Talk:Sovereign citizen

Note about the "class bias" in the article - I think that is wrong
A LEO said that the "sovereign citizens" only seem to squat in "million dollar homes". The article note this is "class bias". I doubt it. It seems that he wa just pointing out that their interpretation of the law is inevitably tied to their self-interest. They will inevitably "discover" the law "allows" them expensive toys for nothing,

Comparison with other ideas of Sovereignty
The contrast with the UK is incorrect. Sovereignty is split between the Crown and Parliament, with Parliament having the majority (There are complications around the Human Rights Act, since in the British constitution it is not possible for a court to strike down legislation).

Debunking article
I've watched plenty of videos from SovCit traffic stops, where they scream about 'travelling not driving', 'traffic law is not crime', quoting case laws and generally acting like they know some secret knowledge. I was wondering if people with actual understanding of the subject could compile an article that goes through all those little points, debunking them one by one (for instance, when SovCit talks about 'travelling' they refer to constitutional right of every citizen to travel between states, not anything to do with driving, or if they quote People V Battle, it's whether failure to check brakes counts as crime) and how to counter a point like that in conversation? Just like you did on those Conservapedia publications and books? I would really like to understand it, but I'm not smart enough to read legal documents. SirMaxKing (talk) 08:47, 21 May 2019 (UTC)
 * Bump, but I can compile several arguments SovCits in traffic stop make


 * 1) I'm not driving, I'm traveling.
 * 2) I'm a free citizen, I don't have to obey U.S. law (e.g. I don't need a license to drive)
 * 3) According to People vs. Battle, traffic violations are not crimes
 * 4) Appeal to corpus delicti
 * 5) Mention Article 4
 * 6) Mention Black's Law dictionary
 * 7) Mention Affidavit of Truth
 * 8) Mention Terry v. Ohio


 * I got most of it courtesy of Donut Operator. He made a Bingo in this video. It would make for a good subsection in the article. 21:01, 10 October 2019 (UTC)

Tower Hamlets case
Will mention this. (Bear 'the legalities' in mind when discussing). Anna Livia (talk) 16:34, 24 June 2019 (UTC)

Ledes longer than three paragraphs are not gucci
above Neiltyson1fan (talk) 13:38, 2 February 2021 (UTC)

The fake surgeon working in the nude
From the podcast of retired FBI agent Jerri Williams: https://jerriwilliams.com/episode-219-terry-kerns-and-bryanna-fox-naked-fake-doctor-sovereign-citizens/ 98.128.228.30 (talk) 23:00, 17 April 2023 (UTC)