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View Full Version : Achilles' Heel, is "You"



Mark
1st October 2013, 12:58
(http://iamid.co.uk/blog/)

"Who “you” are, is no longer the question. The question is, who “IS” you. The word “you”
gets more people into trouble than any other word currently utilized within our legal and
financial systems.
It is virtually impossible to fully explain the proper grammatical usage of the word “you”,
insofar as proper English is concerned.
Wikipedia: You (stressed /ˈjuː/; unstressed /jə/) is the second-person personal pronoun in
Modern English. Ye was the original nominative form; the oblique/objective form is you
(functioning originally as both accusative and dative), and the possessive is your or
yours.
YourDictionary.com: you (yo̅ ̵o̅)
pronoun pl. you
1. the person to whom one is speaking or writing: personal pronoun in the second
person (sing. & pl.): you is the nominative and objective form (sing. & pl.), yours the
possessive (sing. & pl.), and yourself (sing.) and yourselves (pl.) the reflexive and
intensive; your is the possessive pronominal adjective
2. any person: equivalent in sense to indefinite one: you can never be sure!
Note: Though you is properly a plural, it is in all ordinary discourse used also in
addressing a single person, yet properly always with a plural verb. (No confusion here!)
Loosely, the word “you” is a pronoun, that cannot be properly grammatically used
according to English language rules. When spoken, “you” is commonly heard by
everyone present, as if it were being addressed to each of them, individually, in a singular
sense. We erroneously hear a singular inclination of the properly plural expression, as in
one speaking to a group and saying; “I’m happy to share this with you.”
Properly, “you” is indeed “plural”, yet the word “you” is often spoken as if it were in
reference to a singular man or woman. In such instances, the word “you” induces a
natural inclination for everyone in an audience to hear it as being addressed singularly to
a specific individual within that audience, particularly if the word “you” follows an
antecedent noun; as in one speaking to that same group, and saying; “Yes George, I’m
happy to share this with you.”
In “law”, this word “you”, is properly utilized in all ordinary legal discourse when
addressing the singular mind (or the single party with volition) within the plural-natureconstruct
of a PERSON. The PERSON being comprised of a man that answers for, or is
liable for that PERSON, and the corporate entity that IS that PERSON. In this sense,
addressing a PERSON, as “you”, is actually as close to a proper use of the word “you”,
as anyone could imagine.
Thus the personal pronoun “you”, being both singular and plural, properly addresses the
essential plural nature of the single PERSON entity. The key to benefiting from this, is to
grasp who the correct (plural) components are within that single PERSON entity.

