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Eustace C. Mullins - The Rape of Justice (1989)
PDF, searchable text under the page image, 549 pages, 22MB.
INITIAL SEEDING: LOTS TO UPLOAD TODAY AND A THIN PIPE SO I WILL STOP ONCE 1 OR 2 HAVE IT, PLEASE CONTINUE TO SEED.
Though published 21 years ago there are plenty of personalities mentioned in this book who are or were until recently still on the scene e.g. Lyndon Larouche. Mullins' book is referenced in among others, The Phoenix Journal, 6 February 1996, article: "Judicial Monopoly: Examining The U.S. Legal System. Part III: The Right Of Representation".
"Representing oneself in court, as this writer has now done for some four decades, is a heady experience. It allows one to choose at will from the entire repertoire of legal strategy, without fear or favor. Strangely enough, strategy is a word rarely used in the legal profession, because its members prefer the devious techniques of conspiracy and treachery. I once asked a former "richest man in the world" who was embroiled in a legal battle, "What is your strategy?" He was puzzled by the question. Could anyone believe that Napoleon had no strategy in his succession of lightning like victories throughout Europe? He began to lose when he tempered his military genius with political considerations. Waterloo was not far off."
CONTENTS:
01. Legal Anarchy.
02. The Origin of Law.
03. A Plague of Lawyers.
04. Judge Not.
05. The Supreme Court.
06. The Court as Arena.
07. The Department of Justice.
08. Durance Vile.
09. The Case of the Strange Director.
10. The Strange Case of the Schizophrenic Driver.
11. The Strange Case of the Senile Millionaire.
12. Freedom of Speech, Anyone?
13. Taxation Without Hope.
14. The Taxing Power.
15. Mullins on Equity.
16. Our Legal Future.
Chapter 15 contains some early thoughts on individual sovereignty and the usurpation of the US Constitution. See also chapp. 13, 14.
There's some pretty esoteric legal learning in here...