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Rights

Your rights are often given away through the deceptive use of words, to understand how we need to know the following:
Adjective meaning: An adjective is a word that describes a noun or noun phrase. The semantic role of an adjective is to change the information given by the noun.
Noun meaning: A noun is a word that generally functions as the “name” of a specific object or set of objects, such as people, places or actions, such as “Man”, “Home” or “Car”.
This means placing an adjective before a word, usually a noun, changes said word or noun.
Therefore adding a word or “adjective” in front of the word “right” turns it into a title, and the “right” into a privilege controlled by someone else, usually the people behind government.
Meaning a word before the word “right” turns it into a titled privilege operating within maritime law, such as:
  • Human rights.
  • Civil rights.
  • Cultural rights.
  • Religious rights.
  • Gay rights.
  • Minority rights.
  • Miranda rights.
Only a Sovereign individual can have rights, as it is their authority that enforces it.
Caution should also be exercised regarding rights, as making open declarations to your rights will make this appear as an invitation to contract by politicians, in the guise to “protect them”.
It is far safer to consider that “no one” has “rights”, or a right to something within your dominion, rather than you having a “right” to it, as the burden of proof is on the one making the claim to said right.
Rights protect you from the action of another, not to give you resources.
UCC 1-308 All rights reserved 😂😂😂😂
this is how I sign documents
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the burden of proof is on the claimant, therefore it is safer grammatically to ask for proof of right for someone to lay hands on you.
this is apophatic thinking (thinking in the negative). a right is something that is not a wrong.
a wrong is a theft of life, property, well-being, safety, chastity, or truth, when not done in self-defense but purely for the sake of committing a wrong or thru justification (fictional justice) of a wrong.
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