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The Jural Assembly Handbook                                               By: Anna Von Reitz


                                           Section 37 — The Interface


               So we have studied the issue and meaning of “Lawful Persons” and two basic jurisdictions —
               soil (national) and land (international).

               We have seen that we have two kinds of states: republican states of the soil and international
               States of the land, both of which are unincorporated and geographically defined.
               We have also observed that these states are members of two unincorporated Unions of states.

               The republican states are members of The United States.
               The land States are members of The United States of America.

               Both of these states are populated by people.

               When the people of the soil jurisdiction republican states operate their national jurisdiction as
               citizens of, for example, The Wisconsin Republic, they operate as Natural Persons.

               When the people of the republican states enter the international land jurisdiction of their State of
               the Union, they act as the People of their State, and as Lawful Persons.
               Lawful Persons differ from Legal Persons.

               Lawful Persons are connected to specific actual, factual, geographic and physical reality.

               Legal Persons are fictional legal constructs devoid of such connection to physical fact.
               There is only one interface between Lawful Persons and Legal Persons and that interface occurs
               in international jurisdiction.
               The international land jurisdiction is populated by Lawful Persons.

               The international sea jurisdiction is inhabited by Legal Persons.

               What  happens  when  a  Lawful  Person  crosses  this  invisible  boundary  and  becomes  a  Legal
               Person is known as an “unlawful conversion”.

               What happens when a Legal Person crosses this same boundary in the opposite direction and
               becomes recognizable as a Lawful Person is known as a “lawful conversion”.
               When a Lawful Person crosses into the international jurisdiction of the sea and attacks Legal
               Persons already there it is known as a “transgression”.
               And when the opposite occurs and a Legal Person crosses into the international jurisdiction of
               the land and attacks a Lawful Person it is known as a “trespass”.

               Both can be considered errors worthy of forgiveness, or as crimes, depending on the acts and/or
               the expressed intention of the parties.

               When Lawful Persons transgress again Legal Persons it most often results in obstruction of the
               business or other activities of the Legal Persons.

               When Legal Persons trespass against Lawful Persons it most often results in in inland piracy,
               conscription, kidnapping, press-ganging or other crimes.





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