Course: Declaration of 1776

A Common Lawyer Comments Clause-by-Clause

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Course is scheduled to begin October 30, 2025.

Presenters

  • Brent Allan Winters, Attorney at Law
  • Dar Leaf, Sheriff, Barry County, Michigan

Description

Our U.S. Declaration of 1776 is a common-law complaint, declaring a real case in controversy.

Today, as also back in 1776, the powers-that-be strive to displace our common-law of the land with civil-law of the city under its four labels: admiralty law, administrative law, martial law, and international law.

Decades of warrantless searches and seizures, government-controlled corporations, untold alphabet-soup agencies, swarms of ignorant bureaucrats, countless code rules, untold executive orders and decrees, and foreign tribunals, all without common-law due process or trial by Jury, now form…

a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object, [which] evinces a design to reduce . . . [these States] under absolute Despotism.

Today as then, our common-law tradition is both our shield and sword against all such devices of domination and is the means by which the laws of Nature’s God keep freedom—but only if you not merely know about them but rather know them.

Our Declaration lists the train of overt acts—abuses and usurpations—proving King George’s conspiracy with England’s central-bank money cartel and offshoot trading monopolies to replace common-law courts and government with civil law’s international, admiralty, and martial law: rule by distant decree, searches without warrant, tribunals without due process, and criminal convictions without the Jury—the same abuses and usurpations now afoot in the United States.

—Brent Allan Winters

By highlighting our U.S. Declaration of 1776’s complaints of tyranny,

all having in direct object . . . an absolute Tyranny over these States,

Brent Allan Winters and Sheriff Dar Leaf will show that these same wrongs threaten us today.

Course will be presented in 12 sessions, beginning 30 October 2025. All sessions will be recorded and available to enrolled students. Students will receive a digital copy of the book Declaration of ’76 and U.S. Constitution.

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