Rights By Jared M. Held, Sui Juris "You have rights antecedent to all earthly government; rights that cannot be repealed or restrained by human laws; rights derived from the Great Legislator of the Universe."John Adams I walked into the courtroom and found a seat. As someone who is interested in the workings of a court, I like to visit them from time to time. Before the judge came in, the bailiff settled everyone down and began a tape recording of what he said were our "constitutional rights." Loudspeaker blared the distorted recording: "You have the right to counsel, You have the right to a speedy trial. You have the right not to be a witness against yourself..." The information on the tape made it sound as if the government, and the U.S. Constitution, gaves us these rights. My mind wandered as I thought of other legal matters. I thought about Rodney King and all the fuss about his "civil Rights." His fundamental, inalienable rights as a human being were never mentioned. [See " Inalienable Rights"] Civil rights, human rights, natrual rights, inalienable rights, constitutional rights, sovereign rights . . . Which do we have? Which of these protect us? Which do we want. Are the rights of a U.S. citizen different than those of someone whose political status and Citizenship, like mine, are that of a California Citizen, or of any state? The difference lies in one's status, or citizenship. Citizenship is a political status.[See; Ex parte(ng) Fung Sing, U.S. Supreme Court; D.C. 6 F.R.D.] As a California Citizen, a different set of laws and rights apply to me than to those who are "citizen of the United States" (i.e. citizen of the District of Columbia, or federal government) Historical Perspective In 1783, after the Revolutionary War, the Treaty of Peace was signed by the King of England and our founding fathers. The power of this treaty, which profoundly affected American Law, as the couts latter stated: The people of the state, as the successors of its former soverereign, are entitled to all the rights that formerly belonged to the king by his own prerogative. Lansing v. Smith, 21 Dall. (21 U.S.) 89 (1829) Since all citizens, at that time were citizens of their respective states, it was the people of the states who possessed those rights, not the "citizens of the United States." When the U.S. Constitution was written, "technically ans abstractly there [was] no such thing" [See; Ex parte Frank Knowles, 5 Cal. 300 (1855)] as a citizen of the United States. State Citizens, through the power vested in them by the sovereign declaration in the Treaty of Peace, created states and state Constitution as restriction and limitation on the State government, and through the states came the Federal Constitution creating the Federal Governement. This Constitution was also a restrictions and limitations on the federal government. In this way, the power flows from the people to thegovernment, not at all the way the courtroom's tape had explained it, there version made it sound that the power flowed from the government to the people.[See: U.S. Constitution Amedments 9,10] This why the opening words of the Constitution are "We the People." No less an authority than the U.S. Supreme Court has written: The question is not what power the federal Government ought to have but what powers in fact have been given by the people . . . . The federal union is a government of delegated powers. It has only such as are expressly confered upon it and such as are resonably to be implied from those granted. U.S. v. Butler, 297, Us. 1 (1935) Civil Rights The "citizens of the United States" did not exist until after the Civil War.[See: Cory et al. v. Carter, Indiana Supreme Court ruling (1874)] In 1866, as the forerunner of the 14th Amedment, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act. Through this law, Congress created a new class of rights for freed former slaves who were not included with those sovereign rights by the Treaty of Peace and who, therefore, had no access to the courts. These newly classified "person" [i.e. not people] were thereby given civil rights Civil rights were said to be the same as those that the state Citizen already had, by virue of his/her birth and blood. Through the alleged "ratification" of the 14th Amendment[See: Congressional Record, June 13, 1967, pp. 15641 to 15646; Dyett v. Turner, 20 Utah 2d 403, 439 P.2d 266 (1968)] and latter through the Social Security Act, these civil rights extended, through deliberate non-disclosure, to almost everyone in America. As one request a Social Security (account) number, one claims to be a U.S. citizen; all benefits and civil rights then become part of the now converted "person's" life In this way, nearly everyone in the states has "voluntarily" gave up their inalienable rights, God given fundamental rights and sovereign status to granted the "privileges and immunities" of civil rights as subjects of Congress, i.e., U.S. citizens. Civil rights are "privileges" given to the U.S. citizens and are "protected by Congress." as stated in Title 42 of the United States Code Annotated(USCA) at Section 1983, note 853: Rights under 42 USC Sec. 1983 are for citizens of the United States and not of state[Emphasis added] When enjoys civil right, then he or she is regulated by the body that gave those rights. as the California Court of Appeals stated: A civil right is a right given and protected by law, and a person's enjoyment therefore is regulated entirely by the law that created it.