Mark
1st October 2013, 12:58
So here are some thought provoking examples:
A judge might say; “Mr. John Smith, I find “you” guilty.” The question arises, then; “who”
is this particular “you”, considering “you” is plural?
The answer may well be in the judge’s next question; “Mr. Smith, do “you” have anything
to say?” Notice, the judge is not properly asking if Mr. John Smith has anything to say, he
is rather improperly asking John Smith, if “you” has anything to say. Thus, whoever
answers, voluntarily defines himself as being in joinder with “you”, and concurrently
accepts the guilty verdict, for the PERSON, Mr. Smith.
Check out any court transcripts you can find, and in not one instance, will you ever find
an example of a judge saying; “I find you, Mr. John Smith, guilty.”
Likewise, find someone high up in the banking system that alleges that “you” owe their
bank money. You will NEVER get them to say “John Smith owes $XXXX to this bank and
therefore John Smith must pay $XXXX to this bank.” Rather they will only always ever
say something like; “You owe $XXXX to this bank, therefore you must pay $XXXX to this
bank.” Even a judge’s order will say something like; “John Smith, I order “you” to pay”.
Even when asked directly to just repeat, “John Smith owes $XXXX to their bank”, they
will either terminate the conversation, or continue to ask; “are you John Smith?”, and
when you respond with “yes”, they repeat that “then you owe $XXX to their bank.” When
asked directly while on a telephone conversation, if they intend to continue to refuse to
say, “John Smith owes $XXXX to their bank”, they generally just get angry and hang up.
I guess we all should be looking for “you”, since “you” is the one, and apparently the only
one, that can be found guilty, or that must pay whatever is owed. Check out collection
notices. Again, it is always “you” that must pay, or action will be taken against “you”.
This is not just silly grammar, and there is good reason to explain it this way. Okay, here
is why. “You”, in legal and financial discourse (which differs from otherwise “normal” language) ,
refers to the duality inherent within, and of, the party that is liable for the essential plural
nature of the single PERSON-corporate-entity, or who at least is prepared to volunteer to
accept responsibility and or liability thereto. The PERSON, a.k.a., the Estate, is at a
minimum, comprised of a decedent, and an Executor, hence the duality/plurality of its
nature, which justifies correctly addressing it with the inherent plurality of the word, “you”.
You see, a PERSON, without its Executor, has no volition, and thus cannot answer to
anyone, judge or banker included. Only a man can answer. The problem arises in that
men are outside, or above the jurisdiction of judges and bankers; i.e., “only a PERSON
may commit an offence”. Hence a judge will not ask a man per se, nor will he ask the
PERSON to answer, he will only ask “you” to answer, in hopes that a man will volunteer
to respond as and for the plural “you” – the PERSON. He also knows very well that he
cannot directly ask the PERSON to answer, because a PERSON is a fiction entity, a.k.a.
corporate being without volition, and cannot answer.
Judges and bankers also know that all PERSONS are domiciled offshore (corporate bodies
registered in foreign jurisdictions), hence they have no domestic jurisdiction over those
PERSONS. Therefore it would be futile to find a PERSON guilty, or to attempt to force a
PERSON to pay a debt, or to pay taxes.Who paid the tax in the Messiah’s day? Well, not
the sons, or the domestic ones, but rather the Strangers and the foreigners. Thus, the
CRA collects the tax, a.k.a., they re-venue it, from a PERSON domiciled in a foreign
jurisdiction so they can comply with scripture.
Hence it is not futile to find a man to volunteer to be “you”, because “you” can indeed, be
found guilty, and “you” can be ordered to pay debts and taxes, and in most cases,
historically at least, “you” has very obediently served the sentences and paid the debts
and the taxes for, and as, the foreign PERSONS. And besides, only a “you”, a.k.a., a
man acting concurrently as a man and as a decedent, within the construct of a PERSON,
can answer a question, or pay a debt or taxes, or cause them to be paid, for, as, or on
behalf of that foreign PERSON.
Many have heard that “sometimes” when a man informs the judge, that the judge has
been appointed as “Trustee”, the judge will dismiss the case, but not always. “You” is
also directly related to the reason for this seemingly inconsistent behaviour.
In truth, the PERSON is legally considered an Estate for a “decedent”. This decedent, or
dead man, constitutes the basis, or claim of right to the property of the Estate, a.k.a.,
PERSON. Only an Executor of an Estate can make appointments, such as those of
Trustee or Beneficiary. If a man appoints a judge as the Trustee, then initially, the judge
will correctly presume that you, the man (not “you” the PERSON), has assumed your rightful
role as Executor of the subject Estate. And unless the judge can trick you, the man into
admitting that you, the man is not the Executor, without asking you, the man directly, the
judge will continue on this presumption, and dismiss the case against the plural “you”, the
PERSON.
The judge knows that if you, the man, is the Executor, that you, the man can indeed
appoint him as Trustee, and concurrently hold him liable, as a Trustee. However, if “you”,
the mistaken man, claims to be, or lets himself be tricked by the judge, into being
something like a Grantor, or a Beneficiary, of an undefined, or allegedly undisclosed, or
implied Trust (as opposed to Executor of the subject Estate), then the judge will rapidly find
“you” the PERSON, guilty, because he will then re-place himself as de facto Executor.
Oh, and get over the false and silly idea that it matters, or that the court even cares
whether or not you, the man write the name of the PERSON’s Estate in all capital letters,
a combination of upper and lower case letters, or Chinese symbols.
It DOES NOT MATTER. The PERSON is still defined as an Estate of a decedent,
registered in a foreign jurisdiction, regardless of how you write it’s name. “You” can, and
more importantly you do make joinder with the PERSON’s Estate, regardless of how its
name is written, simply when, and by answering to, “you”.
Inasmuch as I am me, who is “you”?"