coordinator's first duty is to welcome them home and assess their situation:
are they State Nationals, Municipal Employees, Territorial Employees, or Federal
Dependents?
Depending on the answer, people need
to join their proper Assembly.
Municipal Employees and Dependents
belong in the Municipal Assembly.
Territorial Employees and Dependents
belong in the District Assembly.
Everyone else should be actively
participating in their State Assembly.
It's important to note that even
though Municipal and Territorial Employees and their Dependents belong to
different Assemblies during their working life and for as long as they adopt
foreign citizenship obligations, they are still Americans and can still be
protected under the terms of the Constitutions as American State Nationals so
long as they record their birthright political status with their State Assembly.
(2) After the initial inquiries and
sorting out, the State Coordinators direct and expedite the process of
completing and recording the necessary 1779 Declaration paperwork. They assist
directly or through designated helpers.
(3) Next the newcomers decide whether
or not they want to participate in the Assembly, and the Coordinator, or a
designated helper, explains the requirements and options.
State Nationals populate the Assembly
and have a strong voice in local County and Statewide affairs, but they don't
get to vote on international issues or lead the State Militia.
State Citizens also have a voice in
the local and statewide issues, but additionally, they are the ones who decide
international questions for the State. This is because State Citizens have a
singular commitment and political allegiance to the Public Good of their State
of the Union.
(4) The Coordinators help place new
Assembly members in places where their skills are needed. Each Assembly has to
organize its own courts, fill its jury pools, educate its members, provide for
its budgetary and financial processes, and fulfill its functions as the
government operating in Original Jurisdiction.
It's a tall order, but Americans who
see the vital importance of preserving their rights, enforcing their
constitutional guarantees, and maintaining their self-governing status are more
than able and competent to do the job.
Our volunteer Coordinators are the
ones who orchestrate it all, for the good of their State and everyone living in
it.
Right now, State Assemblies are in
Session all over this country, doing the work that has to be done.
Once an Assembly is populated, and
the internal organization -- the General Assembly, the International Business
Assembly, the Assembly Courts, the Assembly Militia and the various necessary
committees are formed, the Assembly is "fully seated".
At this point, the job of the State
Coordinator is done.
In most cases, their work as a
liaison for The United States of America is passed on to the Assembly Chairman,
or those duties may be passed on to another Assembly Officer designated by the
Assembly itself.
The job of a State Coordinator is a
difficult one. It's unpaid. It's misunderstood. It's often thankless and
frustrating. Everyone is learning on the job. Everyone is stuck with an uphill
struggle against telephone bills, broken printers, and all the other adversities
of life.
And still, despite everything, this
difficult Rescue Operation is getting done.
The Government of Original
Jurisdiction has come home, and every day, as more Americans realize that they
have been trafficked into foreign jurisdictions without their knowledge and
subjected to foreign law against their will and without their consent, they turn
homeward --- looking for the beacons being lit by each State Coordinator and
each State Assembly, and importantly, The United States of America, our
unincorporated Federation of States.
There are only three ways for the
States to be called into Session: (1) the Federation President (there hasn't
been one elected since 1856); (2) a quorum of nine States of the Union (Texas
was the only one left in Session, so they couldn't raise a quorum.); (3) the
hereditary Head of State can call the States into Session (and that seemed such
an unlikely possibility that the Powers That Be didn't even consider it).
The impossible has happened. The
United States of America has come back from the dead and summoned its member
States into Session.
Each State has one (1) Assembly
composed of all the Americans living within its borders who are claiming their
birthright or lawfully naturalized political status. Each Assembly summoned is
organized by a State Coordinator working for the Summoning Authority, The United
States of America, our unincorporated Federation of States.
Because of these definitions and
provisions, there can be no exclusive or renegade Assemblies. Our Assemblies
cannot devolve into private clubs and they cannot be commandeered, limited, or
redefined by enterprising individuals.
Our State Assemblies are part of the
public government of these United States operating in Original Jurisdiction.
They are populated by birthright Americans and Naturalized U.S. Citizens who
have chosen to adopt the State where they live as their permanent home. All are
equally welcome to reclaim their birthright and invited to participate; race,
religion, personal differences and myriad other issues do not stand against our
commonality.
In each town and each State of the
Union, we gather together and accept the responsibility of lawful
self-governance.
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