Sunday, May 22, 2022

JOHN JAY SINGLETON on EASEMENT RIGHTS & THE PMA

"Viruses cannot be transmitted from person to person: bacteria can." --John Jay Singleton, interview with Peggy Hall

"Wearing a mask violates OSHA safety standards."  --John Jay Singleton, interview with Peggy Hall

John Jay Singleton is such a champion.  I am just glad that he produces these videos from time to time, for he is quite good at citing the law and understanding how one decision interacts with other aspects of the law.  I only wished that my friends and family would heed his advice, particularly with the mask mandates and the vaccine mandates.  I learned of him through Peggy Hall.  His site is Privacy Fight, where he has scores of videos to purchase and review.  His bio reads like this, 

JJ Singleton is an advocate for entrepreneurs and business owners. He helps his clients avoid the fraud trap built into the banking system. His proven process has been a three-decade project in the making. Did you know that creditors can garnish your wages, take money out of your bank account and even put a lien on your home if you don’t keep up with credit card payments? They can, and do to thousands of Americans every day. Protect your cash and assets from creditors using simple, legal strategies that anyone can access. JJ Singleton helps you with life, liberty & the pursuit of privacy.

PMA stands for Private Membership Association.  

Always ask, "Do you have evidence of that?" John asks the question, How do police have a monopoly on safety? And then explains that we gave it to them. But how? Legally?  Yes. Through our tax dollars we gave them an easement to the streets and neighborhood where we live.

Catching speeders and writing fines, that's what they do, right?  Well, people gave them an easement, a shared right over the use of land.  Our police have an easement.  

Where the streets are private, the police do not have control over the neighborhood, or an easement, and therefore do not have the power to patrol the safety of a private streets.  They couldn't just drive through thd neighborhood whenever they wanted unless someone called them, someone who is responsible for the neighborhood, or someone who lived there.  We pay for the private streets and everything else.  The county didn't do that.  The place where I'm living now the county pays for everything . . . I mean we pay the county and the taxes go for that, so the police can come on our streets and do whatever they need to do.  Property rights give dominion over the property from the backyard property line out to the front sidewalk, the apron, the gutter, and the center of the street where the sewer line runs. My private property is actually out to the center of the street.  But I have an easement right with the county so I can't obstruct or do anything with that part of the land although I do a private property right over that, there's an easement with all my utilities--the power company, the internet (the provider of the cable), the water, all this stuff, okay, sewage . . . .  With that easement right, I have to yield the right of wat when someone is exercising an easement right.  And so just like with the police, on the interstate if I go father out beyond the street, beyond the roadway, the interstate, the boundary of it, I'm going to run into some private property, I'm probably going to run into a farm.  You see this all the time running on the interstate, there's farmland and things like that.  It's private property: it all starts with private property. And then there's a shared use of the property that allows people to use the property without having to ask for permission all the time.  This is the usefulness of an easement.  So if someone has been given permission to do a thing, in the name of public safety to keep things simple, and is not doing something in the name of safety and instead is doing something else like described above, 

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