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YesToHellWith

YesToHellWith

By: and may TRUTH reign supreme!
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YesToHellWith is determined to expose the wrongful conviction and imprisonment of Orlando Carter. We are asking that President Trump review this injustice and exonerate Carter.

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Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • A Special Invitation
    Jun 12 2026

    Have you ever wondered why so many people walk into court with an attorney... and walk out feeling like nobody ever defended their freedom?

    Maybe it’s not corruption.

    Maybe it’s training.

    Most attorneys are taught how to navigate the system, not how to challenge its underlying assumptions.

    That’s where the Liberty Dialogues Framework is different.

    People across the country are using it to represent themselves, ask better questions, challenge presumptions, and achieve results they never thought possible.

    If you want to discover why the Liberty Dialogues is changing the way people think about court, send an email to info@yestohellwith.com.

    You’ll receive an invitation to our Liberty Dialogues conference calls every Tuesday and Thursday.

    One call could completely change the way you view authority, jurisdiction, and your own ability to defend yourself.

    And as always...

    May truth reign supreme.



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    1 min
  • Attorneys are not what we believe.
    Jun 12 2026

    Have you ever wondered why so many lawyers can tell you what the law says, but so few can tell you whether the government has the authority to act in the first place?

    Let’s look at what law school actually teaches.

    A typical law student spends three years studying contracts, torts, criminal law, property law, constitutional law, civil procedure, evidence, legal writing, appellate decisions, and courtroom process.

    They learn how to identify issues.

    How to locate precedent.

    How to argue both sides of a case.

    How to draft motions.

    How to navigate procedure.

    How to predict what a judge is likely to do.

    In short, they are trained to operate within the legal system.

    But notice what is largely absent.

    Very little time is spent asking:

    Where does authority come from?

    What is the source of jurisdiction?

    What status is being presumed?

    Who has standing to bring the claim?

    What obligation is actually owed?

    By what authority may enforcement occur?

    Instead, the student is often taught to assume the framework and then argue within it.

    The Liberty Dialogues Framework takes the opposite approach.

    It begins before the argument.

    Before the motion.

    Before the procedure.

    Before the case.

    It asks:

    Who claims authority?

    Can that authority be proven?

    Who has jurisdiction?

    Can that jurisdiction be established?

    What status is being attributed to the individual?

    Is that status proven or merely presumed?

    What obligation exists?

    How did it arise?

    Can it be demonstrated?

    Only after those questions are answered does enforcement become relevant.

    This distinction is critical.

    Law school generally teaches people how to navigate process.

    The Liberty Dialogues teaches people how to examine the legitimacy of the process itself.

    This is why many lawyers do not see themselves as defenders of freedom.

    They see themselves as officers of the court.

    Their professional role is to ensure that procedures are followed, filings are proper, deadlines are met, evidence is admitted, and rules are observed.

    That does not necessarily make them defenders of liberty.

    It makes them managers of legal process.

    Freedom and process are not the same thing.

    A perfectly administered process can still operate upon false presumptions.

    A perfectly drafted motion can still proceed from an unchallenged assumption.

    A perfectly conducted trial can still avoid the foundational question:

    By what authority does this action proceed?

    The Liberty Dialogues Framework is concerned with that foundational question.

    Not merely whether the machinery operated correctly.

    But whether the machinery should have been operating at all.

    This is why Liberty Dialogues does not begin with procedure.

    It begins with authority.

    Then jurisdiction.

    Then status.

    Then standing.

    Then obligation.

    Then enforcement.

    Because if authority fails, everything downstream fails with it.

    And that may be the single greatest difference between traditional legal education and the Liberty Dialogues Framework.

    One teaches how to work within the system.

    The other teaches how to examine whether the system has properly justified its actions in the first place.



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    4 mins
  • Liberty Dialogues Call Invitation
    Jun 11 2026

    Have you ever received a traffic ticket?

    Have you ever walked into traffic court wondering why the judge, prosecutor, and officer seem to be speaking a completely different language?

    What if I told you that many traffic cases begin not with proof—but with presumption?

    Tonight, during our Liberty Dialogues conference call, we will be discussing one of the most important concepts in law and government: presumption.

    What is a presumption?

    How is it created?

    When can it be challenged?

    And what role does it play in traffic stops, traffic citations, and traffic court?

    If you want to understand the difference between authority and assumption, proof and presumption, this call is for you.

    Normally, attendance is reserved for Liberty Dialogues members.

    However, tonight we have ten free guest seats available for those who do not yet own the Liberty Dialogues System.

    If you would like to attend, contact us immediately.

    The first ten people will be admitted free.

    Join us tonight and learn why understanding presumption may change the way you look at every traffic case forever.

    And as always, may truth reign supreme.



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    1 min
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