As a Texian National You Will Be Identified with a Sovereign Entity (Herein After), the Republic of Texas

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

As a Texian National You Will Be Identified with a Sovereign Entity (Herein After), the Republic of Texas 1. IDENTIFICATION – As a Texian National you will be identified with a sovereign entity (herein after), the Republic of Texas. A Texian National will not be a Citizen of the State of Texas, a United States Citizen or an American Citizen. Just as one born or naturalized in Norway would be a Norwegian National, one born or naturalized in the Republic of Texas will be a National of the sovereign Texas Republic. Texian Nationals will not be subjects of any other government. 2. TAXATION – As a Texian National you will not be subject to comply with any tax of the State of Texas or parts of the States of Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming, or the United States. Texian Nationals will not be required to pay enforcers Federal Income Tax, Social Security, or FICA. IRS, Federal taxes including those limited to basics such as national defense, highway, police or courts. The people’s Government will operate only from importexport fees and Chartered Corporate fees. 3. LAND OWNERSHIP – As a Texian National you will have the ability to reclaim the land that you live on through a land patent and the possibility of owning your land outright (allodial title) exists. 4. ENERGY – As a Texian National you will be free to use and develop any energy system technologically available. Texian Nationals will be free to pursue and use renewable and free energy options. 5. MEDICINE – As a Texian National you will be free to pursue any remedy available to cure or relieve symptoms related to your body. Vaccines will not be forced upon Texian Nationals. No plant that grows naturally (such as hemp) will be prohibited from use for medicinal purposes. What is commonly called “alternative” medicine in America today will remain viable if one prefers it as what has come to be considered “traditional” medicine. 6. BANKING – The Republic of Texas will not charter banks that would profit from the use of fractional reserve banking or by charging interest (usury). Texian Nationals will be able to lend and borrow from each other without interest, and instead pay reasonable service charges for gold, silver depository and storage services. 7. BUSINESS – As a Texian National you will be able start a business in the Republic of Texas without all of the red tape and filing requirements typical of business today. All chartered businesses by the Republic of Texas shall demonstrate that they serve the public good in order to maintain their charter. Businesses chartered by the Republic of Texas will not pay or collect Social Security, FICA contributions, and will be relieved from all UNITED STATES compliance requirements. To Charter a business one may contact the local County Representative currently found on www.TheTexasRepublic.com 8. ROADS – The Republic of Texas will stand behind the right of freedom to travel. No individual traveling on Texas highways will have to pay a toll unless using the public roads for profit. Speed limit signs in the Republic of Texas will be suggested caution maximums and the use of seat belts will be optional. In Common Law all travelers are responsible for their own actions. 9. FIREARMS – As a Texian National you will have the right to purchase, carry and responsibly use firearms without registrations or permits. Militia groups within the Republic of Texas will be encouraged to protect private property from all enemies, foreign or domestic in support of your local county Sheriff and or the Commanderin- Chief. 10. FREEDOM – As a Texian National you will have God given inalienable rights at birth for life and the right to free speech, right to freedom of worship, right to freedom of personal security, plus all other freedoms found in the 1836 Declaration of Rights. 11. LAW – The Republic of Texas shall function on basically one rule—the Golden Rule. Justice will be achieved through common law through a jury of one’s peers, and any statutes written by the Texian National Government shall be kept to a minimum and written in plain English so that all can read and understand them. 12. GOVERNMENT – The Republic of Texas believes that the best government is the Texian people’s local government. Government in the Republic of Texas shall be limited with the greatest authority being given to Texian National’s local municipalities and Counties rather than the National government. The highest authority over all entities though belongs to our one Almighty God. 13. EDUCATION – As a Texian National you will have the freedom to have your child educated as you see fit at your own expense. Private and public schools will be encouraged and will be locally controlled. 14. HUNTING and FISHING – As a Texian National you will have the right to hunt and fish without a license or permit for your own needs and the needs of your family and friends except on private lands without permission from the land owner. 15. MARRIAGE and CHILDREN – The Republic of Texas shall not require marriage licenses and shall not take any children away for not complying with so called state or local statutes. The rights of children shall be protected from conception through the courts, as would anyone else’s rights. 16. EQUALITY – No Texian National shall have any claim of superiority over any other Texian by way of age, sex, ethnicity, or religion. Slavery in any form shall be unlawful in the Republic of Texas. 16. LEGACY – In the Republic of Texas, property may be passed from generation to generation without probate taxation. 17. POLITICS – In the Republic of Texas there will be no political parties. Those who run for political office do so based on their own merits and record. Strict term limits exist for all politicians to avoid corruption. 18. Future examples without compliance to the Corporatist Socialism Tyrannical Governments of present enforcers: airports without the Transportation Security Administration; gun sales without the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; lands protected by peace officers without the military style color of law enforcers: land development without the Endangered Species Act, EPA, Climate Control; new congressional districts without the Voting Rights Act; and a new guest- worker program without ICE and Washington gridlock over immigration reform. The new norm is with a much leaner government that bears little resemblance to the enforcers’ fullservice nation it left behind. Texian Republic Common Law: 1 Let it be written, Our word is our bond and we will not intentionally harm another living soul and will respect and bring no harm to anyone’s private property (ies)..
