Theme: Constitutional Order

  • Law Enforcement Be Under P-Law

    Apr 22, 2020, 11:55 AM

    —“How different would the function of law enforcement be under P-law than how it operates in today’s society?”—

    Primary differences are: 1) adopt sheriff public service model rather than police (corporate revenue generation) model, 2) to increase the number of officers in each incident so that force isn’t required 3) coupled with the ability to call large numbers of ‘trained’ citizens (militia) to assist (similar to volunteer fire departments); This increases the chances that someone who knows the individual can talk him or her down. 4) the population would be trained by continuous pubic service announcements on how to react to police officers. 5) Restore more discretion by senior officers, and lower the number of people who are put into the system. In other words ‘make time for human beings’. The acceleration of human behavior into rat-utopia panic is due to alienation, and the consequences. Social pressure and getting attention on one’s ‘ir-reciprocities’ and ‘feeling the social pressure (guilt)’ does not accelerate conflict behavior as does a relationship between an ‘oppressor / opponent / authority” with an officer. Shame is more effective than we think. Which is something we used to know. 6) We would restore all rights of self defense and all OBLIGATIONS to defend the commons: physical, normative, informational, and institutional. Meaning that a lot more criminals would be shot for ‘starter crimes’ – my favorite being porch-thieves, and within a decade behavior would return to ‘normal’. What does this amount to? Restoring the number of people protecting private and common. ORIGINS Where does this come from? Study of dutch british and german police forces, and study of how french citizens are taught to react to police. Source of the problem is distributed us population vs concentrated european population, and associated coverage costs. In effect we are forcing officers into a position where they cannot use numbers to encircle (see italian method) remain calm, and de-escalate, and so must use force to obtain control and bring into the system. The ability to storm someone’s home rather than wait to take them in public is another that needs to be changed. In effect we are trying to be too efficient with expensive officers, and we are paying the cost in increased distrust of the police courts, and political institutions becasue of it. We don’t need wild west sheriffs. We need to encircle, show consideration, de escalate, and if escalation is necessary it’s because there is no other choice, not because of the power ratio between officers and subjects. I can write more but in general, Americans suppress more petty crimes than europeans which is important and why we have nicer suburbs – and we want to keep it that way, and we are better at investigation – esp FBI – than european countries, but they are better at civil policing than americans. We are a more militarized society However, what I’m recommending is that we are a more “MILITIA-ISED” at the local level so that we restore investment in the material, social, political, and informational commons.

  • End the False Dichotomy: Rule of Law Produces All

    Apr 22, 2020, 12:06 PM The optimum balance between market economy and non-market economy is calculated by tests of reciprocity. In other words, good capitalism is the result of rule of law of reciprocity and bad capitalism is the result of failing at rule of law of reciprocity. Just as good combination of market economy(liberty), mixed economy (freedom), state provision (serfdom), and military service (indentured servitude) is calculated by rule of law of reciprocity. The ((())) lie of the left was another monopoly, another idealism, that one way is somehow superior to tri-functionalism and rule of law producing markets in everything INCLUDING consumption (markets for goods, services, and information) and markets for commons (mixed economy), state production (serfdom) and state military servitude (indentured servitude) Edit

  • End the False Dichotomy: Rule of Law Produces All

    Apr 22, 2020, 12:06 PM The optimum balance between market economy and non-market economy is calculated by tests of reciprocity. In other words, good capitalism is the result of rule of law of reciprocity and bad capitalism is the result of failing at rule of law of reciprocity. Just as good combination of market economy(liberty), mixed economy (freedom), state provision (serfdom), and military service (indentured servitude) is calculated by rule of law of reciprocity. The ((())) lie of the left was another monopoly, another idealism, that one way is somehow superior to tri-functionalism and rule of law producing markets in everything INCLUDING consumption (markets for goods, services, and information) and markets for commons (mixed economy), state production (serfdom) and state military servitude (indentured servitude) Edit

