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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
  • Inmates within our own country?
    Jun 5 2026

    For generations, Americans have been taught to ask the wrong question.

    When government accuses someone of wrongdoing, most people immediately ask:

    “What law did he break?”

    But under the Common Law, that was never the first question.

    The first question was:

    “Who was harmed?”

    Think about that.

    Not what statute was cited.Not what regulation was violated.Not what ordinance was enforced.

    Who was harmed?

    What man?What woman?What child?What family?

    Because under the Common Law, rights belong to people, not governments.

    If there is no injured party, no damaged property, no violated right, then what exactly is the court attempting to remedy?

    The Founders understood this distinction.

    Courts were created to resolve disputes.

    To restore rights.

    To compensate injuries.

    To provide remedies.

    Courts were never intended to function as revenue collection agencies.

    They were never intended to operate as administrative compliance departments.

    They were never intended to punish peaceful people simply because a bureaucratic rule was not followed.

    Imagine two scenarios.

    In the first scenario, a man steals his neighbor’s truck.

    We immediately know who was harmed.

    The neighbor lost his property.

    There is a victim.

    There is injury.

    There is damage.

    There is a remedy.

    Now consider the second scenario.

    A peaceful homeowner has a weed growing from a crack in his driveway.

    The weed harms no neighbor.

    No property has been damaged.

    No right has been violated.

    No one has suffered an injury.

    Yet a code enforcement officer arrives.

    A citation is issued.

    Fines begin to accumulate.

    The homeowner may eventually find himself standing before a judge.

    Under Common Law principles, that should cause every citizen to pause and ask:

    Who was harmed?

    What right was violated?

    Whose property was damaged?

    What injury occurred?

    And if there was no injury, then what exactly is being remedied?

    The American legal system increasingly asks citizens to focus on obedience rather than injury.

    Compliance rather than harm.

    Procedure rather than rights.

    But Common Law begins with a much simpler question:

    Who suffered the loss?

    Because if no one suffered a loss, then government is not restoring justice.

    It is enforcing compliance.

    And those are not the same thing.

    This is not an argument against law.

    It is an argument for understanding what law was originally intended to do.

    Law was supposed to protect people.

    Not weeds.

    Not paperwork.

    Not bureaucracies.

    People.

    The next time you hear about someone being prosecuted, fined, imprisoned, or sanctioned, ask the question that Common Law has asked for centuries:

    Who was harmed?

    And if no one can answer that question, perhaps we should spend less time discussing compliance and more time discussing justice.

    Because justice begins where injury exists.

    And liberty begins when the people remember the difference.



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    4 mins
  • Mr. President, you went through hell!
    Jun 3 2026

    Mr. President,

    History may remember your Presidency for economic growth, border security, foreign policy achievements, and political battles unlike any in modern American history.

    But perhaps your greatest contribution to the American Republic still lies ahead.

    You have experienced something very few Presidents ever have.

    You occupied the highest office in the nation.

    Then you experienced investigation, indictment, arrest, prosecution, trial, and conviction by the very governmental machinery you once supervised.

    Whether one agrees with the outcomes or not, millions of Americans watched as governmental power was directed at a former President of the United States.

    For many citizens, that experience raised a troubling question:

    Who investigates the investigators?

    Who reviews the prosecutors?

    Who examines the institutions when the institutions themselves may have gotten it wrong?

    I ask because I have witnessed a similar problem firsthand.

    In the Orlando Carter case, records emerged that appeared to conflict with the central prosecution theory. Questions were raised. Contradictions surfaced. Requests for review were submitted to multiple agencies and public officials.

    Yet meaningful investigation never followed.

    The problem extends far beyond any single case.

    America has built vast institutions to investigate, regulate, prosecute, convict, and imprison.

    But where is the institution dedicated to determining when government itself has made a mistake?

    Where is the office whose mission is accountability for governmental misconduct, prosecutorial misconduct, investigative failures, suppression of evidence, due process violations, political targeting, and wrongful convictions?

    The Founders understood a timeless truth:

    Power requires accountability.

    Not because government is evil.

    But because government is human.

    And human beings make mistakes.

    Today, Americans across the political spectrum increasingly distrust public institutions.

    That trust cannot be restored through speeches.