Recommended publications
  • U. S. Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management General Land Office Records
    U. S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT GENERAL LAND OFFICE RECORDS Federal Land Patents Survey Plats and Field Notes Land Status Records Presented by Frances A. Hager, Librarian Arkansas Tech University Russellville, Arkansas GENERAL INFORMATION The Bureau of Land Management provides live access to Federal land conveyance records for the Public Land States, including image access to more than five million Federal land title records issued between 1820 and the present. There are also images related to survey plats and field notes, dating back to 1810. 1 GENERAL INFORMATION (CONT.) Due to the organization of documents in the General Land Office collection, this site DOES NOT currently contain every Federal title record issued for the Public Land States. LAND PATENTS Federal Land Patents offer researchers a source of information on the initial transfer of land titles from the Federal government to individuals. This allows the researcher to see Who—Patentee, Assignee, Warrantee, etc Location—Legal Land Description When—Issue Date Type of patent 2 LAND PATENTS, CONT. Types of Patents Cash entries Homestead Military Warrants Displays Basic information in table format PDF of actual document HTTP://WWW.GLORECORDS.BLM.GOV/ Header for the Bureau of Land Management website 3 SEARCHING LAND PATENTS Location State County Name Last Name First Name Middle Name SEARCHING LAND PATENTS, CONT. Land Description Township Range Meridian Section Miscellaneous Land Office Document # Indian Allot. # Survey# Issue Date 4 My Hager Family Tree I will use the “Marquess” line in my Land Patent Search. The Land Patents initial search page. 5 Search Results Screen 6 Patent Detail Patent Image that can be printed or e-mailed.
    [Show full text]
  • Filing a Homestead Declaration with the County Recorder in Your County
    Informational FILING A HOMESTEAD Brochure DECLARATION If you own a home, you should consider filing a homestead declaration with the County Recorder in your county. A homestead declaration protects your home from being seized and sold in the event that a money judgment is entered against you by a court. What kind of properties may be declared as a homestead? These types of property may be homesteaded: Land with a dwelling house on it plus appurtenances (fixtures and buildings). A mobile home, whether or not the mobile homeowner owns the land on which it sits. A condominium unit. Who can decide to declare a homestead? A single person or, in the case of a married couple, either or both spouses. If someone obtains a money judgment from a court against me, how will a homestead declaration protect my home? For most judgments against you, a homestead declaration protects the first $605,000 of equity you have in your home. If you have less than $605,000 equity in your home and the judgment is not of the type listed below, your home will not be sold to satisfy a judgment. If your equity exceeds $605,000, the property (or a portion of it, if a court determines it can be divided) may be sold, but you are entitled to keep the first $605,000. If allodial title has been established, the exemption extends to all equity in the land, dwelling and appurtenances. A homestead declaration will not prevent your home from being sold to pay a judgment for: Taxes. A mortgage, trust deed or other loan arrangement used to purchase or refinance your property or improvements to your property.
