Most
Americans, even those with post-graduate degrees from the nation's most
prestigious universities, are political and jural illiterates. Political
illiteracy means unversed in the political facts upon which the American
nation's schemes of governance are dependent for authority.
Jural illiteracy means unversed in the law facts pertaining to authority
to govern wherein those law facts are dependent upon the political facts
firstly. Even most law school
graduates are political illiterates and, consequently, are also jural
illiterates in matters of the law of governing.
(Frankly, the typical law school graduate is jurally illiterate in
many essential principles and doctrines of law and the problem is compounded
because almost all law school graduates, thus “licensed” attorneys, are
epistemological illiterates which means the typical lawyer has no appropriate
foundation for understanding the language of law in the first place.
And the subject of law cannot be understood when understanding of the
nature and limitations of human language is lacking.)
Nothing can be more fatal than
to presume that because a man or woman has passed a "bar" examination
and holds a "license" to practice law that he knows and understands
the law in your case. Think about this when you face a prosecutor in your
traffic court case or when you hire a lawyer to represent you.
The WIN YOUR TRAFFIC CASE:
a.k.a. Travel as a Right introduces you to the political and jural
facts you must know to be politically and jurally literate enough to effectively
argue challenges of subject-matter jurisdiction in traffic courts and succeed in
getting your cases dropped in one fashion or another.
Volume I contains 34 Chapters
and consists of 460 plus pages introducing and detailing the fundamental
principles of political fact and jural, a.k.a. law, fact you must know.
Volume
II contains 230 plus pages of notices, affidavits, motions, memorandums of law,
objections, etc. presented as exhibits. These are actual examples of documents
used in traffic court cases. These documents show and further review points of
law and political facts upon which the authority of law depends.
Volume III consists of over 170
pages providing additional background information to include commentary on
certain points of law drawn from case law and other jurisprudence sources. |