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Is the legal term for someone who abides by the laws not "citizen"?
legal means by contract
If you get on board of the citizen ship, you obey by the rules of the ship, the terms of the contract wich you accepted by getting on board.
The origin of the maritime law conspiracy theory is unknown, though it may stem from a misunderstanding of some nautical-sounding words in common usage in the English-language judiciary such as ownership, citizenship, dock or birth (berth) certificate. This theory is entirely devoid of merit: when invoked by litigants, it has been consistently dismissed as frivolous.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Admiralty_law#Conspiracy_theory
you are under a spell :)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/admiralty
Admiralty law exists. And it is used as the base of this conspiracy theory.
I enjoyed the parts that are true though, it was interesting.
This guy likes to cite obscure provisions
Is he even a lawyer?
Does he practice admiralty law?
please enlighten for all of us the parts that are not true
That’s not a legal argument
Try using that in a deposition or court
Citizenship is a membership and allegiance to a sovereign state.
It's just being a member of a club. You can in some cases be a citizen of multiple countries, or also stateless.
The most common case is people get their citizenship by birth, but there are other ways of getting it, depending on the country.
a constitution is a contract
Wrong
constitution is a contract. only a few people signed it, and they have all been dead for a while. any paper document that is signed by two or more parties becomes contract in law.
you heard of East India Company?
A corporation with it's own army, citizens, courts..
Colony management tool
the square foot was registered. the cat does not own anything. sorry.
outrageous!
Is the legal term for someone who abides by the laws not "citizen"? Or are you talking about something else?
https://m.stacker.news/28288