    [Show full text]
  • John Marshall and Indian Land Rights: a Historical Rejoinder to the Claim of “Universal Recognition” of the Doctrine of Discovery
    WATSON 1-9-06 FINAL.DOC 1/9/2006 8:36:03 AM John Marshall and Indian Land Rights: A Historical Rejoinder to the Claim of “Universal Recognition” of the Doctrine of Discovery Blake A. Watson∗ I. INTRODUCTION .............................................................................481 II. JOHNSON V. MCINTOSH ...................................................................483 III. ROGER WILLIAMS AND “THE SINNE OF THE PATTENTS” .................487 IV. EUROPEAN VIEWS OF INDIAN LAND RIGHTS DURING “THE AGE OF DISCOVERY” ......................................................................498 A. Spanish Views of Indian Land Rights ................................499 B. French Views of Indian Land Rights .................................511 C. Dutch and Swedish Views of Indian Land Rights .............517 D. Early English and Colonial Views of Indian Land Rights ..................................................................................520 V. “THE SINNE OF THE PATTENTS” REDUX: INDIAN TITLE IN NEW JERSEY ............................................................................................540 I. INTRODUCTION John Marshall was a historian as well as a jurist. In 1804, in the introductory volume of his five-volume series entitled The Life of George Washington, Marshall sought to place Washington’s life in con- text by presenting a lengthy narrative “of the principal events preceding our revolutionary war.”1 Almost twenty years later, when crafting the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Johnson v. McIntosh,2 Marshall relied heavily on his history of America “from its discovery to the present day” in order to proclaim “the universal rec- ognition” of two legal principles: (1) that European discovery of lands in America “gave exclusive title to those who made it”; and (2) that ∗ Professor of Law, University of Dayton School of Law. J.D. 1981, Duke Univer- sity School of Law; B.A. 1978, Vanderbilt University. Research for this Article was supported by the University of Dayton School of Law through a summer research grant.
    [Show full text]
  • The Doctrine of Tenure in Australia Post-Mabo: Replacing the 'Feudal Fiction'
    The doctrine of tenure in Australia post-Mabo: Replacing the ‘feudal fiction’ with the ‘mere radical title fiction’ — Part 2 Dr Ulla Secher* Until the decision of the High Court in Mabo, the universal acceptance and application of the English doctrine of tenure in Australia led to the view that all titles, rights and interests in land had to be the direct consequence of some grant of the Crown. In Mabo, however, six justices of the High Court agreed that the common law, as it had been previously understood, should be changed to recognise native title rights to land; rights which do not derive from a Crown grant. The common law device adopted by the High Court to effect this change, and thereby reconcile the doctrine of tenure and native title when the Crown acquired sovereignty of Australia, was ‘radical title’. This two-part article examines how the Mabo High Court redefined the English doctrine of tenure, or, more accurately, defined the Australian doctrine of tenure, by developing the concept of radical title. It will be seen that in order to achieve this redefinition, the court had to clarify two interrelated aspects of the common law: the applicability of the English (feudal) doctrine of tenure in Australia and the legal effect of the classification of Australia as settled. Part 1 lays the foundation for this analysis by examining the genesis of the doctrine of tenure in pre-Conquest England and the pre-Mabo effect of the colonisation of Australia and the reception of English land. The question posed in Part 2 is twofold: first, how and why the Australian doctrine of tenure, with radical title as its postulate, diverges from the doctrine of tenure in English land law.
