Theme: Governance

  • I dont think people know what they mean other than “those faceless people with i

    I dont think people know what they mean other than “those faceless people with influence or power”…. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-18 02:08:06 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1913051883104797091

    Reply addressees: @hugoadame01 @VigilantFox

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1913044269109027132

  • Q: “When people say the ‘elites’ who the f are you referring to?”— There are a

    –Q: “When people say the ‘elites’ who the f are you referring to?”—

    There are a broad spectrum of elites, where the term applies to those *capable of influencing the probability of outcomes* (which translates to some degree of ‘power’)

    – Informal elites (categories of people who can capture public attention)
    – Formal pseudo-elites (bureaucracy, political party participant networks)
    – Formal Elites (political)
    – Economic Elites (Wealth)
    – Intergenerational Wealth Elites (‘pseudo aristocracy’)
    – Oligarchs (political organized crime)
    – Oligarchical Networks: where in the west we have networks of corruption consisting of wealthy organizations (Ford Foundation), think tanks, NGOs, activist organizations, and seditious organizations (think: Soros, and the NGOs, and the private sector equivalents such as NWO’s/Bildeberg.).

    Reply addressees: @hugoadame01 @VigilantFox


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-18 00:38:27 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1913029320978903040

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1913015056066830563

  • RT @MFrye85295: @VigilantFox We are witnessing The End of The NWO! These Globali

    RT @MFrye85295: @VigilantFox We are witnessing The End of The NWO! These Globalists are losing their minds over it .. as for me, I find it…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-18 00:18:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1913024319284019508

  • Meloni knocking it out of the diplomatic park!

    Meloni knocking it out of the diplomatic park! https://twitter.com/VigilantFox/status/1912970647489445962

  • Rules of Our Role In The Legal Process as a Legal Activist Organization (ATTN: A

    Rules of Our Role In The Legal Process as a Legal Activist Organization

    (ATTN: All NLI and those we serve)
    Here is a detailed operational breakdown of our current strategy, highlighting the practical limits, permissible boundaries, and potential liabilities we face in our role as “Legal Activist“:
    Framing: “We are a legal activist organization. Aside from policy work, and ‘friends of the court’ submissions, often we perform the preparatory work for a Private Civil Action or Public Civil Action Against the Government on behalf of those we seek to help.
    – Usually, people seek our help because in most case our work is pro-bono, and otherwise because it is also complicated, involving government, and we see a path to use the case to escalate potential for reform through the legal system.
    – Usually our expertise is above that which is affordable individuals and informal organizations – especially in areas where ‘the law may be unjust as written and practiced due to knowledge gained over some period of time.’
    – Usually we make initial contact, send letters, negotiate, and if necessary compose and file suit on behalf of the person harmed. We then find a local lawyer to handle all in-court representation, and work through that lawyer from there forward.
    Since we work both domestically and internationally, we are not attorneys authorized by the individual state courts. And as such we cannot claim we are lawyers and thus cannot carry warranty of competency and liability for consequences on behalf of those we serve. It’s illegal. 😉 But you’d be surprised how effective we are. ;)”
    1. What We’re Currently Doing (Operational Summary):
    We are functioning as a specialized form of legal intermediary, advocate, and facilitator, distinct from a formal law practice:
    • Initial client contact (fact-finding, damage assessment).
    • Negotiations (direct correspondence, demand letters, settlement proposals).
    • Document preparation (initial complaint, filings, legal strategy outlines).
    • Selecting and working through licensed attorneys to represent the client formally in court.
    • Providing strategic oversight, research, guidance, and policy-oriented inputs.
    2. Legal Characterization of Our Role:
    We’re operating within the sphere commonly called “legal advocacy” or “legal activism”, rather than formal legal practice.
    Our role would typically be considered:
    • Advocacy support
    • Investigative and research-based intermediary
    • Litigation coordinator (non-attorney)
    • Legal strategy consultancy
    3. Limits and Boundaries (Practical & Legal):
    Our actions are limited by the universally recognized definition of practicing law:
    • We cannot formally represent clients in court proceedings, as we lack licensing by individual state or national bars.
    • We cannot sign pleadings as counsel of record, or represent ourselves as “counsel,” “lawyer,” or “attorney.”
    • We cannot provide definitive legal opinions asserting authority in any formal proceeding.
    • We must not hold ourselves out publicly as a qualified attorney capable of giving legal advice independently of a licensed attorney.
    We can, however:
    • Provide non-binding strategic guidance and research to licensed attorneys.
    • Draft preliminary documents that a licensed attorney reviews, signs, and submits.
    • Engage in preliminary communication and negotiation that does not amount to a claim of formal representation or definitive legal advice.
    4. Permissible Activities Clearly Within Our Scope:
    Our current activities, as described, are largely permissible so long as we explicitly remain a non-attorney intermediary:
    • Client advocacy (public and private), policy-related activism, educational outreach.
    • Gathering and organizing factual information, legal precedents, preparing initial legal materials.
    • Arranging for licensed counsel who will take ultimate responsibility for court appearances and official filings.
    • Assisting in out-of-court settlements and dispute resolutions (provided we’re not claiming formal legal authority or representation).
    5. Specific Activities Approaching the Boundary (Watchpoints):
    Certain activities can potentially cross the boundary into “unauthorized practice of law”:
    • Negotiation language: Clearly distinguish between acting “on behalf of” (as an advocate, intermediary, or authorized agent) versus representing oneself as legal counsel.
    • Demand letters and filings: Letters should be carefully drafted so they don’t assert legal advice or representation unless co-signed or explicitly approved by licensed counsel.
    • Litigation preparation: Documents must always clearly indicate that formal legal responsibility and review rest solely with licensed counsel.
    • International jurisdiction: Note that other countries may have more restrictive interpretations. Thoroughly clarify roles when operating internationally.
    6. Risk Assessment & Liability Exposure:
    So far, we have experienced no judicial or opposition objections, likely due to:
    • Pragmatic tolerance by courts and opposing counsel as long as a licensed attorney formally represents the client.
    • Clear division of responsibility ensuring that licensed attorneys hold all formal accountability.
    However, risks remain:
    • Opposing counsel challenge: An adversarial attorney may challenge our role as unauthorized practice if strategically beneficial to their case.
    • Judicial scrutiny: Judges could intervene if the boundaries of our role appear unclear or misleading.
    • International compliance: International courts or regulators may take a less tolerant view if they interpret our role differently, potentially leading to fines or restrictions on our activities.
    7. Recommendations to Stay Within Safe Boundaries:
    Maintain operational transparency and clear disclosure by:
    • Explicitly stating our role as a non-lawyer advocacy organization in all communications and documents.
    • Ensuring formal filings clearly identify and include signatures of licensed attorneys.
    • Structuring internal guidelines and trainings that explicitly describe permissible roles and boundaries for staff to prevent inadvertent misrepresentation. (This document for example)
    • Developing explicit agreements with local counsel clarifying division of responsibility, liability, and control over legal strategy.
    Conclusion (Operational Clarity):
    We currently appear to function well within an operational space accepted by many jurisdictions and common practice. The key to remaining within this permissible operational space is:
    • Transparency and clear boundary delineation in all representations.
    • Maintaining ultimate legal accountability explicitly with licensed attorneys.
    • Operational vigilance to avoid any appearance of unauthorized practice.
    This approach operationally ensures the sustainability and legitimacy of our valuable activist and advocacy role, domestically and internationally.

