Remaining In Honor In The Court
"Remaining
in honor is as simple as offering discussion to avoid conflict before
you get to court. That is all it requires. And using "notices" which are
instruments of common law discussion, and the Notary Public, you can
offer discussion to avoid conflict. Usually YOU will be ignored, placing
your opponent in DIShonor, meaning you win by default. Remaining in
honor is very simple. You just have to answer any notice you receive in
writing.
See when people go to court they are not in trouble in
court for example for what they did to receive a notice, like any form
of traffic ticket. They are in trouble for what they did NOT do in the
30 days or so BEFORE court. This process of notices is an ancient common
law process. It is the same process the police use with their tickets
to get YOU into trouble. They expect you to either pay, or do nothing at
all until the hearing and then create dispute or conflict without
having first offered discussion. THIS is what puts you in DISHONOR.
ALSO another thing that will put you in DISHONOR is claiming to
understand the cause and nature of the charges and proceeding against
you, and then pleading not guilty. When you are in court and claim to
understand like this, you have not said what you think you said. You
just claimed to stand under the cause and nature of the charges and
proceedings against you. THAT is your statement, and then you Plead or
BEG to NOT PAY because not guilty means NOT GUILDED that you are
refusing to pay, AFTER having claimed to stand under the cause and
nature of the charges and proceedings against you.
If you have
used notices through the Notary Public to offer discussion to avoid
conflict, and were ignored, you are golden. You show up and when asked
if you understand the cause and nature of the charges and proceedings
you say NO, then you just hand the judge your notices which evidences
that you are in honor and your opponent is in default and DISHONOR you
win by default, case dismissed."
~Rob Johnson~
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