    [Show full text]
  • A Background Study of Historic Land Use of The
    PROPERTY OF LIBRARY IDIVISION OF CULTURAL RESOURCES NARO ccs i4oooO GWaJ13I BACKGROUND STUDY OF HISTORIC LAND USE OF THE GATEWAY NATIONAL RECREATION AREA STATEN ISLAND UNIT Sherene Baugher-Perlin Ph.D Frederick Bluefeld B.A P.B.E.C With special assistance by George Rappaport Ph.D Prepared by the Staten Island Institute of the Arts and Sciences under contract number IFB-NARO-9-0047 for the North Atlantic Regional Office National Park Service U.S Department of the Interior July 1980 Table of Contents Listof Figures ii Acknowledgements Iv Introduction .. Fortwadsworth ....... The Beaches 30 MillerField 49 The Britton Cottage 70 Great Kills Park 86 Recommendations 97 References Cited .1 99 Annotated Bibliography 106 List of Figures No Title Page Map of the Gateway Property on Staten Island map of Old Town Diagram of the excavation area at Oude Dorp 11 Drawing of Fort Richmond under construction 1861 21 Beers map of Fort Wadsworth 1874 22 view bf the Narrows 1854 24 mansion in Arrochar 25 Robinsons map of Fort Wadsworth 1898 27 Military map of Fort Wadsworth 1962 29 10 Historic map of Staten Islands terrain 31 11 Robinsons map of South Beach Resorts 1898 33 12 Pier at Midland Beach 35 13 Hotels at Midland Beach 35 14 Bromleys map of South Beach Resorts 1917 37 15 Robinsons map of Midland Beach Resorts 1898 39 16 Bromleys map of Midland Beach Resorts 1917 43 17 Bromleys map of New Dorp Resorts 1917 44 18 Woodland Beach tent camp 46 19 View of Midland Beach 46 20 Print of the Vanderbilt Home 61 21 Beers map of Vanderbilt Estate 1874 63 List
    [Show full text]
  • General Land Office Book
    FORWARD n 1812, the General Land Office or GLO was established as a federal agency within the Department of the Treasury. The GLO’s primary responsibility was to oversee the survey and sale of lands deemed by the newly formed United States as “public domain” lands. The GLO was eventually transferred to the Department of Interior in 1849 where it would remain for the next ninety-seven years. The GLO is an integral piece in the mosaic of Oregon’s history. In 1843, as the GLO entered its third decade of existence, new sett lers and immigrants had begun arriving in increasing numbers in the Oregon territory. By 1850, Oregon’s European- American population numbered over 13,000 individuals. While the majority resided in the Willamette Valley, miners from California had begun swarming northward to stake and mine gold and silver claims on streams and mountain sides in southwest Oregon. Statehood would not come for another nine years. Clearing, tilling and farming lands in the valleys and foothills and having established a territorial government, the settlers’ presumed that the United States’ federal government would act in their behalf and recognize their preemptive claims. Of paramount importance, the sett lers’ claims rested on the federal government’s abilities to negotiate future treaties with Indian tribes and to obtain cessions of land—the very lands their new homes, barns and fields were now located on. In 1850, Congress passed an “Act to Create the office of the Surveyor-General of the public lands in Oregon, and to provide for the survey and to make donations to settlers of the said public lands.” On May 5, 1851, John B.
    [Show full text]
  • Does the Federal Government Own
    TOJCI.DORAN.DOC 5/25/2012 2:59 PM DOES THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OWN THE PORE SPACE UNDER PRIVATE LANDS IN THE WEST? IMPLICATIONS OF THE STOCK-RAISING HOMESTEAD ACT OF 1916 FOR GEOLOGIC STORAGE OF CARBON DIOXIDE BY KEVIN L. DORAN* AND ANGELA M. CIFOR** This Article establishes that pursuant to the mineral reservation contained in the Stock-Raising Homestead Act of 1916 (SRHA), as well as U.S. Supreme Court jurisprudence that has further defined the scope of that reservation, the federal government likely holds title to some 70 million acres of subsurface pore space located under private land in the West. In addressing the issue of pore space ownership, scholars and regulators have focused on the question of who owns the pore space when the mineral estate has been severed from the surface estate. This approach, however, overlooks the critical fact that for the approximately 70 million acres of land patented under the SRHA, the United States government held the original fee simple absolute, and conveyed the land while retaining “all the coal and other minerals in the lands.” In 1983 in Watt v. Western Nuclear, Inc., the Supreme Court delineated a four-part test for determining if something falls within the scope of the SRHA’s mineral reservation—a test that was further explicated by the Court’s decision in 2004 in BedRoc Limited, Inc. v. United States. This Article analyzes this jurisprudence vis-à-vis the question of whether or not pore space falls within the scope of the SRHA’s mineral reservation. Based on a detailed analysis of the history of the SRHA and relevant jurisprudence by the Supreme Court and other federal and state courts, we conclude that the federal government likely owns the pore space for those lands patented under the SRHA.
