The world is a mystery. And in the US the overwhelming mysterious language is of our supposed law/s that rule our majority and country. We mostly, the majority in America, do not speak the language of law. It has become a ridiculous language and mostly discorso incomprensibile, therefore, it is not surprising that the idea of pro se is akimbo to gibberish in the language American. What to do? I am not a scholar in this. I feel extremely stupid, is what I told the best civil rights attorney in the State of Oregon yesterday during our conversation about how to handle my own case against the City of Portland, Police.
- The city attorney is a typical bought and paid for government subject to the unAmerican wealth machine to trade flesh as a respectable J-O-B: debt slavery. These people who work against our constitution in the form of retiring on those who are not privy to this system of cannibalism - say what it isn't: civilized.
What this attorney said: You are intelligent and you must go to the web page for the US District Court of Oregon, Local Rules and also, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to study how to do your case.
I told him I have been to the site.
What I did not say to him: I have been "reading at," but not reading in a committed form as one who must learn the language. Why must I!? Damnit I am a Baby Boomer and so on. My story is a long one and too tiresome for me to think about.
My purpose is to get this idea of pro se as a common sense approach to a mass class action suit in the United States, which can stand against the corporations who are transnational - "Too Big To Fail!"
Not with the power of pro se.
PRO SE is not a tribe of silly Americans who wander in and out of conspiracy theory fantasies found in right wing this and left progressive that.
Go to each state, each American who lives in one and look at the webpage for the US District Court Local Rules as well as the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and become insatiably curious in sharing with the whole entire 51 states of pro se:
- how to read, write and understand the language of the United States of America.
The judges are in need of understanding the meaning of the majority rules: how many numbers of pro se are there in America?
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