In New Zealand, the state runs on fraud. The fraud relates to the union of the church and state and originates with the house of Windsor, who institutionalized New Zealand's civil government. The head of state of New Zealand has the title of "Defender of the Faith and Supreme Governor of the Church of England", and the religious connection with the ministers of parliament, judges, and police is the oath of allegiance since an oath is an act of religion.
All fraud involves a falsehood, and the falsehood here is the state's misrepresentation of the law of the land, which is also called common law. The common law originated in England with King Alfred the Great, who wrote his "dooms" (judgments) to make the common law known within his kingdom. What he wrote began with the Saxon version of the ten commandments, and included some of the Judaic law, making it a theistic system of law. The theistic nature of the common law is recognised by well-known writers like William Blackstone, and by the authors of mainstream dictionaries of law like Blacks, which in it's fifth edition described lex terre as the common law or law of the land, and said that in the strictest sense it means the privilege of making oath. However, the state doesn't mention this, and it describes the common law simply as case law (the decisions of judges made in court).
For there to be an actual fraud there has to be some loss or injury resulting from a falsehood. In this case the loss is the failure of the state to recognize the existence of the natural right of liberty, which is a part of the common law. Liberty of movement involves the ability to move from place to place without any undue restriction, and licensing of ordinary use public roads only occurs as a result of the failure of the state to recognize this right.
As well as the fraud there is the hypocrisy of a state in which the head of state swore a coronation oath to keep the "laws of God", while that state lies about the role of deity within the law. This hypocrisy can be traced back to Christianity itself, since the canonical texts of the religion impeach one of the authors of the books of the Bible as a liar and a hypocrite. The author Paul, sometimes called the thirteenth apostle, is impeached by the book of Acts which records him lying about the events on the road to Damascus (Acts 22 vs Acts 26). In the gospels the Pharisees were condemned as hypocrites, and Paul is recorded as claiming to be a Pharisee after he took up preaching amongst the first century disciples.
The misrepresentation of the common law by the state is a form of corruption, and this has major implications for the concept of parliamentary sovereignty and the idea that parliament makes law that is universally binding on the people of New Zealand.
All fraud involves a falsehood, and the falsehood here is the state's misrepresentation of the law of the land, which is also called common law. The common law originated in England with King Alfred the Great, who wrote his "dooms" (judgments) to make the common law known within his kingdom. What he wrote began with the Saxon version of the ten commandments, and included some of the Judaic law, making it a theistic system of law. The theistic nature of the common law is recognised by well-known writers like William Blackstone, and by the authors of mainstream dictionaries of law like Blacks, which in it's fifth edition described lex terre as the common law or law of the land, and said that in the strictest sense it means the privilege of making oath. However, the state doesn't mention this, and it describes the common law simply as case law (the decisions of judges made in court).
For there to be an actual fraud there has to be some loss or injury resulting from a falsehood. In this case the loss is the failure of the state to recognize the existence of the natural right of liberty, which is a part of the common law. Liberty of movement involves the ability to move from place to place without any undue restriction, and licensing of ordinary use public roads only occurs as a result of the failure of the state to recognize this right.
As well as the fraud there is the hypocrisy of a state in which the head of state swore a coronation oath to keep the "laws of God", while that state lies about the role of deity within the law. This hypocrisy can be traced back to Christianity itself, since the canonical texts of the religion impeach one of the authors of the books of the Bible as a liar and a hypocrite. The author Paul, sometimes called the thirteenth apostle, is impeached by the book of Acts which records him lying about the events on the road to Damascus (Acts 22 vs Acts 26). In the gospels the Pharisees were condemned as hypocrites, and Paul is recorded as claiming to be a Pharisee after he took up preaching amongst the first century disciples.
The misrepresentation of the common law by the state is a form of corruption, and this has major implications for the concept of parliamentary sovereignty and the idea that parliament makes law that is universally binding on the people of New Zealand.