|
DEFENDING YOUR RIGHT TO TRAVEL
Form #06.010
114 pages;10 chapters
Click here for a sample
History of Changes
|
Defending Your Right
To Travel is a detailed study into how to drive a
vehicle safely and responsibly in modern society without using
any kind of government-issued license.
This book contains detailed administrative procedures, instructions,
and forms intended to:
- Accelerate your study and learning about your right
to travel.
- Provide simple and effective guidelines on how to deal
with traffic stops for those who have no license.
- Give you ideas and resources for getting insurance or
proof of financial responsibility without having a Social
Security Number or license.
- Show you how to challenge policemen and judges when
they wrongfully and illegally assert authority.
- Provide strategies useful in traffic court.
- Provide links to resources on the web that may be useful
for specific situations you may find yourself in.
It comes with editable versions of the forms contained in
Chapter 9 that you may reuse.
|
Defending Your Right to Travel
draws on works from several prominent sources and authors, such as:
- The
U.S. Constitution.
- Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
- State traffic codes.
- State traffic court cases.
- The United States
Code (U.S.C.), Title 26 (Internal Revenue Code), both the current
version and amended past versions.
- U.S. Supreme Court
Cases.
- Several websites.
The book is made available in Adobe Acrobat
5.0 or later format. It is electronically searchable, and you
can navigate to any section using the bookmarks organized as a table
of contents on the left of the screen. If you want a printed copy,
simply download it and then follow the instructions on the front cover
which describe how to make a printed copy at any Kinkos or other duplicating
store.
Click here if you are having
trouble downloading or viewing or using the above document
NOTE:
You will need to download and install the free
Adobe
Acrobat Reader version 5.0 or higher
from the Adobe website at http://www.adobe.com
in order to view the document. If you don't update to
the very latest Acrobat reader, then you may get errors opening
or reading the document. We recommend that you also click
on the "Show/Hide Navigation Pane" button in the left portion of
your screen in order to simplify navigating around in this document.
Below is a complete outline of the content
of this very extensive work.
PREFACE
Revision History
Table or Contents
Table of Authorities
Cases
Statutes
Regulations
Other Authorities
Index
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1 Purpose of this document
1.2 Intended Audience
2. RIGHTS v. PRIVILEGES
2.1 Rights Defined and Explained
2.2 Fundamental Rights: Granted by God and Cannot be Regulated
by the Government
2.3 What is the Difference Between a "Right" and a "Privilege"?
2.4 A right cannot be converted into either a privilege or
a crime by the state
2.5 Why you shouldn't cite federal statutes as authority for
protecting your rights
3. DRIVER'S LICENSING
3.1 The Right to Travel
3.2 Rights Given Up by Getting a Driver's License
3.3 Legal Requirement for Driver's License
3.3 Social Security Numbers and Driver's Licenses
3.3.1 Background
3.3.2 State of California Driver's License SSN requirements
3.3.3 Do I have to give the State my SSN to get a driver's license?
3.3.4 State Driver's License Laws Relating to SSNs
3.3.5 Penalties for providing false Social Security Numbers
3.3.6 Quitting Social Security and Gifting your Driver's License
to the Social Security Administration
3.5 Suspension of Driver's License
3.6 Risks and Penalties of Driving Without a License
3.7 Strategies and techniques for driving without a license
3.7.1 Group or Associational Driver's Licenses
3.7.2 Letters of Disqualification
3.7.3 Canceling your Driver's License the Right Way
3.7.4 Getting a foreign driver's license
3.7.5 Certificates of Competency from Driving Schools
3.7.6 Ways to avoid being "barcoded" by the state with
a Slave Surveillance Number (SSN) and still get a Driver's License
3.7.7 International Driving Permit (IDP)
3.7.8 Getting Insurance or Proof of financial responsibility
WITHOUT a driver's license and/or SSN
3.8 Responding to a police officer who stops you for driving without
a license
3.9 Techniques to avoid giving officers probable cause to stop you
to begin with
4. VEHICLE REGISTRATION
AND LICENSE PLATES
4.1 Registering vehicles in foreign states
4.2 Protecting your license plate number from automated photography
systems
5. PASSPORTS AND IDENTIFICATION
5.1 State identification
5.2 Government Passports
5.3 Private Passports
5.4 Military ID cards
5.5 Private IDs
6. DEFINITIONS AND AUTHORITIES
6.1 "automobile" v. "motor vehicle"
6.2 "business"
6.3 "commercial driver's license"
6.4 "commercial motor vehicle"
6.5 "commercial vehicle"
6.6 "conversion of a right to a crime"
6.7 "county"
6.8 "dealer"
6.9 "driver"
6.10 "driver's license"
6.11 "foreign jurisdiction"
6.12 "foreign vehicle"
6.13 "franchise"
6.14 "franchisee"
6.15 "franchisor"
6.16 "highway"
6.17 "legal owner"
6.18 "license"
6.19 "motor carrier"
6.20 "motor vehicle"
6.21 "new vehicle"
6.22 "nonresident"
6.23 "operator"
6.24 "passenger vehicle"
6.25 "person"
6.26 "police power"
6.27 "registered owner"
6.28 "regulation"
6.29 "resident"
6.30 "road"
6.31 "State"
6.32 "street"
6.33 "traffic"
6.34 "travel"
6.35 "vehicle"
7. LOOPHOLES IN STATE
LAWS REGARDING RIGHT TO TRAVEL
7.1 Idaho
7.1.1 No driver's license required
7.1.2 Your car is a recreational vehicle
7.2 Oregon
7.2.1 No driver's license required
7.2.2 Your car is a recreational vehicle
7.3 Washington
7.3.1 No driver's license required
7.3.2 Your car is a recreational vehicle
7.3.3 There is no seat belt law
7.3.4 No insurance required
8. RESOURCES FOR TAX FREEDOM
FIGHTERS
8.1 Websites
8.2 Books and Publications
9. FORMS
9.1 Attachment to Driver's License Application/Renewal
9.2 Attachment to Government form which asks for Social Security
Number
9.3 Request DMV Legal Department to Modify/Rescind Driver's License
|