Archive for February, 2011

Walk For Liberty Day 197 – Would Attorneys and Lawyers Be Necessary In a Free Market Justice System?

Donate.WalkForLiberty.com Ifyou support what we’re doing to promote the cause of freedom on the Walk For Liberty, please consider supporting our work by making even a $3 contribution. Every contribution helps! http (click here to subscribe to the WalkForLiberty channel) *** Video notes November 20th 2008, day 197 / Entering Canandaigua / Local house of tyranny / Would attorneys and lawyers be necessary in a pure free market justice and dispute resolution system? / Attorneys are necessary in the current monopolistic legal system because of the thousands of laws (including case law) in existence / Laws written in legalese / Representing yourself in civil vs criminal trials / What would a free market system look like? / All property would be private / No central monopolistic “government” claiming to have authority over everything and everyone / No legislature, so there wouldn’t be hundreds of new laws accumulating each year / Categories of property: individual, retail or service business, roads, other (farms, factories) / Rules that you must follow if you want to remain on someone’s property / Businesses would want repeat customers, so their rules would likely be simple and straightforward / Probably only a very few commonly accepted laws across all property, namely those against behavior which physically harms or threatens another’s person or property / Representing yourself in front of mutually-agreed upon arbitrator / Hiring a person to represent you who is skilled in

NH Lawyer Mark Stevens 603-893-0074 with Kendra Cooper and Jay Milligan

NH Lawyer Mark Stevens 603-893-0074 with Kendra Cooper and Jay Milligan

Picture taken by ByeByeDWI on 2009-11-16 20:14:55.

HB160 Rep. Mead

New Hampshire House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee January 29, 2009 HB160 “Extending the castle doctrine” Rep. Bob Mead “These are NATURAL rights… they are not granted” “We have made this Constitutional right so complex that only the judges and the lawyers can now determine what it means.”