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osoab
20th October 2012, 03:58 AM
I read this awhile back. I didn't see this posted on the board.

Marriage Licenses:The Real Truth (http://www.usavsus.info/MarriageLicenses-TheRealTruth.htm)


Enlightening Conversation with a Marriage License Bureau. . . .

About 15 years ago, my former wife of 26 years, filed for divorce. We had seven (7) children: five (5) daughters and two (2) sons. Our youngest at the time, our second son, was five years old. At the time, I prepared a counterclaim to the Petition for Dissolution her attorney filed in Domestic Relations (DR) court.

I met one afternoon with the head of the Maricopa County Superior Court, Marriage License Bureau, in downtown Phoenix. The marriage license bureau was headed by a young woman of about age 25. I asked her to explain to me the general and statutory implications of the marriage license. She was very cooperative, and called in an Assistant, a tall Black man who at the time was working on an Operations Manual for internal departmental use.

She deferred for most technical explanations to her Assistant. He walked through the technicalities of the marriage license as it operates in Arizona. He mentioned that marriage licensing is pretty much the same in the other states --but there are differences. One significant difference he mentioned was that Arizona is one of eight western states that are Community Property states. The other states are Common Law states, including Utah, with the exception of Louisiana which is a Napoleonic Code state.

He then explained some of the technicalities of the marriage license. He said, first of all, the marriage license is Secular Contract between the parties and the State. The State is the principal party in that Secular Contract. The husband and wife are secondary or inferior parties. The Secular Contract is a three-way contract between the State, as Principal, and the husband and wife as the other two legs of the Contract.

He said, in the traditional sense a marriage is a covenant between the husband and wife and God. But in the Secular Contract with the state, reference to God is a dotted line, and NOT officially considered included in the Secular Contract at all.

He said, if the husband and wife wish to include God as a party in their marriage, that is a "dotted line" they will have to add in their own minds. The state's marriage license is "strictly secular," he said. He said further, that what he meant by the relationship to God being a "dotted line" meant that the State regards any mention of God as irrelevant, even meaningless.

In his description of the marriage license contract, the related one other "dotted line." He said in the traditional religious context, marriage was a covenant between the husband and wife and God with husband and wife joined as one. This is not the case in the secular realm of the state's marriage license contract. The State is the Principal or dominant party. The husband and wife are merely contractually "joined" as business partners, not in any
religious union. They may even be considered, he said, connected to each other by another "dotted line."

The picture he was trying to "paint" was that of a triangle with the State at the top and a solid line extending from the apex, the State, down the left side to the husband, and a separate solid line extending down the right side to the wife, a "dotted line" merely showing that they consider themselves to have entered into a religious union of some sort that is irrelevant to the State.



http://www.usavsus.info/Images9/MarriageLicense-SecularContractDiagram.gif




He further mentioned that this "religious overtone" is recognized by the State by requiring that the marriage must be solemnized either by a state official or by a minister of religion that has been "deputized" by the State to perform the marriage ceremony and make a return of the signed and executed marriage license to the State.

Again, he emphasized that marriage is a strictly secular relationship so far as the State is concerned and because it is looked upon as a "privileged business enterprise" various tax advantages and other political privileges have become attached to the marriage license contract that have nothing at all to do with marriage as a religious
covenant or bond between God and a man and a woman.

By way of reference, if you would like to read a legal treatise on marriage, one of the best is "Principles of Community Property," by William Defuniak. At the outset, he explains that Community Property law descends from Roman Civil Law through the Spanish Codes, 600 A.D., written by the Spanish juris consults.

In the civil law, the marriage is considered to be a for-profit venture or profit-making venture (even though it may never actually produce a profit in operation) and as the wife goes out to the local market to purchase food stuffs and other supplies for the marriage household, she is replenishing the stocks of the business. To restate: In the civil law, the marriage is considered to be a business venture, that is, a for-profit business venture. Moreover, as children come into the marriage household, the business venture is considered to have "borne fruit."

Now, back to the explanation by the Maricopa County Superior Court, Marriage Bureau's administrative Assistant. He went on to explain that every contract must have consideration. The State offers consideration in the form of the actual license itself - the piece of paper, the Certificate of Marriage. The other part of consideration by the State is "the privilege to be regulated by statute." He added that this privilege to be regulated by statute includes all related statutes, and all court cases as they are ruled on by the courts, and all statutes and regulations into the future in the years following the commencement of the marriage. He said in a way the marriage license contract is a dynamic or flexible, ever-changing contract as time goes along - even though the husband and wife didn't realize that.

