You Must Have a Good Faith Belief Documented! cover art

You Must Have a Good Faith Belief Documented!

You Must Have a Good Faith Belief Documented!

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It is April 2nd. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.

At the beginning of this Good-Faith Belief series, I told you I had a surprise. Today, I will share it.

The Supreme Court said in US v Cheek that willfulness requires the intentional violation of a known legal duty. And if a man sincerely and honestly believed that the law did not impose that duty upon him, then that belief matters.

But here is the hard truth:

A belief that is not documented may later be treated as though it never existed.

Look at the cases of Vernie Kuglin and Tommy Cryer. In both cases, the jury was shown years of letters, notes, research, statutes, and correspondence. The jury could see that these two had studied, questioned, and formed sincere good-faith beliefs.

Their beliefs were not merely in their minds.

Their beliefs were on paper.

And because they were documented, the jury could weigh them.

Now contrast that with what happened to me.

Long before I was arrested, I had spent years studying these issues. I had written letters. I had read the books. I was a member of Save-A-Patriot Fellowship, We the People, and had attended meetings. I had created records of what I believed.

But by the time the government came for me, my wife had become a government spy, my home was gone. My records were gone. My possessions were gone. I was raided at gun point in a public venue by a swat team of 15 agents with a fat CID IRS agent. I was immediately placed into jail and then isolation among murderers.

And when I stood in court, I learned something devastating:

The system does not care what you say you believed.

The system cares what you can prove you believed.

My attorneys would not present my good-faith defense. The court obstructed my efforts to even refer to letters, questions, and documents that once existed.

And without that evidence, the jury could not fully see what had once been there.

That is why I say this to you now:

Do not make this mistake.

If you are serious about protecting yourself—whether on taxes, property, licensing, regulation, or any other issue—then preserve your record.

Duplicate it.Triplicate it.Keep one copy in your home.Keep one in a safe deposit box.Keep one with someone you trust.Store digital copies in more than one place.

Preserve your letters.Preserve your notes.Preserve your statutes.Preserve your cases.Preserve your questions.

Because one day, memory will not be enough.

You will need a record.

That is why I created the Liberty Dialogues.

To teach you how to think.

Authority.Jurisdiction.Status.Standing.Obligation.Enforcement.

And that is why the Statement of Understanding program exists.

It transforms sincere belief into a documented, organized, preserved evidentiary record. This is the surprise.

The program includes not only the Statement of Understanding itself, but also a complete Good-Faith Belief letter series directed to congressmen, senators, and agencies.

Those letters are designed to make your position clear.To show your questions.To show your effort.To prove that you did not hide, evade, or act recklessly.

They preserve a written record that you sought answers directly from the very people responsible for the law.

That is what makes this so powerful.

This program does not merely teach you what to believe.

It teaches you how to create the record of why you believed it.

A record that may one day stand between you and the full force of presumption.

The system depends on confusion.The system depends on silence.The system depends on people who cannot explain why they believe what they believe.

Do not give it silence.

Give it a record.

Visit statementofunderstanding.com.



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