The Inner Collections are reserved exclusively for Sustaining Partners. Sustaining Partner status is secured through a one-time $195 payment and provides access to the complete Inner Collections, with no subscription and no recurring charges.
Sustaining Partners receive structured access to a cohesive body of work designed to clarify how authority is asserted and recognized, when jurisdiction attaches and rules apply, what makes agreements legally binding, how identity and legal standing are determined, and how enforcement power operates once law is invoked. Rather than fragments or commentary, the Inner Collections present a unified framework for understanding how formal legal systems actually function.
Representative selections from the Inner Collections are presented below for review.
Sustaining Partners receive immediate access to the complete manuscript volumes, the institutional monograph series, and the structured audio library.
On the Dominion of Peoples: A Historical Reference on Authority, Status, and Lawful Power
Volume I. A Historical Study of Authority, Autonomy, and Civic Inheritance
This volume serves as the foundational reference work of the Inner Collections. It examines the historical formation of authority, the boundaries of personal autonomy, and the development of civic status within Anglo-American legal traditions. The work provides historical and institutional context rather than instruction, establishing the conceptual framework upon which the remaining collections depend.
Volume II. The Instruments of Sovereignty: Doctrines and Devices of Liberty
This volume examines the formal doctrines, procedural tools, and institutional mechanisms through which authority is exercised and liberty is structured within legal systems. It surveys the instruments by which sovereignty is expressed — including offices, writs, delegations, immunities, and recorded powers — documenting how liberty is mediated through recognized legal devices and enforceable forms.
Volume III. Judicial Cases: Reasoning and Dispute in Law
This volume examines how courts reason through dispute, interpret authority, and resolve conflict through adjudication rather than declaration. Drawing on judicial opinions, procedural records, and doctrinal development, it documents how law functions as applied reasoning shaped by institutional process and recorded judgment.
Volume IV. Chronicles of Identity: Origins and Continuing Development
This volume explores how identity — legal, institutional, and social — has been defined, recorded, and contested through history and law. Drawing on doctrinal analysis, historical records, and conceptual frameworks, it examines how personal and collective identity becomes legally meaningful, how it is institutionalized through records and status, and how it continues to evolve in practice and interpretation.
Institutional Monographs
Twenty full-length monographs examining how systems of law determine who has standing, how jurisdiction attaches, how obligation is imposed, how authority is exercised, and how enforcement proceeds once power is recognized.
- The Structure of Sovereign Authority — Delegation, Office, and the Architecture of Power
- The Origins of Jurisdiction — Territory, Authority, and Judicial Power
- The Right to Refuse — Consent, Compulsion, and the Limits of Authority
- Before You Consent — Notice, Capacity, and the Formation of Agreement
- The Covenant of Debt — Obligation, Enforcement, and the Moral Language of Finance
- The Faith of Fiat — Currency, Credibility, and the Modern Monetary Order
- The Dominion of the Body — Custody, Consent, and the Boundaries of Personhood
- Property and Dominion — Ownership, Control, and the Legal Meaning of Possession
- The Reservation of Rights — Waiver, Silence, and Legal Preservation
- Lex Mercatoria — Commerce, Custom, and the Law of Trade
- On the Limits of Compact — Contracts, Consent, and the Boundaries of Agreement
- The Limits of Obligation — Liability, Enforcement, and the Reach of Law
- The Ledger of Nations — Public Debt, State Finance, and International Obligation
- The Record of Exchange — Contracts, Ledgers, and the Legal Memory of Obligation
- Theories of Sovereignty — Authority, Legitimacy, and the Claims of Power
- The Lineage of Free Men — Status, Citizenship, and the Evolution of Legal Personhood
- Voices of the Founders — Authority, Law, and the Early American Record
- Coin and Covenant — Trust, Value, and the Instruments of Exchange
- The Lawful Mind — Intent, Capacity, and Responsibility in Legal Systems
- Healing and Jurisprudence — Law, Authority, and the Governance of the Human Body
Institutional Audio Library
A structured audio library containing over 30 lectures (15+ hours) organized across twelve thematic divisions.
- How the Courts Really Work — Administrative courts, courts of record, procedural movement, defaults, and rulings.
- When Jurisdiction Locks In — Subject-matter jurisdiction, personal jurisdiction, and attachment of authority.
- The Power of the Sheriff, Oath & Proof of Authority — Office, delegation, commissions, and lawful identification.
- UCC, Secured Party & Commercial Claims — UCC filings, financing statements, secured positions, and priority claims.
- Judge & Officer Bonds — Official bonds, surety backing, and liability structure.
- Licensing, Registration & State Control — Regulatory authority, registration distinctions, and jurisdictional expansion.
- Liens, Judgments & Collection Power — Recorded claims, defaults, seizure, and enforcement mechanisms.
- Signatures, Consent & Presumption — Express vs. implied consent and operational presumptions.
- Courts of Record & Standing — Venue, posture, standing requirements, and dismissal thresholds.
- Legal Person vs. Living Individual — Corporate personhood, capacity, and representation.
- Standing to Bring a Claim — Filing authority, procedural thresholds, and gatekeeping rules.
- Interstate Commerce & Federal Jurisdiction — Commerce clause authority and federal attachment standards.
Foundations of Legal Authority
The Person the Law Recognizes
Most people lose in court long before the facts matter — not because they’re wrong, but because they misunderstand how the system recognizes personhood, status, capacity, and jurisdiction. Courts don’t respond to declarations or intent. They respond to legal standing, office, authority, representation, and continuity. This volume explains that recognition layer — natural versus juridical persons, office versus individual, capacity, agency, and perpetual succession — so readers stop guessing, stop relying on faulty assumptions, and start thinking in terms the system actually recognizes.
Existing partners may restore access below.
The public archive remains accessible through the main index.