What Would Change Under Common or Constitutional Law: A Return to True Justice
On the horizon, a new America awaits.
As America faces an unprecedented awakening, more citizens are questioning the legitimacy of the laws that govern them. Most people assume they are protected by the Constitution, but in reality, we are often subject to corporate statutes enforced under maritime or admiralty jurisdiction. This legal system, rooted in commercial contract law, is a far cry from the common law and constitutional law that the founders intended. So, what would change if we re-established the nation under common law or constitutional law?
Under constitutional law, you are innocent until proven guilty. The burden is on the government to prove your guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Today, under statutory law, you’re often presumed guilty unless you can afford to prove otherwise. The rise of administrative courts, traffic courts, and family courts has allowed presumptions and penalties without due process.
Common law operates on a very clear principle. No victim, no crime. If no person has been harmed or property damaged, then there is no crime. Under statutory law, people are penalized for violating rules such as expired tags, licensing, zoning codes, or mandates, even if no harm has been done. These are technically crimes against the state, not individuals. Restoring common law would eliminate thousands of victimless crimes and end the endless stream of revenue-generating tickets, fines, and jailings.
Most Americans don’t realize that their names, written in all capital letters on legal documents, represent a corporate fiction, not their living self. Under common law, only living men and women have rights, not corporations, agencies, or legal entities. Courts would be required to recognize the living soul, not a trust account created at birth.
Constitutional law forbids fiat currency. The Constitution states only gold and silver shall be lawful tender. This alone would dismantle the Federal Reserve system and remove private banks from printing the money supply. The dollar would be backed by tangible value, and inflation would be minimized. Contracts would once again require full disclosure, mutual consent, and a meeting of the minds. This would eliminate the use of deceptive terms and predatory lending that have plagued mortgages, insurance, and employment.
Agencies like the IRS, EPA, FDA, CDC, and others issue regulations treated as law. But under constitutional governance, only Congress can make laws and only through proper legislative process. The entire administrative state would be reigned in or dismantled. Officials and public servants would be held liable for their actions, not shielded by qualified immunity or secret deals.
Today, many trials are manipulated through jury selection, judge interference, or plea deals. Under common law, a trial would require a jury of peers, meaning people who actually know the defendant or are from the community. Judges would act as referees, not rulers, and the jury would be the highest authority in the courtroom, not the court itself.
In a constitutional republic, the county sheriff is the top legal authority, not federal agencies or even the state police. A return to this would empower local communities to reject federal overreach, protect private property, and enforce constitutional rights over globalist agendas.
Under constitutional law, your rights come from God, not the government. That means you don’t need permission to build on your own land, travel freely, keep and bear arms, speak your mind, or practice your religion. Licenses, permits, and fees are tools of privilege, not rights. Under true law, no man or woman can be forced to ask permission to do what they have a natural right to do.
Public servants would be held to their oath of office under penalty of treason or dereliction of duty. No more lobbying behind closed doors, immunity from prosecution, or executive overreach. Every official, elected or appointed, would answer to the people directly.
Currently, we are often tried under admiralty law, which governs ships, commerce, and war. That’s why flags in courtrooms often have gold fringes, a military jurisdiction symbol. Common law removes this wartime framework and re-establishes peaceful civil justice governed by the will of the people, not corporate interests or foreign policies.
A return to common and constitutional law isn’t just a nostalgic wish, it is a lifeline for a republic under siege. It would restore liberty, dignity, and responsibility to individuals, reduce corruption, and decentralize power back to the people. As more awaken to the reality of legal deception, the movement toward lawful governance gains momentum.
The Constitution is not dead. It has just been buried beneath the weight of statutes, agencies, and global interests. It’s time we dig it up and breathe life into it once more.
Get Ready!
Superb explanation and breakdown of Common Law and Constitutional Law.
Sincere thanks, Anonymous!
It sounds as if djt operates under statutory law