  • That’s false. The aristotelian restoration re-harmonized law and the state, with

    That’s false. The aristotelian restoration re-harmonized law and the state, with learning. Our law has remained constant for four thousand years. Our religions have changed from IE to semitic, to platonic, to protestant, to aristotelian. Same for china korea japan.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-05-22 00:42:29 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1263631281516089346

    Reply addressees: @PaulDesmoParker @TheRealFMCH @Maroeladalx10DB @laurenboebert @austere1717

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1263630512406454273

  • Reciprocity – Court

    Jury Nullification

    Nullifications in England, USA and Canada have a long history, and are dependent upon the character of the jury, and the character of the jury largely a matter of being a responsible middle class citizen, ad a middle class citizen on responsibility for property.

    —“Jury nullification, jury equity, or a perverse verdict occurs when members of a criminal or civil trial jury believe that a defendant is guilty, but choose to acquit the defendant anyway because the jurors also believe that the law itself is unjust, that the prosecutor or plaintiff, or judge has misapplied the law in the defendant’s case, or that the potential punishment for breaking the law is too harsh.”—

    So let’s list them again: … 1 – The Law itself is unjust, … 2 – The prosecutor(Plaintiff, Judge) has misapplied the law, … 3 – The punishment is too harsh for the crime. Nullification is at present a consequence of two rules of procedure within the law rather than a because it is explicitly encoded in the law: … a) Jurors cannot be punished for reaching a “wrong” decision. … b) A defendant who is acquitted cannot be tried again for the same alleged crime in front of another jury. In practical terms to prevent jury nullification, … a) prosecutors choose not to prosecute, … b) jurors are given a set of options and multiple ‘counts’ (crimes), … c) jurors are given instruction by the judge. The most effective is (b) since this is usually the source of concern. The open issue is the corrupt juror or jurors which originally was a common problem. In the P-Constitution jury nullification is embedded in the law. However, … 1) The unjustness of a law is easy to explain, demonstrate, and difficult to construct, and it is possible to prosecute those who attempt unjust laws before they can be acted upon. … 2) Misapplication of the law is easy to explain, and demonstrate. … 3) Excessive Punishment is open to debate, and in general should be a misapplication of the degree of the crime. So this means it is fairly easy for a juror or jurors to either (a) explain and defend their position on nullification (b) judge, juror or jurors to claim the resistant juror is engaged in contempt. (c) And it should be extremely difficult to make a fraudulent claim of nullification, (d) and extremely difficult for an unjust law to survive. What remains is (e) that the juror or jurors disagree on the interpretation of the facts of the case. (Good examples in the literature are common). In addition, police, plaintiffs, prosecutors, the judge, and members of the court are not free from prosecution for misrepresentation including overcharging including overcharging for the purpose of coercing the accused. THE PROBLEM The problem is preserving the high trust society that makes the jury system possible. it’s almost impossible to create. it’s extremely easy to destroy. And that is the reason for P-law. To defend it.

  • Reciprocity – Court

    Jury Nullification

    Nullifications in England, USA and Canada have a long history, and are dependent upon the character of the jury, and the character of the jury largely a matter of being a responsible middle class citizen, ad a middle class citizen on responsibility for property.

    —“Jury nullification, jury equity, or a perverse verdict occurs when members of a criminal or civil trial jury believe that a defendant is guilty, but choose to acquit the defendant anyway because the jurors also believe that the law itself is unjust, that the prosecutor or plaintiff, or judge has misapplied the law in the defendant’s case, or that the potential punishment for breaking the law is too harsh.”—

