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Thanks, Open. 

Just a couple of related comments. One is about just how much social media and Google track and identify us. I have apps which block them and name them all (rather like greys of the internet). It's a shame to have to choose between connecting and some really great insightful and inspiring videos; and being watched all the time.

Did anyone else's town get new extra nosy CCTV around lockdown? And some suspicious things on poles, which I think is for [that thing you call a different name, dive tree] and even microphones.

I checked out the site you mentioned, Open - the Common Law Court, as I am fascinated, but also a bit worried. Who are these people behind it who ask for all my details? I'm also unsure how helpful it is to carry those cards and register when most of the world doesn't understand what it means. I am wary of traps for alternative people. In my research on sovereignty, I found that many enforcement agencies fear free citizens and consider it extremism to curb. I hope and pray as it becomes more known that it will become accepted.

I'd like to make a final point, also related to sovereignty and an abberration of it I experienced today. I've had and seen encounters like this before. It seems that people who have no legal or authority over us - even without the steps you described, Open - try to get it by making relationships entirely one-sided. They don't recognise the people's sovereignty to question and to say no. I tried to go to the library tonight to get rid of some of the zillions of books I've had for months - one of them ironically being called I am Me, I am Free. I was leapt upon by a masked man who broke social distancing and aggressively held up his hands to stop me and wanted me to show my library card. I asked why I needed to identify myself to simply enter the building and return items, and that he was being aggressive. He then called his security colleague who was also aggressive and told me to dump my items and leave, on pain of the police! I asked his name, firmly (but no more so than he'd spoken to me) and he covered his badge and told me to get out, or he really would call the cops! I've complained, for that is a complete abuse.

It seems that these people don't want (or can't cope with) an even playing field, where my right to question and stand in my truth is as great as theirs. 

Open, I watched your recent video where you discuss police defunding. I've been asking a lot about law and police and my answer is a different one. I feel that police are often not the best people to call on to handle a situation, and that they are misused. It seems they're a go-to threat when we can't cope ourselves. I've seen railway staff, post offices, all threaten police to anyone who seems upset at bad service. I am prepared to say no to being asked for my details in many situations, or to acquiesce to searches and any testing and treatment that I've not chosen and consider harmful and unnecessary. But if we can't enter a library for querying why we have to queue and wait in an empty hall, and we can get nabbed for standing up to a bully bodyguard, then we have work to do to get our sovereignty accepted.

This might seem a small incident, but I've noted this for a while: that private staff, including security contractors, simply threaten when someone speaks back to them. They label any noncompliant behaviour as abuse and try to stop you doing what you were going to (in my case, go to the lirbary but it could be something more necessary, even that we've paid for) for the mere fact that you said no, or why? 

I feel that it's important as sovereign beings to challenge this. We hopefully can find ways to diffuse and be strong without being rude, but it seems hard when bigger matters about our freewill and civil rights may well arise and these security people don't seem well trained or very 'awake'.

How can we stand in our truth and awaken them?

 

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