Practical Use of Good Faith
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About this listen
Why Silence Becomes Agreement
It is April 3. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.
Most people believe that doing nothing is the safe option.
It is not.
Silence is interpreted. Silence becomes agreement. Silence allows the system to continue building a record against you.
If you receive a notice from the IRS, a court, a state agency, or any authority, and you do nothing, the system does not usually conclude that you disagree.
It concludes that you accept.
That is how presumption works.
The system says: You did not object. You did not ask questions. You did not require proof. Therefore, you must agree.
But that is not truth. That is merely presumption.
The Liberty Dialogues teaches us that before there can be any obligation, there must first be:
Authority. Jurisdiction. Status. Standing. And only then, obligation.
Yet most people never ask those questions. They skip directly to fear. They assume that because a notice was issued, the matter is settled.
It is not.
What matters is what is placed into the record.
That is why documented good faith beliefs matter.
A Good Faith Belief document says:
I do not consent to presumption. I do not admit your conclusion. I require proof.
When you put your position into the record, silence no longer speaks for you.
And as always, may truth reign supreme.
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