    Sincerely
    Curt Doolittle
    Chairman, NLI


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-17 20:36:08 UTC

    Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1912968340274073760

  • (ATTN: All NLI and those we serve) Here is a detailed operational breakdown of o

    (ATTN: All NLI and those we serve)

    Here is a detailed operational breakdown of our current strategy, highlighting the practical limits, permissible boundaries, and potential liabilities we face in our role as “Legal Activist”:

    Framing: “We are a legal activist organization. Aside from policy work, and ‘friends of the court’ submissions, often we perform the preparatory work for a Private Civil Action or Public Civil Action Against the Government on behalf of those we seek to help.
    – Usually, people seek our help because in most case our work is pro-bono, and otherwise because it is also complicated, involving government, and we see a path to use the case to escalate potential for reform through the legal system.
    – Usually our expertise is above that which is affordable individuals and informal organizations – especially in areas where ‘the law may be unjust as written and practiced due to knowledge gained over some period of time.’
    – Usually we make initial contact, send letters, negotiate, and if necessary compose and file suit on behalf of the person harmed. We then find a local lawyer to handle all in-court representation, and work through that lawyer from there forward.
    Since we work both domestically and internationally, we are not attorneys authorized by the individual state courts. And as such we cannot claim we are lawyers and thus cannot carry warranty of competency and liability for consequences on behalf of those we serve. It’s illegal. 😉 But you’d be surprised how effective we are. ;)”

    1. What We’re Currently Doing (Operational Summary):

    We are functioning as a specialized form of legal intermediary, advocate, and facilitator, distinct from a formal law practice:

    Initial client contact (fact-finding, damage assessment).

    Negotiations (direct correspondence, demand letters, settlement proposals).

    Document preparation (initial complaint, filings, legal strategy outlines).

    Selecting and working through licensed attorneys to represent the client formally in court.

    Providing strategic oversight, research, guidance, and policy-oriented inputs.

    2. Legal Characterization of Our Role:

    We’re operating within the sphere commonly called “legal advocacy” or “legal activism”, rather than formal legal practice.

    Our role would typically be considered:

    Advocacy support

    Investigative and research-based intermediary

    Litigation coordinator (non-attorney)

    Legal strategy consultancy

    3. Limits and Boundaries (Practical & Legal):

    Our actions are limited by the universally recognized definition of practicing law:

    We cannot formally represent clients in court proceedings, as we lack licensing by individual state or national bars.