    So let’s list them again: … 1 – The Law itself is unjust, … 2 – The prosecutor(Plaintiff, Judge) has misapplied the law, … 3 – The punishment is too harsh for the crime. Nullification is at present a consequence of two rules of procedure within the law rather than a because it is explicitly encoded in the law: … a) Jurors cannot be punished for reaching a “wrong” decision. … b) A defendant who is acquitted cannot be tried again for the same alleged crime in front of another jury. In practical terms to prevent jury nullification, … a) prosecutors choose not to prosecute, … b) jurors are given a set of options and multiple ‘counts’ (crimes), … c) jurors are given instruction by the judge. The most effective is (b) since this is usually the source of concern. The open issue is the corrupt juror or jurors which originally was a common problem. In the P-Constitution jury nullification is embedded in the law. However, … 1) The unjustness of a law is easy to explain, demonstrate, and difficult to construct, and it is possible to prosecute those who attempt unjust laws before they can be acted upon. … 2) Misapplication of the law is easy to explain, and demonstrate. … 3) Excessive Punishment is open to debate, and in general should be a misapplication of the degree of the crime. So this means it is fairly easy for a juror or jurors to either (a) explain and defend their position on nullification (b) judge, juror or jurors to claim the resistant juror is engaged in contempt. (c) And it should be extremely difficult to make a fraudulent claim of nullification, (d) and extremely difficult for an unjust law to survive. What remains is (e) that the juror or jurors disagree on the interpretation of the facts of the case. (Good examples in the literature are common). In addition, police, plaintiffs, prosecutors, the judge, and members of the court are not free from prosecution for misrepresentation including overcharging including overcharging for the purpose of coercing the accused. THE PROBLEM The problem is preserving the high trust society that makes the jury system possible. it’s almost impossible to create. it’s extremely easy to destroy. And that is the reason for P-law. To defend it.

  • Roe v Wade is a finding of the court. It is one of the two great failings of the

    Roe v Wade is a finding of the court. It is one of the two great failings of the supreme court – and they know it. It was was a matter for the states to legislate since it is not decidable by test of reciprocity. Therefore it is a preference.

    I never err in matters of law.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-05-21 22:51:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1263603416988868609

    Reply addressees: @TheRealFMCH @Maroeladalx10DB @laurenboebert @austere1717

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1263600939841269760

  • As with anything by the Undermine Tribe, it’s a half truth, but yes P would put

    As with anything by the Undermine Tribe, it’s a half truth, but yes P would put these companies out of the business of selling our data.

    Also, P-constitution nationalizes the major players.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-05-20 13:47:54 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1263104162159460352

    Reply addressees: @KurtKurtking

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1263100859962933248

  • The Law (Container)

    [insert page=’the-front-matter’ display=’content’]


    Part 1

    Mankind

    1. Man

    [insert page=’mankind’ display=’content’]

    Existence

    1. Mind and Consciousness

    [insert page=’main-mind’ display=’content’]

    2. Sex Differences

    [insert page=’man-sex-differences’ display=’content’]

    3. Personality, Intelligence, Moral Differences

    [insert page=’man-personality’ display=’content’]

    4. Classes Differences

    [insert page=’man-classes’ display=’content’]

    6. Species and Races

    [insert page=’man-species-races-subraces’ display=’content’]


    Action

    1. Vitruvianism

    [insert page=’vitruvianism’ display=’content’]

    2. Acquisition and Demonstrated Interest

    [insert page=’acquisition’ display=’content’]

    3. Emotions

    [insert page=’man-action-emotions’ display=’content’]

    4. Aesthetics

    [insert page=’man-action-aesthetics’ display=’content’]

    5. Agency

    [insert page=’man-agency’ display=’content’]

    6. Transcendence

    [insert page=’man-transcendence’ display=’content’]


    Cooperation

    1. Cooperation

    [insert page=’man-cooperation’ display=’content’]

    2. Time

    [insert page=’man-production-time’ display=’content’]

    1. Productivity (define)

    ( … ) [insert page=’ display=’content’]

    1. Division of Labor

    [insert page=’man-production-division’ display=’content’]

    5. Rationality

    [insert page=’man-cooperation-rationality’ display=’content’]