[Emphasis added] Nickell v. Rosenfield, 82 Cal.App. 369, 375 (1927) In other words, one's civil rights, unlike one's inalienable rights, are regulated by the government(Congress), who grants them and who, therefore, can take them away. In this way, even the protections secured by the Bill of Rights become "privileges" granted by the 14th Amendment, which apply to all U.S. citizens. Inalienable Rights Because only one class of people existed when America was founded, the following rights, protected by the Bill of Rights, were considered inalienable: the rights of religious freedom, freedoms of speech and press ; the right to bear arms; no quarting of soldiers; the right to privvacy and security against unreasonable searches and seizures; the right no to be a witness against oneself (commonly referred to as "self incrimination"), and to due process of law; the right to a speedy and public trial; the right to an impartial jury and assistance of counsel (not necessarily a licensed attorney); the right to trial by jury; excessive bail, fines and punishment prohibited; rights beyond the Bill of Rights belong to the people; and undeligated powers belong to the people, unless given by the people to the states. People in the courtroom were informed of their civil rights, not of their inalienable rights or sovereign rights, because most Americans have been tricked into believing they are "citizens of the United States." Most have no idea that by claiming U.S. citizenship, they voluntarily choose civil rights instead of their natural birhtright. For the U.S. citizen the Bill of Rights, then, becomes merely a list of granted privileges offered through the 14th Amendment, whereas, for the state Citizen, they are fundamental rights of a free government. Differences in Citizenship In 1908, the Supreme Court spelled out some of the differences between the rights of national citizenship and those of state Citizenship: The distinction between national and state citizenship [sic] and their respective priviledges there drawn has come to be firmly established. And so it was held that the right of peaceable assembly for a lawful purpose (it not appearing that that the purpose had any reference to the national government) was not a right secured by the Constitution of the United States, although it was said that the right existed before the adoption of the Constitution of the United States, and that is and always has been one of the attributes of citizenship under a free government. Twining v. State of New Jersey, 211 U.S. 78, 29 S.Ct. 14(1908) The opinion goes on to say: If,then it be assumed, without deciding the point, that an exemption from self-incrimination is what is described as a fundamental right belonging to all who live under a free government, and inccapable of impairment by legislation or judicial decision, it is so far as the states are conserned, a fundamental right inharent in state citizenship [sic], and is a privilege or immunity of that citizenship only. Privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, on the other hand are only such that arise out of the nature and esential character of the national government, or are specifically granted by the Constitution of the United States. (i.e., 14th Amendment)[Emphasis added] Twining (Ibid.) Privileges The Supreme Court then listed the following "Six Privileges of National citizenship"(i.e., U.S. citizenship) Thus, among the rights and privileges of national citizenship recognized by this are: the right to pass freely from state to state; the right to petition Congress for redress of grievances; the right to vote for national officers; the right to enter the public lands; the right to be protected against violance while in the lawful custody of a United States marshal;and and the right to inform the United States authorities of violation of its law. [M]ost of these cases (citations omitted were indictments against individuals for conspiracies to deprive persons of rights secured by the Constitution of the United States, and met with a different fate in this court from the indictments in United States v. Cruikshank and Hodges v. United States, because the rights in these case were rights of state, and not of national citizenship. We can assume it to be true, then, that the exemption from self-incrimination is not a fundamental right of national citizenship, included in the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States.Twining (Ibid.) The protection of the Fifth Amendment is, in fact a fundamental right of state Citizenship and that Citizenship only.Remembr that the state constitutions were written before the federal Constitution. These rights were enumerated in the state constitutions and "existed before the adoption of the Constitution of the United States." (Ibid.) Obviously, a court of law, through it can inspire many useful insights, has little to do with where or what our rights truly are, or can be. State Citizenship adds a whole new persective to what we have been led to believe and is certainly something that needs to more widely understood. Back to Article Index Created: 30 Aug, 1995 Updated: Wednesday, April 16, 1997 2:50:36 PM © copyright 1995 Jah Red Productions