My thought on this is can it really be considered a true contract as one becomes aware of the failure by the State to make full disclosure of the terms and conditions. A contract must be entered into knowingly, intelligently, intentionally, and with fully informed consent. Otherwise, technically there is no contract.

Another way to look as the marriage license contract with the State is as a contract of adhesion, a contract between two disparate, unequal parties. Again, a flawed "contract." Such a contract with the State is said to be a "specific performance" contract as to the privileges, duties and responsibilities that attach.

Consideration on the part of the husband and wife is the actual fee paid and the implied agreement to be subject to the state's statutes, rules, and regulations and all court cases ruled on related to marriage law, family law, children, and property. He emphasized that this contractual consideration by the bride and groom places them in a definite and defined-by-law position inferior and subject to the State. He commented that very few people realize this.

He also said that it is very important to understand that children born to the marriage are considered by law as "the contract bearing fruit" -meaning the children primarily belong to the State, even though the law never comes out and says so in so many words.

In this regard, children born to the contract regarded as "the contract bearing fruit," he said it is vitally important for
parents to understand two doctrines that became established in the United States during the 1930s. The first is the Doctrine of Parens Patriae. The second is the Doctrine of In Loco Parentis.

Parens Patriae means literally "the parent of the country" or to state it more bluntly - the State is the undisclosed true parent. Along this line, a 1930s Arizona Supreme Court case states that parents have no property right in their children, and have custody of their children during good behavior at the sufferance of the State. This means that parents may raise their children and maintain custody of their children as long as they don't offend the State, but if they in some manner displease the State, the State can step in at any time and exercise its superior status and take custody and control of its children - the parents are only conditional caretakers. [Thus the Doctrine of In Loco Parentis.]

He also added a few more technical details. The marriage license is an ongoing contractual relationship with the State. Technically, the marriage license is a business license allowing the husband and wife, in the name of the marriage, to enter into contracts with third parties and contract mortgages and debts. They can get car loans,
home mortgages, and installment debts in the name of the marriage because it is not only a secular enterprise, but it is looked upon by the State as a privileged business enterprise as well as a for-profit business enterprise. The marriage contract acquires property through out its existence and over time, it is hoped, increases in value.

Also, the marriage contract "bears fruit" by adding children. If sometime later, the marriage fails, and a "divorce" results the contract continues in existence. The "divorce" is merely a contractual dissolution or amendment of the terms and conditions of the contract. Jurisdiction of the State over the marriage, over the husband and wife, now separated, continues and continues over all aspects of the marriage, over marital property and over children brought into the marriage.

That is why family law and the Domestic Relations court calls "divorce" a dissolution of the marriage because the contract continues in operation but in amended or modified form. He also pointed out that the marriage license contract is one of the strongest, most binding contractual relationships the State has on people.

At the end of our hour-long meeting, I somewhat humorously asked if other people had come in and asked the questions I was asking? The Assistant replied that in the several years he had worked there, he was not aware of anyone else asking these questions. He added that he was very glad to see someone interested in the legal implications of the marriage license and the contractual relationship it creates with the State.

His boss, the young woman Marriage Bureau department head stated, "You have to understand that people who come in here to get a marriage license are in heat. The last thing they want to know is technical, legal and statutory implications of the marriage license."

I hope this is helpful information to anyone interested in getting more familiar with the contractual implications of the
marriage license. The marriage license as we know it didn't come into existence until after the Civil War and didn't become standard practice in all the states until after 1900, becoming firmly established by 1920. In effect, the states or governments appropriated or usurped control of marriages in secular form and in the process declared Common Law applicable to marriages "abrogated."

Please pass this information along and share it as widely as possible.

Original message from Virgil Cooper: ultrac21@whitemtns.com



“Essentially, the husband and wife became married to the STATE; anything the two produced became the property and control of the STATE.”- - Jack Slevkoff



Such contacts can be considered void due to non-full disclosure
or can be terminated when full disclosure is realized.



A little more is at the link.

palani
20th October 2012, 04:11 AM
A contract that contains undisclosed facts (or material misrepresentation of material facts) may be made null and void nunc pro tunc.