    It can only be restored through accountability.

    Imagine creating an independent Office of Government Accountability whose sole mission is reviewing credible claims of governmental abuse and institutional error.

    Not to weaken government.

    To strengthen it.

    Not to attack public servants.

    To ensure that public power remains answerable to the people.

    Because every American understands that citizens are accountable to the law.

    Public officials should be accountable as well.

    Mr. President, perhaps your greatest legacy will not be what government accomplished.

    Perhaps it will be creating a permanent mechanism to ensure that when government gets it wrong, someone has both the authority and the duty to correct it.

    Because freedom survives only when accountability survives.

    And the Republic survives only when justice belongs equally to the powerful and the powerless.

    May truth reign supreme.



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    4 mins
  • What is Hochul Hocking?
    Jun 1 2026
    It is June 1, 2026.Welcome to yestohellwith.com.Let me tell you a remarkable story.Many of you know country music star John Rich.You know him as an entertainer.You know him as a businessman.You know him as a patriot.What you may not know is that he is involved in a significant battle concerning private property, government authority, and the future use of agricultural land in the State of New York.Now, before I go any further, this video is not about taking sides.It is about something much bigger.It is about how you think.Recently, through an intermediary, I received information concerning that controversy.Not the entire file.Not every document.Not every study.Not every communication.Just enough information to begin asking questions.And that is where the Liberty Dialogues begins.Most people approach a problem by arguing.The Liberty Dialogues approaches a problem by asking:Who has authority?What is the source of that authority?What is the jurisdiction?What is the status of the parties?Who possesses standing?What obligation exists?What evidence supports enforcement?And perhaps most importantly:What is merely being presumed?So I took the limited information available and applied the Liberty Dialogues Framework.What happened next was extraordinary.Without having every document...Without having every study...Without having every answer...The Liberty Dialogues was able to map the entire battlefield.It identified the agencies.It identified the claimed authority.It identified the competing jurisdictions.It identified the assumptions.It identified the missing evidence.It identified the burden of proof.It identified the precise questions that must be answered before anyone can intelligently determine whether governmental authority is being exercised properly.Think about that.Most people believe they need years of legal training to begin analyzing a complex issue.Yet the Liberty Dialogues does something entirely different.It organizes thought.It removes confusion.It separates facts from assumptions.It separates authority from presumption.It separates proof from opinion.And once that happens, clarity begins to emerge.What started as a discussion concerning farmland and solar development became something much larger.It became a demonstration.A demonstration of what happens when a structured framework is applied to a real-world controversy.And that demonstration produced pages of analysis, strategy, evidentiary requests, authority audits, jurisdictional reviews, and accountability measures.Not because someone argued louder.Not because someone hired a larger law firm.But because the right questions were asked in the proper order.That is the power of the Liberty Dialogues.And that is why so many people who have acquired the Liberty Dialogues System tell me that it fundamentally changed how they analyze government, business, contracts, disputes, regulations, administrative actions, and virtually every important issue they encounter in life.The Liberty Dialogues is not merely a collection of books.It is not a set of legal forms.It is not a list of arguments.It is a thinking system.A framework.A methodology.A way to navigate complexity and uncover truth.And because this recent analysis provides such a powerful example of the Liberty Dialogues in action, I have decided to do something special.I will conduct a Liberty Dialogues conference call exclusively for individuals who do not currently own the Liberty Dialogues System.This call is intended for new people only.If you have attended prior Liberty Dialogues calls, this opportunity is not for you.The access code will be changed.The call will be private.Participation will be limited to ten individuals.During that call, I will walk through this real-world analysis and show you exactly how the Liberty Dialogues Framework was applied.You will see how authority was identified.How jurisdiction was examined.How assumptions were exposed.How the burden of proof was shifted.And how a complex public controversy was transformed into a structured investigation.If you have ever wondered whether the Liberty Dialogues actually works...If you have ever wondered why so many people continue to study and use this system...If you have ever wondered how ordinary people can begin navigating issues that seem overwhelming...This is your opportunity to see it for yourself.Only ten positions will be available.If you would like to participate, contact us immediately.Once the ten positions are filled, registration will close.May truth reign supreme. Get full access to YesToHellWith at yestohellwith.substack.com/subscribe
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    5 mins
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