    6. Immorality

    [insert page=’man-cooperation-immorality’ display=’content’]

    7. Reciprocity 

    [insert page=’reciprocity’ display=’content’]

    8. Morality

    [insert page=’man-cooperation-morality’ display=’content’]

    9. Tolerance

    [insert page=’tolerance-forbearance’ display=’content’]

    10. Virtues

    [insert page=’man-cooperation-virtues’ display=’content’]


    Calculation

    Weights and Measures

    Information 

    Mindfulness ( … )

    Norms ( … )

    Identities ( … )

    Stereotypes ( … )

    Archetypes ( … )

    Mythologies ( … )

    Group Strategy

    [insert page=’man-organization-group-strategy’ display=’content’]


    Compatibility

    1. Variation

    ( … )

    1. Compatibility

    ( … )

    1. Competition

    ( … )

    1. Sortition

    ( … )

    1. Vertical Class

    [insert page=’class’ display=’content’]

    1. Influence (Elites)

    [insert page=’man-organization-influence’ display=’content’]

    1. Horizontal Classes

    [insert page=’man-organization-vertical-class’ display=’content’]

    6. Social Orders

    [insert page=’man-organization-social’ display=’content’]

    7. Social Strategy ( monopoly -> trifuctionalism ) ( … )

    5. Generational Differences ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]


    Organization

    Power ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]

    Familial (and kinship) ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]

    Religious

    [insert page=’man-organization-religon’ display=’content’]

    Economic

    [insert page=’man-organization-economic’ display=’content’]

    Political

    [insert page=’man-organization-political’ display=’content’]

    Military (War)

    [insert page=’man-organization-war’ display=’content’]

    Civilizational

    [insert page=’man-organization-civilization’ display=’content’]

    The Production of Commons Civilization consists in the evolutionary institutional production of commons to defeat time at scale ( … )


    Part 2

    The Method

    1. Knowledge (Epistemology)

    [insert page=’epistemology’ display=’content’]

    2. Adversarialism 

    [insert page=’adversarialism’ display=’content’]

    3. The Arguments

    [insert page=’argument’ display=’content’]

    4. The Method  

    [insert page=’the-method’ display=’content’]

    5. The Grammars

    [insert page=’grammars-of-decidability’ display=’content’]

    6. Decidability

    [insert page=’decidability’ display=’content’]

    1. Truth

    ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]

    8. Testimony

    [insert page=’testimony’ display=’content’]

    9. Due Diligence

    [insert page=’due-diligence’ display=’content’]


    Part 3

    Institutions

    1. Government and Law 

    [insert page=’government-and-law’ display=’content’]

    2. Government

    [insert page=’government’ display=’content’]

    3. Law

    [insert page=’law’ display=’content’]

    4. Norms

    [insert page=’norms’ display=’content’]

    5. Marriage and Family

    [insert page=’marriage-and-family’ display=’content’]

    6. Education

    [insert page=’education’ display=’content’]

    7. Economics

    [insert page=’Economics’ display=’content’]

    8. Physical Science

    [insert page=’physical-science’ display=’content’]

    9. Mathematics

    [insert page=’mathematics’ display=’content’]

    10. Philosophy

    [insert page=’philosophy’ display=’content’]

    11. The Pseudosciences

    [insert page=’the-pseudosciences’ display=’content’]

    12. Religion ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]


    Part 4

    Application

    (The Big List)

    [insert page=’findings-of-the-law’ display=’content’]


    Back Matter

    Law Versus Philosophy

    [insert page=’defining-propertarianism-for-newbies’ display=’content’]

    [insert page=’quick-translation-between-philosophy-and-propertarianism-natural-law’ display=’content’]

    [insert page=’disambiguation-p-vs-applied-p’ display=’content’]

    (move this)

    [insert page=’propertarianism-datatypes-operations-grammar-syntax’ display=’content’]

