PknTrainerKevo #conspiracy pokecommunity.com

Let me clarify for you. You have the Right to obtain property, therefore when you buy a car, it is yours, therefore it is your property. You have the Right to transport your property freely meaning your vehicle and its contents within. A license is qa contract between you and the state and you have the Right to decline that contract, especially when it violates one's Rights. Please see Contract Law 101. Just because someone has a "license", it doesn't mean that a person knows what they're doing in which the license involves. How do you know he didn't cheat or pay his way through? That would make for a fraudulant document. I shouldn't be required to renew it and pay a fee in order to keep it. Also, the gasoline tax pays for the roads, therefore I am entitled to use the roads I pay taxes on. Just because one person is dumb enough to go wreck havoc upon the community with their vehicle, doesn't mean everyone else should suffer, THAT'S AGAINST DUE PROCESS.

Also, your confused about the legal definition of drive which is described as an act of commerce upon the highway (taxi, delivery, etc). So basically if you charge a fee to transport people or goods, you are driving. That includes grandma giving you $20 to take her to the store. However, if you're on the highways for fun or to simply get from point a to point b, then you are travelling. The legal definition of operator is one that owns the vehicle used for commerce. So if John and Joe have a business, John owns the car, but Joe drives it, then John is the operator. Black's Law Dictionary has the legal definitions of words before they became mixed up in today's English.

I know how the licensing "regulations" work. I've gone through it in 2 different states, but that was before I knew any of this infomation. My license is currently valid and I am looking to have it denounced as well as my birth certificate and social security number, so I've got some of my own documents to put together that proves my Rights as I've provided here. Here's another SC case for you: Chicago Motor Coach v Chicago, IL. I'm sorry about my punctuation not being perfect as I am not perfect myself.

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Confused?

So were we! You can find all of this, and more, on Fundies Say the Darndest Things!

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