    [Show full text]
  • Land Title Records in the New York State Archives New York State Archives Information Leaflet #11 [DRAFT] ______
    Land Title Records in the New York State Archives New York State Archives Information Leaflet #11 [DRAFT] __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Introduction NEW YORK STATE ARCHIVES Cultural Education Center Room 11A42 The New York State Archives holds numerous records Albany, NY 12230 documenting title to real property in New York. The records range in date from the early seventeenth century to Phone 518-474-8955 the near present. Practically all of the records dating after FAX 518-408-1940 the early nineteenth century concern real property E-mail [email protected] acquired or disposed by the state. However, many of the Website www.archives.nysed.gov earlier records document conveyances of real property ______________________________________________ between private persons. The Archives holds records of grants by the colony and state for lands above and under Contents: water; deeds issued by various state officers; some private deeds and mortgages; deeds to the state for public A. Indian Deeds and Treaties [p. 2] buildings and facilities; deeds and cessions to the United B. Dutch Land Grants and Deeds [p. 2] States; land appropriations for canals and other public purposes; and permits, easements, etc., to and from the C. New York Patents for Uplands state. The Archives also holds numerous records relating and Lands Under Water [p. 3] to the survey and sale of lands of the colony and state. D. Applications for Patents for Uplands and Lands Under Water [p. 6] This publication contains brief descriptions of land title records and related records in the Archives. Each record E. Deeds by Commissioners of Forfeitures [p. 9] series is identified by series number (five-character F.
    [Show full text]
  • United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan Southern Division
    Case 1:15-cv-00253-RJJ-RSK ECF No. 45, PageID.<pageID> Filed 10/29/15 Page 1 of 7 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION JASON PAUL MEADOWS, Plaintiff, Case No. 1:15-cv-253 v. Hon. Robert J. Jonker PATTY NIEPOTH, et al, Defendants. _________________________________/ REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION This is an action brought by pro se plaintiff Jason Paul Meadows against defendants Patty Niepoth, Antrim County Register of Deeds (“Niepoth”), Renee Elder, Custer Township Treasurer (“Elder”), Sherry A. Comben, Antrim County Treasurer (“Comben”), Robert Logee, Custer Township Assessor (“Logee”), and Robert Massey, Antrim County Building Inspector (“Massey”). The matter is before the Court on motions to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), and for failure to state a claim pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), filed by defendants Elder and Logee (docket no. 26) and defendants Comben, Massey and Niepoth (docket no. 28). Plaintiff opposes the motions (docket nos. 29 and 30). I. Background Plaintiff lives in Antrim County, Michigan. He owns property there, in Custer Township. When plaintiff failed to pay 2013 taxes on the property, the county treasurer sent him a 1 Case 1:15-cv-00253-RJJ-RSK ECF No. 45, PageID.<pageID> Filed 10/29/15 Page 2 of 7 delinquency notice in the amount of $519.02. (docket no. 1, PageID #71). Plaintiff still did not pay. On March 31, 2015, the property was forfeited to Antrim County for nonpayment (docket no.
    [Show full text]
  • Land in the Caribbean
    Caribbean Land Policy Network LAND IN THE CARIBBEAN ISSUES OF POLICY, ADMINISTRATION AND MANAGEMENT IN THE ENGLISH- SPEAKING CARIBBEAN Edited by Dr. Allan N. Williams LAND IN THE CARIBBEAN PROCEEDINGS OF A WORKSHOP ON LAND POLICY, ADMINISTRATION AND MANAGEMENT IN THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING CARIBBEAN Edited by Allan Williams Email: [email protected] Special thanks to Jane Dennis for the final editing of this manuscript. All views, interpretations, recommendations, and conclusions expressed in this book are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the supporting or co-operating institutions. Verbatim copying of any part of this book is permitted, in any medium, provided that the copier gives a complete citation of the title, chapter, author and editor of the book, and provided that all copies made remain under these same terms and conditions which are conspicuously published on all copies. Hard copies of this book can be acquired from: Terra Institute 10900 Stanfield Road Blue Mounds, Wisconsin 53517 Email: [email protected] For further information about the Caribbean Land Policy Network, check the web site: www.terrainstitute.org or contact Caribbean Land Policy Network Steering Committee: Chairperson: Andrew Bishop, Commissioner of Land, Guyana (592) 227-2582 (ph) (592) 226-4052 (fx) [email protected] Secretary: Allan N. Williams (868) 624-2142 (ph) [email protected] Manuscript was prepared from digitised copy at the Land Tenure Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, for publication, October 2003.
