A Republican Form of Government: Section 5 — Mission Statement and Membership Agreement by Anna Von Reitz
Section 5 — Mission Statement and Membership Agreement
The Mission Statement
for any organization worth its salt should be short and sweet and exact and as
explicit as humanly possible, so as to conclusively answer the questions —
“What are we doing and why?” In the case of the State Jural Assemblies the answer
to these questions is exactly the same all across the board — for example:
Mission Statement for
the Wisconsin Jural Assembly
Our Wisconsin Jural
Assembly is dedicated to the restoration of a complete and fully operational
land and soil jurisdiction State and County court system serving the people of
Wisconsin, the preservation of the National Trust, the enforcement of the
Public Law, the upholding of the Federal Constitution owed to our State and
People, the re-population of our land and soil jurisdiction, the filling of
vacated Public Offices, and the reclamation of our material and intellectual
public and private assets.
To these ends we, the
living people of Wisconsin, have called the eligible Wisconsin nationals and
electors to assemble and to serve as Jurors and Officers, and we have
established the process and procedure to qualify Jurors and others competent to
hold State Citizenship and Public Office. We do this peacefully and without
rancor in the exercise of our unincorporated powers and capacities.
The above Mission
Statement pretty much nails down who is doing what and in what capacity and
why. That’s all a Mission Statement needs.
Now for the
Membership Agreement portion — again, using Wisconsin as an example:
Updated: May 22, 2019 Table of Contents Page 17 of 209
The Jural Assembly Handbook By: Anna Von Reitz
Wisconsin Jural Assembly Membership Agreement
In
acknowledging and accepting the duties of a Wisconsin Jural Assembly Member, I
act without any deceit or profit motive or obligation. I affirm that I am one
of the people of Wisconsin and that I am acting exclusively in my natural and
unincorporated capacity. I affirm that I have expatriated from any presumed
citizenship obligation owed to the Territorial United States and/or to the Municipal
United States and I make no claim of Dual Citizenship and hold no allegiance to
any foreign power at all. I affirm by this testament that I am qualified and
able and willing to act as a Wisconsin Citizen, as a Wisconsin Juror, and as a
Wisconsin Elector and do so of my own free will and I also say that there is to
my best knowledge and belief no circumstance or obligation barring me from
occupying any vacated Wisconsin Public Office or preventing me from providing
Good Faith Service in such Office if I am elected. In accepting the duties of a
Wisconsin Jural Assembly Member I also accept the rights and responsibilities
thereof. I understand that I may be called upon to serve as a member of a Grand
Jury, or a Trial Jury, or to act as a Sheriff’s Deputy, or to act as a Witness
to Public or Private Records, and that I may be asked to serve in similar
capacities with or without pay. I accept my duty to serve Wisconsin and my
fellow Wisconsinites without reservation, coercion, or issue of conscience. I understand
that I am, as a Wisconsin Citizen, responsible for upholding the Public and
Organic Law of Wisconsin and that if I should be elected or appointed or
otherwise entrusted with assets belonging to Wisconsin or any County thereof, I
am obligated to act as a deputy and as a fiduciary under the Prudent Man
Standard until relieved of such duty. As a member of the Wisconsin Jural
Assembly I shall faithfully promote and help secure Justice for all people,
through the right use of Due Process and Jury Nullification. I shall at all
times endeavor to keep the peace and to know and uphold the best standards and
traditions of the American Common Law. So say I and witness my autograph and
thumbprint seal as I commit myself to serve as a member of the Wisconsin Jural
Assembly this ____ day of _______________ in the year _________ before these
Witnesses:
by:
___________________________(___Seal____) living at 1101 Bollingbrook Street in
Racine, Wisconsin.
Witnessed by:
__________________________ living at _______________________________________________________.
Witnessed by:
__________________________ living at
_______________________________________________________.
Updated: May 22, 2019 Table of Contents Page 18 of 209
The Jural Assembly Handbook By: Anna Von Reitz
Ideally,
the Witnesses will also be Jural Assembly Members and the records will be kept
in original triplicate, one copy to the new Juror, one to the Juror’s home
County, one to be kept by the State Jural Assembly.
It is advisable to
design and secure the unique use of a distinctive Jural Assembly stamp and/or
Logo to be used as a Letterhead on these records.
Although there may be
some additional or different issues each Jural Assembly may wish to address,
the verbiage given here is precise and correct for the jurisdiction invoked: we
do not, for example, use “affidavits” and we do not “swear” any oaths or make
reference to “God” in the land and soil jurisdiction courts.
The confirmations of
Public Offices are simple affirmations of duties and obligations undertaken due
to the Separation of Church and State in the actual American government.
Though familiar to
us, swearing oaths is a pagan practice of commercial courts, the phrase “so
help me God” we grew up hearing from Perry Mason and on other court dramas, is
also. It was not used in American Courts until the Unlawful Conversion of our
Court System by FDR.
The actual land and
soil jurisdiction courts operate on the principle of “Let your yes be yes and
your no be no.” Instead of affidavits we use testamentary evidence and instead
of swearing to anything under penalty of perjury, we use affirmations “to the
best of our knowledge and belief from without the United States”.
—Posted: Sunday,
January 20, 2019
Updated: May 22, 2019 Table of Contents Page 19 of 209
The Jural Assembly Handbook By: Anna Von Reitz
Section 6 — Pointers and Questions
bership Agreement
No comments:
Post a Comment