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If you give it authority and try to hide something from the state, you make a criminal of yourself.

Privacy is not the same as anonymity.

I fully agree, most of us round here don't know about having already given authority to the state to keep the chain tight. Does it matter how hard one try to hide if it still attached to old contracts, unfortunately, unconsciously.

Anonymity start from a totally different perspective.

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131 sats \ 3 replies \ @Lux 13 May

We give our authority constantly.
We sign forms, tickets, registrations, petitions..
Old contracts don't prevent privacy, our thinking does.

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Old contracts don't prevent privacy, our thinking does.

True is, with our thinking mind, old contracts can be void.
Otherwise unsure is how thinking prevent privacy? Does it?

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110 sats \ 1 reply \ @Lux 13 May
with our thinking mind, old contracts can be void

yep
and new offers rejected, injustices corrected (podcast with a lady that learned in prison how to free herself)

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Insightful video. And one great way to invite the elite to our viewpoints and to our side is to bring forth ideas and ways of doing that make them admire us.

no you don't. You don't become "a criminal" (in any sense other than the state's own, immoral, oppressive rules) by breaking immoral/unnecessary laws

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110 sats \ 0 replies \ @Lux 13 May

in the maritime admiralty jurisdiction we get trialed in without jury, yes

morally, no

in reality, it's a breach of contract

anyways, since virtually no one gets this, you get labeled criminal, plead, go to jail

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