Glass
20th October 2012, 04:13 AM
yup that about sums it up. The same principle applies to what people call property. Real or otherwise. State claims sovereignty over the people.

A farmer owns a cow and a bull. He gets a calf. The calf is owned by the cow and the bull. Right?


A contract that contains undisclosed facts (or material misrepresentation of material facts) may be made null and void nunc pro tunc.

In some cases nunc pro tunc can be refused by the other party. Or it can only be given at the approval of a Judge. One of those options is right but I'd have to go look it up again. I do it anyway, because like us out here, those guys in there don't always know all the laws. So if it's not contested go with it.

osoab
20th October 2012, 04:15 AM
A contract that contains undisclosed facts (or material misrepresentation of material facts) may be made null and void nunc pro tunc.


I was confused by that thought. I thought it was the responsibilities of the those entering the contract to know all implications.

For those that will need to look up. Using ziopedia because I am lazy.


Nunc pro tunc (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nunc_pro_tunc)

Nunc pro tunc is a Latin expression (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_phrases) in common legal use in the English language (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_language). It means now for then. In general, a court ruling "nunc pro tunc" applies retroactively to correct an earlier ruling.

Ponce
20th October 2012, 05:17 AM
All that I know is that you really need a marriage license to become husband a wife.........a license is only the means to keep track of you and yours.

First post of the day........good morning to one and all.

palani
20th October 2012, 05:49 AM
I thought it was the responsibilities of the those entering the contract to know all implications.

Go back to the courthouse to find the original license application. If all the details you describe are not FULLY spelled out then material matters of fact were withheld. In a prior day the fraud would be the phrase used but for some reason or other this word is not much in use these days (guessing because it applies to everything the state takes on). There are ways to cancel unconscionable contracts.

palani
20th October 2012, 05:51 AM
All that I know is that you really need a marriage license to become husband a wife

Consensus non concubitus facit nuptiam. Consent, not lying together, constitutes marriage.

Conjunctio mariti et faeminae est de jure naturae. The union of a man and a woman is of the law of nature.

Note the difference between a "man and a woman" and a "husband and wife".

madfranks
20th October 2012, 07:45 AM
1930s Arizona Supreme Court case states that parents have no property right in their children

Does anyone know this actual case? I tried to look it up but couldn't find anything.

7th trump
20th October 2012, 07:52 AM
Consensus non concubitus facit nuptiam. Consent, not lying together, constitutes marriage.

Conjunctio mariti et faeminae est de jure naturae. The union of a man and a woman is of the law of nature.

Note the difference between a "man and a woman" and a "husband and wife".
All that bullsit you call "law" means nothing palani.
Go read what Osoab is saying.

It comes down to having a ssn.
Without a ssn the "state" cannot attach itself.

A ssn denotes the second class citizenship called a "US citizen".
A form SS5 form is signed by the individual VOLUNTARILY under penalty of perjury to being the subject, US citizen.
Nobody has to disclose the ssn to anyone unless applying for government assistence.

You cannot get a marriage license without first disclosing a ssn on the proper "state" form.

Theres virtually nothing you can do as a "US citizen" without asking for permission first and that is disclosing the ssn on government forms.
Why any of you listen to Palani is beyond me.....he will never and has never given answers.....all you get from him is latin phrases and gibberish that he never explains.
Apparantly in palanis eyes all you have to know is how to add in latin to your posts and you know everything there is to know about law.......apparently!

palani
20th October 2012, 09:57 AM
Causality is where one event occurs and that event is the proximate cause of another event. The ssn has nothing to do with a marriage license. Marriage licenses were issued long before the ssn came into existence. You can tell how irrational someone is by their refusal to apply logic to facts. My observation is the 7th trump lives in a fantasy world of his own making. I have noticed that quite a few Deere employees behave the same way but, what the heck, they produce good products so best to indulge them in their fantasy as long as they only intend to injure themselves.

Hatha Sunahara
20th October 2012, 10:15 AM
If a license is permission to do something that would otherwise be illegal, then is it illegal to get married? It's not even illegal to get married without a license. Marriage licenses are an intelligence test for slaves. If you believe you need to have one to get married, by all means, go out and get one. If you can agree with your spouse to be that it is unnecessary, then you would be better off not inviting the state to be a part of your marriage contract. The state will not protect either of you if it comes down to needing protection.