    The Structure of a Program or Contract ———————————————————— Purpose (Whereas these conditions exist) Return Value (and whereas we wish to produce these ends) Constants and Variables (definitions constructed) Objects (constructions from base types / “first principles”) Libraries and Includes ( we refer to these libraries, objects, definitions) Functions (clauses that can be performed) Event Listeners ( criteria that invokes clauses) Operations (assignments of value, comparisons of value) Termination (termination conditions – no infinite loops)

    (Move this)

    [insert page=’natural-law-and-the-grammar-of-operational-language’ display=’content’]

    (Move this)

    [insert page=’strictly-constructed-law-and-contract’ display=’content’]


    P-Law for Dummies

    The Simple Version

    [insert page=’p-for-dummies’ display=’content’]


    Concepts

    [insert page=’glossary-of-concepts’ display=’content’]


    Glossary

    [insert page=’glossary-of-terms’ display=’content’]


    Course

    [insert page=’the-course-in-natural-law’ display=’content’]


    Reading List

    [insert page=’reading-list’ display=’content’]


    Three Generations

    [insert page=’three-generations-to-our-success’ display=’content’]


    Transparency

    [insert page=’back-matter-transparency’ display=’content’]


  • The Law (Container)

    [insert page=’the-front-matter’ display=’content’]


    Part 1

    Mankind

    1. Man

    [insert page=’mankind’ display=’content’]

    Existence

    1. Mind and Consciousness

    [insert page=’main-mind’ display=’content’]

    2. Sex Differences

    [insert page=’man-sex-differences’ display=’content’]

    3. Personality, Intelligence, Moral Differences

    [insert page=’man-personality’ display=’content’]

    4. Classes Differences

    [insert page=’man-classes’ display=’content’]

    6. Species and Races

    [insert page=’man-species-races-subraces’ display=’content’]


    Action

    1. Vitruvianism

    [insert page=’vitruvianism’ display=’content’]

    2. Acquisition and Demonstrated Interest

    [insert page=’acquisition’ display=’content’]

    3. Emotions

    [insert page=’man-action-emotions’ display=’content’]

    4. Aesthetics

    [insert page=’man-action-aesthetics’ display=’content’]

    5. Agency

    [insert page=’man-agency’ display=’content’]

    6. Transcendence

    [insert page=’man-transcendence’ display=’content’]


    Cooperation

    1. Cooperation

    [insert page=’man-cooperation’ display=’content’]

    2. Time

    [insert page=’man-production-time’ display=’content’]

    1. Productivity (define)

    ( … ) [insert page=’ display=’content’]

    1. Division of Labor

    [insert page=’man-production-division’ display=’content’]

    5. Rationality

    [insert page=’man-cooperation-rationality’ display=’content’]

    6. Immorality

    [insert page=’man-cooperation-immorality’ display=’content’]

    7. Reciprocity 

    [insert page=’reciprocity’ display=’content’]

    8. Morality

    [insert page=’man-cooperation-morality’ display=’content’]

    9. Tolerance

    [insert page=’tolerance-forbearance’ display=’content’]

    10. Virtues

    [insert page=’man-cooperation-virtues’ display=’content’]


    Calculation

    Weights and Measures

    Information 

    Mindfulness ( … )

    Norms ( … )

    Identities ( … )

    Stereotypes ( … )

    Archetypes ( … )

    Mythologies ( … )

    Group Strategy

    [insert page=’man-organization-group-strategy’ display=’content’]


    Compatibility

    1. Variation

    ( … )

    1. Compatibility

    ( … )

    1. Competition

    ( … )

    1. Sortition

    ( … )

    1. Vertical Class

    [insert page=’class’ display=’content’]

    1. Influence (Elites)

    [insert page=’man-organization-influence’ display=’content’]

    1. Horizontal Classes

    [insert page=’man-organization-vertical-class’ display=’content’]

    6. Social Orders

    [insert page=’man-organization-social’ display=’content’]

