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I saw many stupid people yelling to a cop "I am a sovereign citizen, you cannot touch me"... but they have no idea what to say after that or they start saying only bullshit crap.

That's why so many normies immediately after somebody start talking about these kind of things, wrongfully consider you a "sovereign citizen" (as in the raw footage you posted, cops talking each other like "ah is the sovereign citizen case", but in fact they have no clue about what it can come over their head). Brandon is right saying that this case is a "treasure", the guy can sue them and win a lot of money. But yeah, that will not be anymore in defense...

I have another approach with cops: I just ask pertinent questions that they do not have a clear answer, until they let me go. Calmly and politely.

55 sats \ 0 replies \ @Fenix 5 May

After coming to understand how interactions between public agents and citizens work, always looking for consent, I started seeing encounter videos for what they really are. The citizen just hands over everything that wasn't even asked for, putting themselves in a submissive position—it's automatic. I haven't had that unpleasant experience yet; if I do, I'm still not a sovereign individual in possession of my public titles to use if necessary, but I know I shouldn't give them even a shred of consent and should ask pertinent questions. The questions for a basic encounter provided by the Sovereign Project are a very good framework that opens our minds to what they actually want when they approach us.

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the guy can sue them and win a lot of money

yes, but it can be a defense tactic also, just mention all that in court and they seek a deal or leave you alone

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The basic understanding is that I am a living, sovereign man, right? This sovereign individual doesn't consent to the jurisdiction of corporations; he uses their own tools to deal with them within their jurisdictions—that's not a form of consent, is it?

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