The public at large verses the individual. An age-old tension! A community (reject the term society as it is way to broad in scope and loses its purpose and meaning) operates as a collective, yet individuals have their own interests, rights, and responsibilities. A balancing act that shapes laws, governance, ethics, and everyday interactions.
Keep in mind that there are only 2 laws needed:
1. Do not encroach on another or their property - the basis of criminal law.
2. Do everything you promised you said you would do - the basis of contract law.
If you never read The Declaration of Independence, I highly recommend you read it.
When the collective good is prioritized, policies are aimed at public welfare, like universal healthcare, infrastructure, and environmental protections.
When individual freedoms take precedence, personal choices and rights become the focus, like free speech, entrepreneurship, and private property.
Historically, this debate has driven countless movements, revolutions that championed individual rights, and social policies aimed at benefiting the greater good.
Communities constantly adjust as values shift.
The purpose of civil local government is to ensure local values and local control.
And as a reminder:
No administrative court supersedes the Constitution.
No administrative law can bind a citizen.
No administrative tribunal can be referred to as a court.
No administrative adjudicator can be referred to as a judge.
No administrative process or tribunal can describe its processes in terms such as order, subpoena, warrant, or the record, as these are reserved for constitutional judiciary.
Your unalienable rights to life, liberty, and property cannot be taken from you without due process of law.
Statutes, regulations, bylaws, and rules are designed to make everything illegal, and sold back to you in the form of fees and conditions upon which you must abide. A topic for in depth discussion.
If you sign any agreement, service or otherwise, you are bound by it.
The public at large verses the individual. An age-old tension! A community (reject the term society as it is way to broad in scope and loses its purpose and meaning) operates as a collective, yet individuals have their own interests, rights, and responsibilities. A balancing act that shapes laws, governance, ethics, and everyday interactions.
Keep in mind that there are only 2 laws needed:
1. Do not encroach on another or their property - the basis of criminal law.
2. Do everything you promised you said you would do - the basis of contract law.
If you never read The Declaration of Independence, I highly recommend you read it.
When the collective good is prioritized, policies are aimed at public welfare, like universal healthcare, infrastructure, and environmental protections.
When individual freedoms take precedence, personal choices and rights become the focus, like free speech, entrepreneurship, and private property.
Historically, this debate has driven countless movements, revolutions that championed individual rights, and social policies aimed at benefiting the greater good.
Communities constantly adjust as values shift.
The purpose of civil local government is to ensure local values and local control.
And as a reminder:
No administrative court supersedes the Constitution.
No administrative law can bind a citizen.
No administrative tribunal can be referred to as a court.
No administrative adjudicator can be referred to as a judge.
No administrative process or tribunal can describe its processes in terms such as order, subpoena, warrant, or the record, as these are reserved for constitutional judiciary.
Your unalienable rights to life, liberty, and property cannot be taken from you without due process of law.
Statutes, regulations, bylaws, and rules are designed to make everything illegal, and sold back to you in the form of fees and conditions upon which you must abide. A topic for in depth discussion.
If you sign any agreement, service or otherwise, you are bound by it.
Thanks for calling out the misleading and derogatory information.
thank you for covering this very serious subject regarding the ostriches