Nobody in the United States had a marriage license, other than people involved in interracial marriages, prior to 1920. So why does everybody think they need one today to get married? It really is an intelligence test for slaves. It was actually a control mechanism to prevent racial mixing because marriage licenses were originally only pertinent to marriages of black slaves to white free people. New York was the first state to institute such a marriage license. After the 14th amendment, we all assumed the status of freed slaves. But how many people know any of this?

And Palani, if you get a marriage license, and subsequently you discover what is in this contract, and you deem it to be constructive fraud (committed by the state), you have to consider that your remedy has to be sought in an institution of the state--the courts--who are a part of this fraud committed upon you.

There is also a doctrine called Parens Patriae--which assumes that the State is the parent of all its citizens, and as a parent has the right to grant or deny permission to its citizens to do anything--as a parent assumes with a small child. There is an excellent discussion of this concept at Barefoot's World--Here:

http://www.barefootsworld.net/parensp.html

There is also a You Tube series of videos by Joyce Rosenwald on The State as Parent.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wkuhPpfLWas

These concepts are rock core fundamentalst principles for statists and other authority worshipping types. My god, what would we do without the state?

I am concluding that the loss of our freedoms has a lot to do with the ignorance of the masses. And their unwillingness or inability to overcome that ignorance.


Hatha

madfranks
20th October 2012, 10:41 AM
I got married before I "woke up", so my wife and I do have the license. I regret signing it and even having it be a part of our marriage. I am trying to verify the accuracy of the OP, and may pursue options to nullify the license if it really means what the OP suggests.

joboo
20th October 2012, 10:54 AM
Marriage is a lot like a deck of cards.

It starts off with two hearts, and a diamond, and winds up with two clubs, and a spade.;)

palani
20th October 2012, 11:01 AM
if you get a marriage license, and subsequently you discover what is in this contract, and you deem it to be constructive fraud (committed by the state), you have to consider that your remedy has to be sought in an institution of the state--the courts--who are a part of this fraud committed upon you.

Hatha

You don't do ANYTHING with a court that you don't want to do. Your consent is vital to the process so just don't give it.

The remedy is by public notice and estoppel and laches. You use the remedy when anyone chooses to cause you to appear in court. If you don't do this then your YEAS are not YEAS and your NAYS are not NAYS. Once you have cancelled an unconscionable contract then it no longer exists.

Twisted Titan
20th October 2012, 01:29 PM
I got married before I "woke up", so my wife and I do have the license. I regret signing it and even having it be a part of our marriage. I am trying to verify the accuracy of the OP, and may pursue options to nullify the license if it reali ly means what the OP suggests.


i would leave it be if for no other reason if in the event of your demise your assets and such become the property oc your wife

if you die and there is no standing agreement the state can (and will) swoop in during probate and claim everything of value. it will be a highly emotional time you dont want to add to it with trying to navigate the probate system.

its not kind to widows and childern

palani
20th October 2012, 01:46 PM
if you die and there is no standing agreement the state can (and will) swoop in during probate and claim everything of value. ...its not kind to widows and childern

The four organic documents that form the U.S. are (in order of creation)
1)Declaration of Independence
2) Articles of Confederation
3) Northwest Ordinance
4) U.S. constitution

Most people ignore the Northwest Ordinance but when it comes to inheritance they shouldn't


Sec 2. Be it ordained by the authority aforesaid, That the estates, both of resident and nonresident proprietors in the said territory, dying intestate, shall descent to, and be distributed among their children, and the descendants of a deceased child, in equal parts; the descendants of a deceased child or grandchild to take the share of their deceased parent in equal parts among them: And where there shall be no children or descendants, then in equal parts to the next of kin in equal degree; and among collaterals, the children of a deceased brother or sister of the intestate shall have, in equal parts among them, their deceased parents' share; and there shall in no case be a distinction between kindred of the whole and half blood; saving, in all cases, to the widow of the intestate her third part of the real estate for life, and one third part of the personal estate; and this law relative to descents and dower, shall remain in full force until altered by the legislature of the district. And until the governor and judges shall adopt laws as hereinafter mentioned, estates in the said territory may be devised or bequeathed by wills in writing, signed and sealed by him or her in whom the estate may be (being of full age), and attested by three witnesses; and real estates may be conveyed by lease and release, or bargain and sale, signed, sealed and delivered by the person being of full age, in whom the estate may be, and attested by two witnesses, provided such wills be duly proved, and such conveyances be acknowledged, or the execution thereof duly proved, and be recorded within one year after proper magistrates, courts, and registers shall be appointed for that purpose; and personal property may be transferred by delivery; saving, however to the French and Canadian inhabitants, and other settlers of the Kaskaskies, St. Vincents and the neighboring villages who have heretofore professed themselves citizens of Virginia, their laws and customs now in force among them, relative to the descent and conveyance, of property.