    [Show full text]
  • The Homestead Act: Land Records of Your Ancestors Researcher, Writer, and Lecturer on Federal Land Policy
    Schedule 2019 Virtual Genealogy Fair # TIME (ET) SESSION TITLE PRESENTER(S) David S. Ferriero 10 a.m. Welcoming Remarks Archivist of the United States of America Rebecca L. Collier Archivist at the National Archives at College Park and Coordinator for History Hub Darren Cole 1 10:05 a.m. Exploring History Hub for Genealogists and Researchers Digital Engagement Specialist at the National Archives in Washington, DC Kelly Osborn Community Manager and Web Developer at the National Archives at College Park Sara Holmes 2 11 a.m. Preserving Personal Collections Management and Program Analyst at the National Archives in St. Louis Elizabeth Burnes Immigrant Records: More Than Just Ship Passenger Arrival 3 12 p.m. Archivist at the National Archives at Kansas City and Lists NARA’s Subject Matter Expert on Immigration Records Nathaniel Patch Using National Archives Records to Research World War I 4 1 p.m. Archivist at the National Archives at College Park and Naval and Marine Corps Records for Genealogical Research NARA’s Subject Matter Expert on U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard Records Cody White Discovering and Researching Bureau of Indian Affairs 5 2 p.m. Archivist at the National Archives at Denver and School Records NARA’s Subject Matter Expert on Native American Records James Muhn 6 3 p.m. The Homestead Act: Land Records of Your Ancestors Researcher, Writer, and Lecturer on Federal Land Policy Ann Cummings 4 p.m. Closing Remarks Executive for Research Services The Homestead Act: Land Records of Your Ancestors 2019 Virtual Genealogy Fair James Muhn Audience Skill Level: All James Muhn explains the basic provisions of the Homestead Act and demonstrates how to research and interpret homestead documents found in Record Group 49, Records of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) for family history research.
    [Show full text]
  • Land Patent No. S-15,7G2
    STATE OF HAWAII Land Patent No. s-15,7g2 SALE PURSUANT TO SECTION 171-95, HAWAII REVISED STATUTES BUTHISPATENTTkState ojHaw& in corlfonni@ with the hws of the d State of Hawaii nhting to public &an& and pmuont to tht approval by the Board of Land and Natural Resomes on Febmary 25, 1994, makes known to aU men that it does this day gmnt and m~rmunto HOUSING FINANCE AND DEVELOPWENT CORPORATION, a public body and a body corporate and politic of the State of Hawaii, whose address is 677 Queen Street, Honolulu, Hawaii 96813 hereinafter referred to as the wPatentee,w forthrwmiderahnof ONE AND NO/IOO DOLULR ($1.00). the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, a'' of the bnd situate at Wahikuli , Lahaina , Maui , Hawaii, being a portion of the Government (Crown) Land of Wahikuli, being designated "Villages of Leiali'i," and further described as follows: &OT 1-9: containing an area of 14.619 acres, more particularly described in Exhibit "Aw and delineated on Exhibit wB,w both of which are attached hereto and made parts hereof, said exhibits being respectively, a survey description and survey map prepared=by the Survey Division, Department of Accounting and General Services, State of Hawaii, both being designated C.S.F. No. 22,143 and dated August 17, 1994; and 1- 8. containing an area of 5.518 acres, more particularly described in Exhibit "CW and delineated on Exhibit nD,n both of which are attached hereto and made parts hereof, said exhibits being respectively, a survey description and survey map prepared by the Survey Division, Department of Accounting and General Services, State of Hawaii, both being designated C.S.P.
    [Show full text]