Article II.III.III: During Inclusion (Others)

1.3 – DURING INCLUSION (IN THE POLITY(INGROUP))

Once Naturalized (Included) into the polity, every insurer guarrantees that he reciprocally insures the rights, obglibations, and inalienations of every other insurer and his or her dependents, whether those RIOs are natural or contractual.

NATURAL, NEGATIVE, RIGHTS, OBLIGATIONS, INALIENATIONS AND CONTRACTUAL POSITIVE RIGHTS OBLIGTIONS AND INALIENATIONS
( … )

( … link these … , turn the list in to dependent sentence form in hierarchy )

1.3.1 – INSURANCE (DUTIES, OBLIGATIONS)

WHEREAS;
All political organization, and as such, all governance, consists of reciprocal insurance, by the insurers of the polity, of the all capital of the polity, as in all demonstrated interests of the polity:

|Capital|: natural, cooperative, obtained, several, shareholder, title, common, formal, informal, and future.

IN THE CONTEXT of all markets in the polity:

|Markets? association, cooperation, reproduction, production, commons, polities, and war.

WHERE Insurance is produced by:

|Insurance|: display, behavior, speech, physical action, force, court, political action, organized violence, or war.

WHERE all rights, obligations, and inalienations, consist of criteria for insurance of all capital of the polity. All rights consist of either negative rights, obligations, and inalienations applicable to all whether Insurer or Dependent, or of positive rights obligations and alienations applicable to those Insurers with the demonstrated ability, competency, and will to exercise them.

AND WHERE;
Natural, Negative Rights Obligations and Inalienations (ROIs) include:

|Natural ROIs|: Sovereignty, Reciprocity, Truth, and Due Process.

AND WHERE;
Contractual Positive Rights Obligations and Inalienations (ROIs) include:

|Contractual ROIs|: Legislation, Regulation, and Contract

AND WHERE;
The all such Insurance of Natural and Contractual Rights, Obligations, Inalienations and Due process constrains all actors to Reciprocity.

Was this page helpful?

. . .