If you examine this article closely you will find
1) no probate
2) no portion of the estate going to the "state"

You really do yourself and your family a disservice by having a will that requires probate.

7th trump
20th October 2012, 03:08 PM
If a license is permission to do something that would otherwise be illegal, then is it illegal to get married? It's not even illegal to get married without a license. Marriage licenses are an intelligence test for slaves. If you believe you need to have one to get married, by all means, go out and get one. If you can agree with your spouse to be that it is unnecessary, then you would be better off not inviting the state to be a part of your marriage contract. The state will not protect either of you if it comes down to needing protection.

Nobody in the United States had a marriage license, other than people involved in interracial marriages, prior to 1920. So why does everybody think they need one today to get married? It really is an intelligence test for slaves. It was actually a control mechanism to prevent racial mixing because marriage licenses were originally only pertinent to marriages of black slaves to white free people. New York was the first state to institute such a marriage license. After the 14th amendment, we all assumed the status of freed slaves. But how many people know any of this?

And Palani, if you get a marriage license, and subsequently you discover what is in this contract, and you deem it to be constructive fraud (committed by the state), you have to consider that your remedy has to be sought in an institution of the state--the courts--who are a part of this fraud committed upon you.

There is also a doctrine called Parens Patriae--which assumes that the State is the parent of all its citizens, and as a parent has the right to grant or deny permission to its citizens to do anything--as a parent assumes with a small child. There is an excellent discussion of this concept at Barefoot's World--Here:

http://www.barefootsworld.net/parensp.html

There is also a You Tube series of videos by Joyce Rosenwald on The State as Parent.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wkuhPpfLWas

These concepts are rock core fundamentalst principles for statists and other authority worshipping types. My god, what would we do without the state?

I am concluding that the loss of our freedoms has a lot to do with the ignorance of the masses. And their unwillingness or inability to overcome that ignorance.


Hatha
You hit the nail on the head Hatha.
The marriage license was a license for whites to marry a black.
So in response to palani and his gooble gook latin law bla bla bla.....yes the marriage license predates the ssn.

Furthermore, only the same 14th amendment "US citizen" which the 14th amendment originally were the colored people can receive the ssn.
This doesnt mean a white, one who is the "People", cannot apply and fall within the same jurisdiction of the colored races.
This is why when you apply for a ssn you sign the application under penalty of perjury to being....you guessed it .........in the same jurisdiction as the not freely colored race.
But nobody listening to palani would know lawful fact about the marriage license and ssn because palani's got his listeners all bedazzled with his recital of latin grammar.

palani
20th October 2012, 03:11 PM
palani's got his listeners all bedazzled with his recital of latin grammar.
Apparently I have YOU bedazzled but don't feel bad. I have a career invested in straightening out electricians.

Horn
20th October 2012, 03:12 PM
Thanks,

The next one that asks for me a divorce, I can now correct her and say,

"No you want a dissolution"

palani
20th October 2012, 04:39 PM
The marriage license was a license for whites to marry a black.

As reported in The Iowa Age from Clinton, Iowa in 1871
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=n3sXDxCj2GoC&dat=18710120&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
http://i48.tinypic.com/33y71pt.jpg

Sure was a lot of racial mixing going on in the central part of the state then.

palani
20th October 2012, 04:41 PM
Thanks,

The next one that asks for me a divorce, I can now correct her and say,

"No you want a dissolution"

Remember .. you gotta give her the dowry back.

osoab
20th October 2012, 06:49 PM
Does anyone know this actual case? I tried to look it up but couldn't find anything.

madfranks, I have searched quite a bit this evening and couldn't find a damned thing to reference a case. I will keep looking as time permits.

You would think the author of the story would have at least given the decision.