Sovereignty

  • It’s about service to yourself and others
  • Duty to care beyond what the current expectation of caring is
  • Sovereigns are equal to the government and are not subject to the Government
  • To act in Truth, honor and integrity
  • Duty to protect others
  • Sovereignty is our greatest /only power
  • Sovereignty has obligations
  • Morals and ethics
  • Benevolence is a characteristic of the sovereign mindset.
  • Guided by facts logic and reason.
  • Freedom
  • Accept responsibility for their own actions.
  • They’re own supreme ruler
  • Possess their own supreme power
  • About equality because equality is a non-issue. Although we are trying to raise the consciousness level of everyone so that we are all on the same sovereign plain
  • Can not be taken away by any higher authority because none exists, as there is no basis in fact, logic, and reason as fiction is based on only hope and belief.
  • Deliberate Ignorance.
  • Sovereignty does not come from an outside source.
  • Sovereignty is not granted or inherited through bloodlines, wealth, gift, or purchase.
  • The Right to exalt themselves above another for any reason.
  • The Right to be irresponsible or cause harm to others and be free from consequence.

Sovereignty embodies the following principles:

The Development of Sovereignty:
Sovereignty is not a birthright but a status achieved when an individual matures into adulthood and demonstrates the capacity to understand their actions, take full responsibility for them, and govern themselves accordingly. Infants and those incapable of self-governance do not possess sovereignty, as they remain dependent on others.

Rejection of Fictional Constructs:
Artificial entities—such as states, corporations, and legal personas—are tools created by human ingenuity and imagination to serve specific purposes. As constructs, they lack independent will, consciousness, or moral agency, and must remain subordinate to the living individuals who design and sustain them. Any claim of sovereignty by these entities is a fabrication designed to undermine individual autonomy.

Autonomy and Accountability:
Sovereignty entails complete self-governance, coupled with full accountability for one’s actions and decisions. It is not a rejection of responsibility but the full embrace of it, affirming the right and obligation to act according to one’s own judgment.

Consent and the Choice to Abdicate Sovereignty:
Sovereignty recognizes that no individual or system has the inherent right to impose authority on another without explicit, informed consent. However, individuals may choose to abdicate their sovereignty by subjecting themselves to external systems, fictional constructs, or ideologies. This choice, though voluntary, does not diminish the reality that sovereignty remains an option for those willing to reclaim it.

Natural Existence Over Constructed Systems:
Sovereignty exists beyond the bounds of man-made systems, laws, or doctrines. It is a status that arises from the natural capacity for reason, accountability, and self-determination, and cannot be diminished or invalidated by artificial rules unless willingly agreed to by the individual.

Challenging the Fiction of Authority:
Sovereignty rejects the widespread inversion of power, where artificial systems and entities claim dominion over living individuals. It asserts that all such systems are tools that must serve, not dominate and that individuals retain the right to withdraw from systems that violate their sovereignty.

Distinction Between Living Beings and Legal Constructs:
Sovereignty recognizes the divide between living individuals and legal constructs such as the “legal person” used in statutory systems. While individuals may engage with these systems for practical purposes, their sovereignty as living beings remains paramount and is not subject to the rules governing fictional personas.