What Is the American Justice System? Equity and Trust....

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“What Is the American Justice System?”

The American justice system was established as an institution of constitutional fidelity and moral equity—intended to protect the unalienable rights of men and women under the laws of Nature and of Nature’s God. Its lawful foundation rests in Article III of the Constitution for the United States, which secures judicial power in matters of law and equity, bound by oath, operating within the limits of delegated authority, and subject to the public trust. In its original form, the justice system functioned as an instrument of remedy and right, ensuring access to due process, redress of grievance, and the preservation of private rights over government privilege. Courts were duty-bound to uphold the common law, respect the separation of powers, and provide impartial tribunals in accord with the Seventh Amendment and the principles of natural justice.
However, the current operational apparatus bearing the name of “justice” has,
through a complex layering of administrative codes, commercial regulation, and presumed consent, departed from that original design. What now functions as a “court” frequently operates as a private administrative tribunal, executing commercial instruments, enforcing statutory policy, and conducting business under the appearance of judicial authority—absent full disclosure or consent of the governed.

This transformation represents not a lawful evolution, but a constructive breach of trust. In equity, such acts, performed under false presumption and without fiduciary disclosure, give rise to constructive fraud. The use of legal fictions, presumptive jurisdictions, and secured bonds against the living estate of the people converts what ought to be courts of law into instruments of commerce and debt enforcement. These actions betray the fiduciary character of government offices and constitute bad faith administration of a public trust.

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