Links for further study
Watch this video regarding Frequently Unanswered questions of the Australian government
The below links are for further study and will advance your knowledge considerably.
1. Natural Law. A Logical Analysis
This article written by Frank van Dun, who is a philosopher of law, is very informative, however I suggest that you skip parts 5.1 through 5.3, and recommence reading at part 5.4. The reason will be very clear to you, I’m sure.
2. Secular Natural Law
This article from The Free Dictionary looks at Divine natural law and Secular natural law and will bring you up to speed concerning the history of both. Please note that consciousness, as the root of ‘existential natural law’ is entirely omitted.
3. Natural law
This article by Frank van Dun is perhaps the most enlightening link for further study of all, since it frames natural law inside all forms of Positive law (man-made law). This work is to be studied, meaning read once, left for a day or two and read again. Your mind will be brilliantly illuminated as exciting possibilities begin forming in your head.
4.‘Kritarchy’, an article by Frank van Dun
This article illustrates a society with no government, how it works and functions. Kritarchy is very similar to what I have projected, but differs in that all protective agencies are voluntarily contracted, not elected to perform inside a strict disciplinary (constitutional) framework that self destructs if self trespassed.
As your eyes glimpse free society potentials and possibilities you’ve never as much dreamt, let your mind roam far beyond, because that is social freedom as endorsed by today's freedom founders!
More links for further study will be added as this work grows
4. Lawful Rebel
“Some things in life are important, some things are not. There are issues that are relevant to our well-being, successful living and our happiness, and there are those that are simply a distraction. Lawful Rebel is all about distinguishing what is important and what is real, and dealing with those issues.” This website closely parallels my explanations concering consciousness, in particular the absolute reason what we have it. If you've not yet read my book Conscious Ascendance, this website will give you very good reasons to do so.
5. Etymology of law
A single family of words shape the English legal normative universe (law, lawful, legal, legislated). In this sense, English is particularly restricted in its legal vocabulary compared to both contemporary and historical languages. French, however, contains two distinct but interrelated words for Law: LaLoi and LeDroit. Both words translate as law, but each refers to different yet essential aspects of ‘The Law’. By its continental nature French has inherited the linguistic dichotomy present in Latin. Latin contained two words making up the totality of what we call ‘The Law’: Lex and Ius. This article closely corresponds to the concepts of Lex and Ius discussed by Frank Van Dun
6. Three ways to overcome the system and start your own revolution.
Overcoming the appropriation of your freedom is first realizing that everything is connected. The system doesn’t want you to understand this, because then the jig is up. The system wants you to believe that you need it in order to survive. But all you actually need is food, water, shelter, and healthy human companionship in a clean environment. As it stands, the system locks up your food, it unsustainably bottles your water, it brainwashes you into believing that’s all okay, while devastating entire ecosystems behind the scenes and calling it “progress.” Exactly the opposite of what we need as a healthy species. The secret to mans emancipation is Intrinsic natural law.
7. The science of law and legal studies: Concepts, Methods and Values
This paper attempts to clarify some of the logical and conceptual issues in the philosophical dispute about law that has pitted the legal positivists against the adherents of natural law. The first part looks at the basic concepts that are relevant to that discussion and at the methodological implications of studying law either as an order of natural persons (natural law) or as a system of rules or an order of rule-defined artificial persons (legal order). Thus, we find that the material and formal objects of natural law studies and legal science are different, and only touch one another because of the contingent fact that most of the positions in the legal orders studied by positivists are occupied by natural persons. — Frank van Dun
8. Natural - Person: a living-soul, man & woman, created by God.
In an attempt to create a safe society, men elected Governments to protect and uphold your unalienable rights and your responsibilities to the Creator and your fellow man. After a while, Governments became corrupt and now we have to ask: How could Governments and other "regulatory bodies" possibly make you follow their rules and be subservient to them since your true allegiance is to your Creator? How can you serve two masters - your creator and your Government?
9. Philosophy: Who needs it
This site explores the importance of philosophy and presents many of the important concepts and questions that must be considered. It will tell you how to base your philosophy on reasonrather than randomness, which will lead to clarity, certainty, success, and happiness. The alternative to an explicit rational philosophy is an indifference that leads to confusion and often failure.
10. How Natural Law Informs Our Understanding of the Constitution
The common law and the natural law are entwined, but they are not the same. The common law was explained by judges over many generations creating a well-known “common” set of rules. The judges of that era intended to use the natural law to determine what those common law rules were. The common law is explained by judges, but the natural law is the nature of people rather than whatever any judge says. This article is a good starting plave for comprehiending intrinsic natural — Devin Watkins