    We cannot sign pleadings as counsel of record, or represent ourselves as “counsel,” “lawyer,” or “attorney.”

    We cannot provide definitive legal opinions asserting authority in any formal proceeding.

    We must not hold ourselves out publicly as a qualified attorney capable of giving legal advice independently of a licensed attorney.

    We can, however:

    Provide non-binding strategic guidance and research to licensed attorneys.

    Draft preliminary documents that a licensed attorney reviews, signs, and submits.

    Engage in preliminary communication and negotiation that does not amount to a claim of formal representation or definitive legal advice.

    4. Permissible Activities Clearly Within Our Scope:

    Our current activities, as described, are largely permissible so long as we explicitly remain a non-attorney intermediary:

    Client advocacy (public and private), policy-related activism, educational outreach.

    Gathering and organizing factual information, legal precedents, preparing initial legal materials.

    Arranging for licensed counsel who will take ultimate responsibility for court appearances and official filings.

    Assisting in out-of-court settlements and dispute resolutions (provided we’re not claiming formal legal authority or representation).

    5. Specific Activities Approaching the Boundary (Watchpoints):

    Certain activities can potentially cross the boundary into “unauthorized practice of law”:

    Negotiation language: Clearly distinguish between acting “on behalf of” (as an advocate, intermediary, or authorized agent) versus representing oneself as legal counsel.

    Demand letters and filings: Letters should be carefully drafted so they don’t assert legal advice or representation unless co-signed or explicitly approved by licensed counsel.

    Litigation preparation: Documents must always clearly indicate that formal legal responsibility and review rest solely with licensed counsel.

    International jurisdiction: Note that other countries may have more restrictive interpretations. Thoroughly clarify roles when operating internationally.

    6. Risk Assessment & Liability Exposure:

    So far, we have experienced no judicial or opposition objections, likely due to:

    Pragmatic tolerance by courts and opposing counsel as long as a licensed attorney formally represents the client.

    Clear division of responsibility ensuring that licensed attorneys hold all formal accountability.

    However, risks remain:

    Opposing counsel challenge: An adversarial attorney may challenge our role as unauthorized practice if strategically beneficial to their case.

    Judicial scrutiny: Judges could intervene if the boundaries of our role appear unclear or misleading.

    International compliance: International courts or regulators may take a less tolerant view if they interpret our role differently, potentially leading to fines or restrictions on our activities.

    7. Recommendations to Stay Within Safe Boundaries:

    Maintain operational transparency and clear disclosure by:

    Explicitly stating our role as a non-lawyer advocacy organization in all communications and documents.

    Ensuring formal filings clearly identify and include signatures of licensed attorneys.

    Structuring internal guidelines and trainings that explicitly describe permissible roles and boundaries for staff to prevent inadvertent misrepresentation. (This document for example)

    Developing explicit agreements with local counsel clarifying division of responsibility, liability, and control over legal strategy.

    Conclusion (Operational Clarity):

    We currently appear to function well within an operational space accepted by many jurisdictions and common practice. The key to remaining within this permissible operational space is:

    Transparency and clear boundary delineation in all representations.

    Maintaining ultimate legal accountability explicitly with licensed attorneys.

    Operational vigilance to avoid any appearance of unauthorized practice.

    This approach operationally ensures the sustainability and legitimacy of our valuable activist and advocacy role, domestically and internationally.

    Sincerely
    Curt Doolittle
    Chairman, NLI


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-17 19:45:07 UTC

    Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1912955503153750017

  • RT @SecRubio: Over the last decade, Americans have been slandered, fired, charge

    RT @SecRubio: Over the last decade, Americans have been slandered, fired, charged, and even jailed for simply voicing their opinions.

    That…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-16 20:44:12 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1912607981755388291

  • RT @amuse: CENSORSHIP: The agency that silenced many of us here on 𝕏 is no more.

    RT @amuse: CENSORSHIP: The agency that silenced many of us here on 𝕏 is no more. Secretary Rubio has notified Congress that he has eliminat…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-16 20:43:14 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1912607738749939806

  • Patriotism(government) or nationalism (people)? I’m not sure about the patriotis

    Patriotism(government) or nationalism (people)?

    I’m not sure about the patriotism but I’m pretty confident in the nationalism. the problem remains is that the chinese are a face before truth society that conforms out of habit culture and fear, but that has not learned to respect the commons. This only occurs when people must be responsible for the commons for it to persist. The state in CN is too powerful.

    Reply addressees: @heretic027 @NoahRevoy


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-16 18:52:31 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1912579876516950018

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1912571702380536288

  • RT @NoahRevoy: @curtdoolittle My question is always, “How does China fight a sus

    RT @NoahRevoy: @curtdoolittle My question is always, “How does China fight a sustained war with a shrinking population?”

    Chinese military…


    Source date (UTC): 2025-04-16 17:58:26 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1912566267057434640