Great post Angel! On earth we are conditioned to accept things at face value and almost never question and dig deeper. Yet it is this process of expanding our consciousness into all spheres of our existence that empowers us with key knowledge and understanding; enabling us to create our world instead of being victims of it. The best legal and lawful defense is always a self defense and if you fully reconciled law and the courts you would realize that you are the highest authority for yourself on earth, and the entire legal system agree’s with this fundamental truth. What often prevents most of us from maintaining our full sovereignty is a lack of total actualization of these concepts within. We cannot be one foot in and one foot out. We are either sovereign or not, there is no middle ground.
The formal term for a lawyer is a counselor in law. We live in the law, and understand it well enough to counsel others about it.
The word attorney comes from the Old French word “atourner”, which means to transfer property from one party to another. More specifically, it historically refers to someone who acquaints a tenant to a new landlord. Amusingly, it has a nominal tertiary meaning from Greek which means “to twist”.
When an officer reads you the Miranda Rights, he tells you that you have the right to an attorney. Not so! You have the right to counsel, but as we’ve seen attorneys are not counselors. (I’d have to check, but I don’t know of anything that guarantees you the right to be lied to about the law by an outlaw.) Your right to a lawyer is typically denied because a) you’re misled into thinking you have the right to an attorney, and b) because over the course of the past two hundred years attorneys have befuddled the citizenry about what a lawyer is, and so there are almost no true lawyers left these days.
His first duty then is as an officer of the court. His second duty is to the public, meaning the status quo adopted by fifty percent of the citizens. Only after those two duties are satisfied does his duty to you ever come into play. So when you go to court you have two agents of the court haggling back and forth over the case in legalese, in front of a judge (or more properly, magistrate) that is an attorney who has outgrown the larval stage, and the point is the convenience of the magistrate. Part of that convenience is to convince you that justice is being done, that you have received a fair trial. But when this doesn’t happen, often it’s only the attorneys and magistrate who are educated enough to know it. (That being the case, we have a distinctly admirable number of honest judges left in the U.S.. What other profession does so well purely on the honor system?)
CLIENT. A client is one who applies to a lawyer or counselor for advice and direction in a question of law, or commits his cause to his management in presenting a claim or defending against a suit in a court of justice; one who retains the attorney, is responsible to him for his fees, and to whom the attorney is responsible for the management of the suit; one who communicates facts to an attorney expecting professional advice. Clients are also called “wards of the court” in gard to their relationship with their attorneys. Corpus Juris Secundum, 1980, Section 4.
In the U.S., the government was created by the People, and the People delegated a small amount of limited authorities to the government. Anything the People didn’t give to the government, the government didn’t have. Over the last two hundred years, government has been purporting to have authorities we never knowingly gave it. Now, when a legislator signs a bit of legislation prohibiting people from smoking downtown for instance, people tend to assume that it’s valid law. But he could have signed anything, even an article from The Onion, and his signing it wouldn’t make it law. Without valid authority from the People, our legislator hasn’t created new law. He’s just added yet another piece of dead legislation to the pile. The problem is that today’s citizens now believe whatever he’s just signed is valid law, and so the public outcry is minimal.
Source:
https://angellucci.wordpress.com/2013/10/27/five-things-your-attorney-wont-tell-you/


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