    7. Social Strategy ( monopoly -> trifuctionalism ) ( … )

    5. Generational Differences ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]


    Organization

    Power ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]

    Familial (and kinship) ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]

    Religious

    [insert page=’man-organization-religon’ display=’content’]

    Economic

    [insert page=’man-organization-economic’ display=’content’]

    Political

    [insert page=’man-organization-political’ display=’content’]

    Military (War)

    [insert page=’man-organization-war’ display=’content’]

    Civilizational

    [insert page=’man-organization-civilization’ display=’content’]

    The Production of Commons Civilization consists in the evolutionary institutional production of commons to defeat time at scale ( … )


    Part 2

    The Method

    1. Knowledge (Epistemology)

    [insert page=’epistemology’ display=’content’]

    2. Adversarialism 

    [insert page=’adversarialism’ display=’content’]

    3. The Arguments

    [insert page=’argument’ display=’content’]

    4. The Method  

    [insert page=’the-method’ display=’content’]

    5. The Grammars

    [insert page=’grammars-of-decidability’ display=’content’]

    6. Decidability

    [insert page=’decidability’ display=’content’]

    1. Truth

    ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]

    8. Testimony

    [insert page=’testimony’ display=’content’]

    9. Due Diligence

    [insert page=’due-diligence’ display=’content’]


    Part 3

    Institutions

    1. Government and Law 

    [insert page=’government-and-law’ display=’content’]

    2. Government

    [insert page=’government’ display=’content’]

    3. Law

    [insert page=’law’ display=’content’]

    4. Norms

    [insert page=’norms’ display=’content’]

    5. Marriage and Family

    [insert page=’marriage-and-family’ display=’content’]

    6. Education

    [insert page=’education’ display=’content’]

    7. Economics

    [insert page=’Economics’ display=’content’]

    8. Physical Science

    [insert page=’physical-science’ display=’content’]

    9. Mathematics

    [insert page=’mathematics’ display=’content’]

    10. Philosophy

    [insert page=’philosophy’ display=’content’]

    11. The Pseudosciences

    [insert page=’the-pseudosciences’ display=’content’]

    12. Religion ( … ) [insert page=” display=’content’]


    Part 4

    Application

    (The Big List)

    [insert page=’findings-of-the-law’ display=’content’]


    Back Matter

    Law Versus Philosophy

    [insert page=’defining-propertarianism-for-newbies’ display=’content’]

    [insert page=’quick-translation-between-philosophy-and-propertarianism-natural-law’ display=’content’]

    [insert page=’disambiguation-p-vs-applied-p’ display=’content’]

    (move this)

    [insert page=’propertarianism-datatypes-operations-grammar-syntax’ display=’content’]

    The Structure of a Program or Contract ———————————————————— Purpose (Whereas these conditions exist) Return Value (and whereas we wish to produce these ends) Constants and Variables (definitions constructed) Objects (constructions from base types / “first principles”) Libraries and Includes ( we refer to these libraries, objects, definitions) Functions (clauses that can be performed) Event Listeners ( criteria that invokes clauses) Operations (assignments of value, comparisons of value) Termination (termination conditions – no infinite loops)

    (Move this)

    [insert page=’natural-law-and-the-grammar-of-operational-language’ display=’content’]

    (Move this)

    [insert page=’strictly-constructed-law-and-contract’ display=’content’]


    P-Law for Dummies

    The Simple Version

    [insert page=’p-for-dummies’ display=’content’]


    Concepts

    [insert page=’glossary-of-concepts’ display=’content’]


    Glossary

    [insert page=’glossary-of-terms’ display=’content’]


    Course

    [insert page=’the-course-in-natural-law’ display=’content’]


    Reading List

    [insert page=’reading-list’ display=’content’]


    Three Generations

    [insert page=’three-generations-to-our-success’ display=’content’]


    Transparency

    [insert page=’back-matter-transparency’ display=’content’]