Radio Show Archive(s):
January 26, 2013 - 1st Hour
January 26, 2013 - 2nd Hour

NOW BROADCASTING LIVE 2 HOURS EVERY SATURDAY!
PRODUCED AND HOSTED BY TODD MCGREEVY and COREY EIB

Listen Live on Republic Broadcasting Network 1pm - 3PM CST every Saturday

NEW: Listen to Common Sense Revisited on the No Agenda Stream, now too! [Good app here to listen live on your smart phone: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/no-agenda-radio/id416693282?mt=8 ]

Today's Topics and Show Links:

Question: What's the Quick Way to Protect My Property?

Surprise. There is no quick way.

Answer: Investigate, Research, Understand and Enforce the Dual Oath of Office those in Gov-Co Have Subscribed To.

On today's show we update the TRB website with more resource links to the "must read" list and "frequently referred" to category. (See upper left corner of this blog).
Pasted in below here for easy reference within this blog posting:

>>Vattel's Law of Nations
>>Bouvier's Law Dictionary (1856)
>>Texas v White (1869)
>>United States v. Cruikshank (1875)
>>Black's Law Dictionary (1891)
>>En Legis Definition
>>>State-Citizen.org by Roger McDonald
>>>Sovereign to Serf by Roger Sayles
>>>USA vs US by TJ Henderson
>>>Alfred Adask's Website
>>>Corey Eib's Blog

Number one, however, is to establish one's non-political common law ID. This is the first step, low-to-no-risk, with high reward, one must take on the pathway to establishing oneself as one of the people of your state, in charge of governing the government to uphold their oaths to protect the people's rights. As residents, we have no rights, the two co-hosts explain. We have signed up to be considered property of the United States gov-co, a "U.S. Citizen," and as such we are treated like property. The signs are all over and Corey and Todd discuss this in detail on the show every week.

Regarding establishing one's non-poltiical ID, Corey's how-to DIY, is right here: http://youtu.be/V4VskAz3fn0 Now permanently displayed on the left column of TRB website.

Meanwhile, calls are taken from all over America regarding right to travel, questions about particular terms used by authors and the gov-co alike. Corey's simple answer to most questions is, "Investigate yourself," to establish the definition of terms with the gov-co agency you think you must engage with. And, for a definition of terms on citizenship, he proposes all who need clarity to consult the Secretary of State. http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/rls/dos/1718.htm

Ed Brotherton of We Are Change LA weighs in on the show, with an update on his appeal to the gov-co court to recognize his right as a California resident arrested for a criminal offense (because when you are given a traffic ticket you are signing a bond to appear, which means it's a criminal matter, otherwise, if you did not agree to sign/appear, then you will be arrested right then) to a jury trial and the appeals court response that only some of his rights apply in this particular matter, not all of them. http://wacla.org/2012/10/02/california-native-proves-cops-cant-write-you...

Riffing off of Ed's appeal response, Todd reads aloud an excerpt from the Blue Back Speller, a fable regarding an attorney and oxen.

Corey talks about his desire to engage government in a way that allows everyone to stay in honor and operate peacefully. "We are engaged in an information war," Corey says. And information is our weapon of choice.

In the, "What Have You Done for Yourself Lately?" Category:

Todd explains that he pulled the oaths of office for the current county executives, including sheriff, auditor, recorder and so on. Further, since the previous oaths of office have been destroyed (they are no longer in force), the helpful gov-co staffer at the Scott County Auditor's office suggested one look at the statutory code for direction on how and/or when the terms and words of the oath of office were changed.

In the State of Iowa, the subscribed oaths for the gov-co are articulated in Chapter 63 of the "Code": https://www.legis.iowa.gov/DOCS/ACO/IC/LINC/Chapter.63.pdf (Handy source for finding items by topic within code is the Skeleton Index found here: https://www.legis.iowa.gov/DOCS/Current/tablesandindex/skeletonIndex.pdf )

The 1857 Codified version of the Iowa Constitution is here.

And, the web intro to this document states:
This version of the Iowa Constitution incorporates into the original document all amendments adopted through the 2010 general election and omits certain provisions apparently superseded or obsolete.
The footnote following an amended section is the latest action only.
See the original Constitution for the original text and amendments in chronological order. This codified version generally adopts the rules for capitalization and punctuation used in drafting legislation.

Unfortunately, no link to the original Iowa Constitution on this page. Stay tuned for a link that soon.

Meanwhile, the recent statute for subscribing to an oath of office, from Chapter 63, states:

63.10 Other officers.
All other civil officers, elected by the people or appointed to any civil office, unless otherwise provided, shall take and subscribe an oath substantially as follows:
I, ........................, do solemnly swear that I will support the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of Iowa, and that I will faithfully and impartially, to the best of my ability, discharge all the duties of the office of .................... (naming it) in (naming the township, city, county, district, or state, as the case may be), as now or hereafter required by law.
[C51, §331, 332; R60, §561, 562, 1084, 1132; C73, §504, 514, 675, 676; C97, §1180; C24, 27, 31, 35, 39, §1054; C46, 50, 54, 58, 62, 66, 71, 73, 75, 77, 79, 81, §63.10]
Referred to in §63.11, 161A.6, 331.501, 331.551, 331.601, 331.651, 331.751, 359.38, 602.8101

Todd states that he thinks the citations referred to at the bottom of this entry (in bold italics above) refer to the previous verbiage of the Oath and that if one can look these up then one can see the lineage of how the language and words of the oath of office may have changed over the years.

To get to the definition of abbreviations used at the end of this statute you have to find the Abbreviation directory by searching for "abbreviation" at this page here. They don't make it easy. C51 = Constitution of 1851, and R60 = Revision of 1860, for instance.

Meanwhile, listeners are calling in that are doing research in their own states like North Carolina, Texas, Illinois, and more. Everyone is reminded that if one is preparing oneself to actually go to court, then one is preparing to be defeated. You have lost the moment you enter the courtroom -typically. And thus, establishing that the system has no jurisdiction over one of the people of your state, and that you are one of the people, becomes paramount.

Corey outlines this process for a typical traffic citation at this video here, entitled Appear without entering a plea on a citation: http://youtu.be/nMLyE6CWN8k

Corey and Todd announce the guest schedule for Feb 2nd will be Peter Hendrickson author of Cracking the Code and Roger Sayles on Feb 9th, author of From Sovereign to Serf.

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